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3. The Relational Leadership Model. Relational Leadership. A relational and ethical process of people together attempting to accomplish positive change. . Being Purposeful. The ability to collaborate and to find common ground with others to facilitate positive change.
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Relational Leadership Arelational and ethical process of people together attempting to accomplish positive change.
Being Purposeful • The ability to collaborate and to find common ground with others to facilitate positive change. • Purposeful groups have a clear mission and reason for being that resonates with group members.
Being Inclusive Understanding, valuing, and actively engaging diversity in views, approaches, styles, and aspects of individuality. • Examine group practices that might block inclusivity. • Involve people from outside the group.
Being Empowering Empowerment has two dimensions: • Self-empowerment: the sense of self that claims a place in the process and expects to be involved. • Empowering environments: examining conditions in the group that promote the full involvement of participants.
Bases of Power (French & Raven) Adapted from Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, F. P. (2006). Joining together: Group theory and group skills (9th ed). Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon, p. 237.
Being Ethical Leadership that is driven by values and standards and leadership that is good—moral—in nature. • Group members operate from a sense of shared standards and values. • Values drive both group goals and the means used to achieve them.
Being Process-Oriented • Being intentional and thoughtful about how the group goes about being a group, remaining a group, and accomplishing a group’s purposes. • Examples of “processes” • Collaboration • Reflection • Feedback • Handling conflict • Making decisions • Sharing the work • Confronting each other • Building community • Making meaning of events