120 likes | 219 Views
Intentionally Developing Leaders of Color. Prasant Nukalapati , Program Manager for NW Region Keith Wilkerson, Senior Program Manager for The Mid-Atlantic Region. Perspective/Context:.
E N D
Intentionally Developing Leaders of Color PrasantNukalapati, Program Manager for NW Region Keith Wilkerson, Senior Program Manager for The Mid-Atlantic Region
Perspective/Context: • What do we hope will happen for students of color at high powered institutions ? What is the reality of what happens? • Why doesn’t access translate to tangible success for many of our students?
Why a Leadership Curriculum: • To help students of color understand what it means to be a high impact individual • To develop high impact young leaders of color, with skills capable of taking on leadership positions in society • To develop students who are already “natural born” leaders into leaders with transferable skills who create change; and to develop students who aren’t “natural born” leaders but who have a desire to be leaders • To expand the networks of young people of color to be in alignment with their White peers
What does this curriculum Look Like? • A grounding in historical trends to increase awareness and sense of self empowerment • Skills based • Goal Oriented • Sustaining
Expanding Circles Exercise: • Most change requires moving a group of people (whether it is your class, your team, your school community, your neighborhood etc.) in one direction towards a goal. • Consider the people in your life that you must motivate to create the change you seek. • Each group represents a concentric circle that expands out from you. On the large sheet of paper you are given, start by creating a circle with you in it and then add the below groups. Once you write down the “headings”, include two-three specific people that come to mind in each of the expanding circles • Who are the people in “the choir?” • Who are the people who don’t really care if this change happens are not? • Who are people that have influence to help you make this change? • Who are the people who have the resources to help you make this change?
10 Month Curriculum: • Month 1 Overview/ historical perspective • Month 2 Building and Writing a Resume • Month 3 Being a Global (and Local Citizen) • Month 4 Expanding Networks • Month 5 Influencing Others • Month 6 Public Speaking (Part 1) • Month 7 Public Speaking (Part 2) • Month 8 Writing for Multiple Outcomes • Month 9 Leveraging Technology • Month 10 Raising and Managing Money
The Difference Between Success and Failure • A steady commitment required with fixed meeting dates; a contract/agreement • Acknowledgement of consistent participation; Consequences for inconsistent participation • A curriculum in place • A student chair that you can ideally meet with in advance of the meetings
Curriculum and Material to Draw FrOm: • Student leadership Challenge Curriculum • Harvard Business Review, HBR Ten Must Reads: On Leadership • Center for Creative Leadership, Feedback That Works for Non Profit Organizations, Shera Clark • 10 Things Employers Want You To Learn in College, Bill Copin • The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwell
Contact Info: • PrasantNukalapati • A Better Chance Program Manager, NW Region • pnukalapati@abetterchance.org • Keith Wilkerson • A Better Chance Senior Program Manager, Mid-Atlantic Region • kwilkerson@abetterchance.org