Supervising Police Personnel: The Fifteen Responsibilities (6th Edition)
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Average customer review:Product Description
For courses in Police Supervision, Human or Organizational Behavior, and Ethics.
Using an exploratory and interactive structure, this introduction to police supervision covers all the latest supervisory concepts and practices with an emphasis on character, teamwork, and conflict resolution. Boasting a 15-responsibility organization, the Sixth Edition implements self-discipline, self-restraint, & self-reliant through Team Fundamentals, Team Development, and Teamwork.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #205225 in Books
- Published on: 2006-03-09
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 336 pages
Editorial Reviews
The publisher, Prentice-Hall Career & Technology
A practical book which covers all the latest supervisory concepts and practices, and encourages the reader to think and then behave as a supervisor.
From the Inside Flap
PREFACE
This, the fourth edition, continues to represent the police supervisor's role as a set of integrated responsibilities. This has been and, in all likelihood, will be an enduring theme for future editions.
As in past editions, all fifteen responsibilities are formatted as chapters. Each one of the responsibilities has been modified, some considerably. more than others. A few have been retitled to reflect a thematic emphasis on teamwork.
I realize that the term "team" is overused to the point that today some find it trite. I toyed with the words "partner," "collaborative," "consensual," "seamless," and others. "Teamwork" prevailed, as you'll soon see in the three major sections: Team Basics, Team Building, and Teamwork.
Team Basics provides the infrastructure for contemporary police workcommunity-oriented policing. These chapters deal with constancy and integrity of purposevalues, ethics, and visionand with the allocation of the requisite time to communicate all three. The chapters on ethics and vision contain a lot of new material.
Team Building starts with a supervisor's responsibility for serving as a team leader. This naturally encompasses motivating, empowering, and training one's staff, while ensuring that everyone is mentally and physically well. The two chapters on team leadership and motivation are essentially new.
Teamwork includes organizing for action, measuring the results of that action, rectifying mistakes, and making certain that community-oriented policing works. I am convinced that it takes teamwork to make it work. Finally, the supervisor is challenged to sense incoming demands or needs for change. Significant updatings are found in the chapters on performance appraisal and conflict resolution.
Being a police supervisor is much more than having more pay, more authority, more influence, more status, and the like, It is much more a set of vital responsibilities, as you will soon discover in the chapters that follow.
I would like to thank Joe Sandoval of Metropolitan State College, Sgt. Twan Uptgrow of the Metro-Dade Police Department, and Sgt. Marc Deluca of the Charlotte Police Department for reviewing the manuscript. My warmest thanks to Kim Davies, Senior Editor, Prentice Hall, who coached and inspired me during the writing of this edition; Pat David and Julie Schmidt, who expertly typed and critically edited the manuscript; and, finally, my longtime prized teammate and wise co-author, George Rush, who said, "Be a big boy. Write this one by yourself."
Paul Whisenand
San Clemente, California
From the Back Cover
Key Benefits: Exceptionally practical in focus, this introduction to police supervision covers all the latest supervisory concepts and practices. Key Topics: The book stresses the importance of values and ethics in police leadership and community-oriented policing. Using a 15-responsibility framework and a variety of interactive and imaginative exercises, it encourages readers to think and behave as supervisors and helps them develop a compelling sense of mission and commitment. Market: For readers interested in police supervision, human behavior and organizational behavior.
Customer Reviews
This book is utterly useless
If you need this book to tell you that you should have ethics and values, then maybe you shouldn't be in law enforcement in the first place.
I don't know how many ways Mr. Whisenand has to say the same thing OVER AND OVER AGAIN. 319 pages? The same points could have been made in about 70. Maybe the publisher had a minimum page requirement for Mr. Whisenand. It's a bit hypocritical as Mr. Whisenand writes on page 89 that "A concise report expresses all the necessary information in as few words as possible..." He should practice what he preaches.
Which leads me to my next point. What is Mr. Whisenand's real world law enforcement experience anyway? In the book, it lists that he was an officer with the LAPD and a reserve deputy sheriff with the Orange County Sheriff's Department. Curiously, no where does it list how many years he did at each or the ranks he held. He also does not relate any of his own experiences as a PO, only that of others. Hmmmmm...
I only gave this a rating of one star because it won't let you put in zero stars.
Ouch! This book hurts.
A real forehead klunker!! Must have hit my forhead on my desk at least 3 times per chapter as I fell asleep. Author lacks ability to lend practical examples and ways to implement theories in a police environment with Unions. I often find myself 2/3 through a chapter and having to go back through the lists of lists to remember what the chapter was about. I would like to work at one of these utopian departments the Author writes of where everybody gets together to make democratic decisions. Must have citizen patrols. Author also enjoys use of vocabulary, so for the author, the book is "trite". I have over 19 years police experience and find the book painful and not very helpful. I also question the author's experience in command position and feel it may be more from Academia PD. Two thumbs down.
Compliments a class for new supervisors well.
The book was used as part of a week long class and complimented it well. (I don't know if I would have gotten as much from it just reading the book alone.)
The book isn't going to teach you everything you need to know about being a supervisor, but it makes good points and has gook information.




