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Debbie Waite Academic Advisor, NDFS February 16, 2012. Not Everyone Gets a Trophy. Quick Generational Review. Born 1922-1943 Silent Generation or Schwarzkopf Generation Born 1946-1964 Baby Boomers. Generational Review . Generation X – 1965-1980 Millennials or Generation Y
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Debbie Waite Academic Advisor, NDFS February 16, 2012 Not Everyone Gets a Trophy
Quick Generational Review • Born 1922-1943 • Silent Generation or Schwarzkopf Generation • Born 1946-1964 • Baby Boomers
Generational Review • Generation X – 1965-1980 • Millennialsor Generation Y • Born 1980-2000
Generations……. • Two other historical issues • Birth control pill • Child development research – 1970 - 1990
Self-Esteem Curriculum • Feeling good about yourself • Advice centers on self • Don’t correct children’s mistakes • Instead of “failed” they have “deferred success” • Competition is bad for self-esteem • Pizza parties for all who pass
Consequences of Self-Esteem Curriculum • Respect for others has declined • Grade inflation • Children don’t need to learn • Kids who can’t take criticism (thin-skinned) • Self-esteem not linked to good grades • More likely to be violent and to cheat • Self-esteem without basis encourages laziness rather than hard work
The Incredibles • Everybody's Super
Strengths of Gen Y • Can be very loyal – but not blind loyalty • Will work for credit • The information generation
More strengths • Will hit the ground running • Want impact • Want to learn • Want flexibility
Managers must provide: • Record of their successes. • Details of how to do their job very well. • Understanding of career path • Salary and benefits plus…… • Respect is a 2 way street
Managers understand: • Learn best from a combination of technology and the human element – • Gen Y can be a long-term employee, one day at a time
Focus on Self • Authority questioned routinely – • Customize anything and everything • Instantaneous responses and constant change
Transactional authority • Focuses on the basic management process of controlling, organizing, and short-term planning.
Gen Y - Transactional Authority • Leader utilizes followers self-interest for leader’s goals and purposes • Gen Y flips it
Customize • Gen Yers want to customize their very minds, bodies, and spirits. • ==========
Customize a degree? • “I want a degree that covers organic gardening and nutrition because the whole system is wrong – we are sick because we don’t grow our food right…. I want it online and accessible to my rural location and I can’t understand why USU doesn’t provide it?”
Change • “Constant change means you can’t count on anything to stay the same. But this doesn’t make Gen Yers feel nostalgic. Rather, it makes them feel liberated to abandon what bores them, embrace new things wholeheartedly, and reinvent themselves constantly.”
Academia – SLOW CHANGE • We have a problem: • What happens when academia meets Generation Y?
There is Hope! • Gen Y can be managed. Here are some tips: • Use transactional authority to your advantage.
More Tips • Clear expectations and clear rewards • It may not be money. • Example: • Daniel has multiple jobs. • Research experience medical school
The importance of context • Factors that are beyond their control • Natural disasters, etc. that limit their potential role. • Where they fit in the larger picture • Customer versus employee/student
Motivation • External – constant external rewards • Internal – motivated for personal reasons
Carol Dweck on Praise • Person praise • Process praise • Setbacks – • Learned helplessness
Across the desk • Ice cream sandwich • Praise the process • Checklists with clear expectations • Look for the transaction – • Find the underlying interest
Negotiate where you can. • Stand strong and clear where you can’t. • Train them to do their own work
What’s Next • Gen Y and a slow economy • Work habits • Entitlement • Parental support – • Definiti0n of success • Global economy ?
Reference: Journal Article • Kamins, M. L. and Dweck, C. S. 1999. Person versus process praise and criticism: implications for contingent self-worth and coping. Developmental Psychology, 35:3, pp. 835-847.