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Introduction to Course

Introduction to Course. Leaders in Health Namibia. Activity: What is your Leadership Style?. Adapted from Anita Verna Crofts, University of Washington. Only three things happen naturally in organizations: Friction, Confusion, and Underperformance.

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Introduction to Course

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  1. Introduction to Course Leaders in Health Namibia

  2. Activity: What is your Leadership Style? Adapted from Anita Verna Crofts, University of Washington.

  3. Only three things happen naturally in organizations: Friction, Confusion, and Underperformance. Everything else requires leadership. - Peter Drucker Source: International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH). 2010.

  4. WHO Health System Framework Source: World Health Organization, 2007.

  5. Health System Building Blocks Leadership is an essential component of health systems strengthening. Source: World Health Organization, 2007.

  6. Why Leaders in Health series? “Good leadership and management can be learned and must be taught alongside required technical competencies as an essential component of health systems strengthening” O’Neil, Mary L. 2008. Human Resource Leadership: the Key to Improved Results in Health, Human Resources for Health 2008, 6:10..

  7. Self-Awareness Knowing Who You Are Leadership Development Framework Self-DeterminationPracticing and refining skills Self-Development Learning & improving skills Source: International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH), 2010.

  8. Leading from Within (1) • A leader is a person… • With an unusual degree of power to project on other people his or her shadow, or his or her light. • With an unusual degree of power to create the conditions under which other people must live. • Who must take special responsibility for what is going on inside him/herself, lest the act of leadership create more harm than good. Source: Living the Questions: Essays Inspired by the Work and Life of Parker J. Palmer (2005)

  9. Leading from Within (2) • Practicing the habits of leadership builds strong character. • Building character is more important than learning skills and techniques. • We must always be asking: • What values and principles are universal? • What constitutes good character in different settings? • What can we learn from other leadership traditions? • Who are the non-Western writers, leaders, and philosophers that we can learn from? • Leadership takes courage.

  10. “My supervisor and myself have different values. I cannot change her values and I have realized that. What I can change is myself and how I interact with her. This workshop has helped me realize how I need to be open to understanding different type(s) of viewpoints and how I need to first understand where they are coming from.” LIH Namibia Participant

  11. Leadership at All Levels (1) • Stereotypes of a “leader” can harm an organization. • Leading and managing are commitments and practices that can be carried out by people at every level of an organization. • Leadership is the property of the group, and must be distributed. • The true leader elicits the strength of the group.

  12. Leadership at All Levels (2) Rank does not confer privilege or give power. It imposes responsibility. - Peter Drucker You don’t want leaders, you want leadership. - Richard Farson Only followers can confer leadership upon a leader. - John W. Gardner

  13. Core Competencies of Series • Leadership • Management • Communication and Storytelling • Policy and Advocacy

  14. Series Structure Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Face to face Workshop Distance Learning GH 521 Course Face to face Workshop

  15. Phase I • The MSH Leadership and Management Framework • The 8 Habits of Highly Successful People • Visual and Storytelling Tools for Leaders • Communication Styles • Public Speaking • Public Policy and Advocacy

  16. Phase II • Leading and Managing Framework • Leading from Within • Team Building • Influence without Authority • Persuasive Communication • Using Monitoring Data in Management Decision Making • Strategic Planning

  17. Phase III • Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI) • Narrating the Storytelling Assignment • The 8 Habits of Highly Effective People • Policy Development and Advocacy

  18. Participant Handbook • LIH Introduction • Agenda • Biographies • Handouts & Articles • DGH521 Syllabus • Contact information

  19. Learning Environment • Psychological Safety • Openness to New Ideas • Appreciation of Differences • Time for Reflection

  20. Pre-Test

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