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The Cadet Officer

The Cadet Officer. Cadet Joshua Pravel. Overview. Speaking the Language of Leadership  Communication: The first step in leading others The Cadet Flight Commander: Small unit leadership Training Plan Sample Leadership and the NCO: Leading those who lead.

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The Cadet Officer

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  1. The Cadet Officer Cadet Joshua Pravel

  2. Overview Speaking the Language of Leadership  Communication: The first step in leading others The Cadet Flight Commander: Small unit leadership Training Plan Sample Leadership and the NCO: Leading those who lead

  3. Speaking the Language of Leadership AIR FORCE DEFINITION OF LEADERSHIP "Leadership is the art to of influencing and directing people in such a way that will win their obedience, confidence, respect and loyal cooperation in achieving common objectives."

  4. Speaking the Language of LeadershipCont. "Leadership is the art of..."  Leadership is an art Stick to what you know Remain consistent

  5. Speaking the Language of LeadershipCont. "...Influencing and directing people..."  Influencing is leading by example Directing is implementing your standards Treat your cadets as people!

  6. Speaking the Language of Leadership Cont. "in such a way that will win their obedience, confidence, respect and loyal cooperation" Win, not force Obedience, Confidence, and Respect Loyal cooperation

  7. Speaking the Language of LeadershipCont. "...In achieving in common objectives." Work together Do not let friendly competition get in the way of accomplishing the mission Keep your people informed

  8. Communication: The first step in leading others "Vision without action is a dream. Action without vision is a nightmare."  - Japanese Proverb

  9. Communication: The first step in leading others Establish a vision Mentor your cadets Schedule regular meetings with staff Ask questions

  10. The Cadet Flight Commander: Small Unit Leadership PREPARATION Schedule regular meetings Train your flight sergeant Understand the age and experience of your people Anticipate issues - develop a week by week training plan Ask your C/CC or C/CD for input

  11. The Cadet Flight Commander: Small Unit Leadership WHILE IN THE ROLE First, explain your vision Set standards early with deadlines  Always give second chances  Work your plan

  12. The Cadet Flight Commander: Small Unit Leadership Cont. FLIGHT TRAINING PLAN A training plan is a written document that accompanies the training syllabus used to understand themethodof training rather than the material being taught.

  13. The Cadet Flight Commander: Small Unit Leadership Cont. TRAINING PLAN USES Organizes thoughts according to your style of leadership Reduces dead time

  14. ZULU FLIGHT TRAINING PLANC/2d Lt Pravel - C/TSgt GardinerActivity: Drill instruction (30 minutes) Individual Notes - Periodically quiz cadets (Including Staff) - Review Drill manual for proper instruction - Assist C/Gardiner as needed - Answer questions firmly rather than aggresively Flight Notes - Show 5 minute drill video - Give time for cadets to ask questions - Address cadets firmly, not aggresively - Understand misunderstanding - Give cadets water halfway through

  15. The Cadet Flight Commander: Small Unit Leadership Cont. CORRECTION vs DISCIPLINE Correction is addressed to the group and is usually performed by the flight sergeant.  Examples: Uniform infraction, failure to salute and officer, looking around at attention, etc. Discipline is usually done in private and usually performed by the flight commander Examples: Insulting a staff member, swearing in uniform, overall disrespect. Correct with the intent of understanding flight understanding

  16. Leadership and The NCO: Leading Those Who Lead GENERAL TIPS   Relationship is built on respect Establish a common vision Discuss your expectations (ask his expectations of you) Understand that the NCO may use a different leadership style NCO will need assistance. Assist when needed

  17. Leadership and the NCO: Leading Those Who Lead Cont. Your leadership style will vary depending on cadet Experience Cadets will be anywhere from C/SSgt to C/CMSgt Your leadership style will vary depending on cadet maturity Cadets will age anywhere from 12-21 years old

  18. Leadership and The NCO: Leading Those Who Lead Cont. HERSEY AND BLANCHARD SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP MODEL S1: Telling - One-way communication in which the leader defines the roles of the individual or group S2: Selling- Two-way communication in which the leader convinces his subordinates that his/her idea is the best course of action. S3: Participating - Shared decision making about aspects of how the task is accomplished. S4: Delegating - The process and responsibility has been passed to the individual or group. The leader stays involved to monitor progress. It still remains the leader's duty

  19. Leadership and The NCO: Leading Those Who Lead Cont. MANAGEMENT LEVELS M1 - The person lacks the specific skills required for the job in hand and are unable and unwilling to do or to take responsibility for this job or task. M2 - They are still unable to take on responsibility for the task being done; however, they are willing to work at the task. M3 - They are experienced and able to do the task but lack the confidence to take on responsibility. M4 - They are experienced at the task, and comfortable with their own ability to do it well. They are able and willing to not only do the task, but to take responsibility for the task.

  20. Leadership and The NCO: Leading Those Who Lead CLOSING NOTES Competence changes depending on the job  An experienced NCO could feel uncomfortable if they are new to a certain job  Just because the NCO is supposed to "get the job done" does not mean they know how to. Mentor to ensure understanding

  21. Questions?

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