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Educational Leadership: The Skill. LuAnn Wilkerson, Ed.D. UCLA School of Medicine. Leadership. the art of mobilizing others to want to struggle for shared aspirations. Assume that everyone who works for you is a volunteer.
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Educational Leadership: The Skill LuAnn Wilkerson, Ed.D. UCLA School of Medicine
Leadership the art of mobilizing others to want to struggle for shared aspirations
Assume that everyone who works for you is a volunteer... • What conditions would need to exist for your staff to want to enlist in your “volunteer” organization? • What would you need to do if you wanted people to perform at high levels? • What would you need to do if you wanted them to remain loyal to your organization? pg. 31 Kouze and Posner
Objectives • Reflect on lessons learned from our experiences as leaders • Describe the characteristics of exemplary leadership • Identify opportunities for developing leadership skills
Our “personal best” when leading others... • Who was involved? Who initiated it? • What motivated you to get involved? • How did you get others involved? • What values guided your actions? • How did you celebrate success? • What did you learn about leadership from this experience?
Kouzes JM and Posner BZ. • The Leadership Challenge: How to Keep Getting Extraordinary Things Done in Organizations. • The Truth About Leadership
Exemplary Leadership • Challenges the process • Inspires a shared vision • Enables others to act • Models the way • Encourages the heart
Challenging the process • Search out challenging opportunities to change, innovate, and improve • Experiment, take risks, and learn from mistakes • Strengthen resilience
Inspiring a shared vision • Imagine exciting future opportunities and believe that together you can make them happen. • Enlist others in a common vision by appealing to their best interests, hopes and dreams.
Enabling others to act • Foster collaboration by promoting cooperative goals and building trust • Strengthen others • by giving power away • providing choice • developing competence • assigning critical tasks • offering visible support
Modeling the way • Set the example by behaving in ways that are consistent with espoused values • Achieve small wins that promote consistent progress and build commitment to shared goals kaizan
Encouraging the heart • Recognize individual contributions to the success of every project • Celebrate team accomplishments regularly
Learning to Lead • Trial and error Observation Education and training
Trial and error • Welcome challenge. • Test yourself against new and difficult tasks. • Broaden your experience: • rotate jobs • volunteer for leadership roles • ask for a new assignment • seek out tough assignments • Reflect on the experience.
Observation of others • Find a mentor or help one find you. • Seek feedback from immediate supervisors. • Develop effective peer networks. • Interview, study, or read about leaders you admire.
Education and training • Make a list of your learning needs. • Continue to invest in knowledge capital. • specialize • maintain a generalist perspective • Develop time and skills for reflection. • Lead outside of the workplace.
Opportunities for educational leadership are everywhere educational task forces & committees teaching special projects clerkship chairs & program directors departmental discussions of education curriculum committees new faculty mentoring faculty development admissions administration