1 / 36

Leading From Within: Foundations of Collaborative Leadership

Leading From Within: Foundations of Collaborative Leadership. Milwaukee Public Schools October 14, 2013. The Tightrope Walker Once there was a tightrope walker who performed unbelievable aerial feats. All over Paris, he had done tightrope acts at great heights. He

enoch
Download Presentation

Leading From Within: Foundations of Collaborative Leadership

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Leading From Within: Foundations of Collaborative Leadership Milwaukee Public Schools October 14, 2013

  2. The Tightrope Walker Once there was a tightrope walker who performed unbelievable aerial feats. All over Paris, he had done tightrope acts at great heights. He followed his initial acts with succeeding ones, while pushing a wheelbarrow. A promoter in America (sic) heard about this and Wrote to him, inviting the daredevil To perform his act over the waters And dangers of Niagara Falls. He added, “I don’t believe you can do it…. 2

  3. The tightrope walker accepted the challenge. After much promotion And planning, the man appeared before a huge crowd gathered to see the event. He was to start on the Canadian side and walk to the American side. Drums rolled and Everyone gasped as they watched the performer walk across the wire blindfolded with a wheelbarrow. When he stepped off on the American side, the crowd went wild. Then the tightrope walker turned to the promoter and said, “Well, now do you believe I can do it?” 3

  4. “Sure I do,” the promoter answered.“I just saw you do it.” “No, no, no,” said the tightrope walker. “Do you really believe I Can do it?” “I just said I did.” “I mean do you really believe?” “Yes, I believe!”

  5. “Good,” said the tightrope walker, “then get in the wheelbarrow and we’ll go Back to the other side.” Tim Hansel

  6. Protocols • Assume Good Intentions • Ouch/Oops • Make the experience work • Right to Pass • Others?

  7. Opening Activities • Paired Activities – p. 25 • Get It Back • Quadrants

  8. Fundamental Beliefs of Collaborative Leadership • Everyone has the capacity to lead • Leadership comes from within a group • Leadership takes place in the context of relationships • In order to lead, one must have the opportunity to lead • Leadership involves risk taking • Leadership involves an action orientation • Learning to lead is a lifelong journey

  9. AGENDA • Introduction • Exploration of collaborative leadershipWhat is Collaboration?What is Leadership?What is Collaborative Leadership? • Connection to your situation • Closing

  10. What is collaboration? “We will surely get to our destination if we join hands.”Aung San Suu Kyi Burmese political leader

  11. 1.A Develop Group Cohesion, p. 20 • Create basic ground rules • Choose from the activities and process • Have students keep track of activities • Journal • Shackleton Voyage • Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer • Discussions about the two events • Chart of productive & non-productive groups • Create a Social Contract for the Class

  12. 1.CDifferentiate Between Cooperation & Collaboration, p. 69 • Create base teams • Human Treasure Hunt • Puzzles Activity • Pi Chart for Cooperation • ABC Pyramid Activity • Processing Questions • Information about Cooperation & Collaboration • Base Team Definitions • Established Definitions • Revisit own definitions • Guest speaker or interviews • Class puzzle on Collaboration • Vignettes • Journal • Rubric • Channel Activity • Self assessment using rubric

  13. Cooperation: 1+1 = 2 Concert, joint action, co-acting, commonality, concurrence, joining of hands, common effort, common enterprise or endeavor

  14. Collaboration: 1+1=3 Concur, harmonize, go into partnership with, get together and team up and buddy up, pull together, hold together, hang together, keep together, stand shoulder-to-shoulder

  15. What are your definitions of cooperation and collaboration?

  16. ABC Pyramid Activity Puzzle, Vignettes, Rubric, Self Rating Reflection Questions Information on Cooperation & Collaboration + Definitions

  17. 1.D Skills & Tools for Collaboration, p. 83 • Group Juggle with a Twist • Discussion • Create list of skills for productive group work

  18. What is leadership? “You do not lead by hitting people over the head - that's assault, not leadership.” ~ Dwight D. EisenhowerUS President and General

  19. 2.B Compose a Personal Definition of Leadership, p. 169 • Think/Pair/Share • Paper about leadership role model • Trade papers and discuss (groups of 3) • Group Brainstorm • Life skills that support leadership • Journal – strong traits for self • SMART goal around one life skill • Journal – Personal definition of leadership

  20. Think/Pair/Share Who Do you admire as a leader and why? 1 Minute to think 2 minutes each to talk and listen 3 minutes to converse

  21. 2.D Explore Different Views of Leadership, p. 185 • Leadership Egg Drop • Discussion • Traditional Views of Leadership • Examples of when each is useful • Situational Leadership • Journal • Acknowledged leaders • Research • Collage • 100-200 word caption for collage • Gallery walk

  22. Traditional Leadership Styles (p. 190) Autocratic Democratic Laissez Faire Situational® Leadership Stage 1: Directing responsibility, low independence :Low Stage 2: Coaching:Low responsibility, medium independence Stage 3: Supporting:Medium responsibility, medium independence Stage 4: Delegating:High responsibility, high independence

  23. Leadership is a reciprocal process of encouraging and supporting people in the pursuit of goals shared by members of a group, organization, or community. Jack Christ, Chair Leadership Studies Ripon College, Ripon WI Executive Director, Wisconsin Leadership Institute

  24. What is collaborative leadership? “Collaboration works when … leaders… keep the process going.” ~ Chrislipand LarsonAuthors of Collaborative Leadership (1994)

  25. 3.C Use Collaborative Leadership Qualities & Values, p. 222 • Balloon Frantic Activity (or Keypunch) • Discussion • Qualities of a Collaborative Leader • Self Assessment on C.L. • Classroom Parts Activity • Compare with C.L. Qualities • Compare C.L. with Traditional/Situational (see p. 4-5) • Ropes Course • Journal • Journal • Plan a gathering

  26. Leadership is a reciprocal process of encouraging and supporting people in the pursuit of goals shared by members of a group, organization, or community. Jack Christ, Chair Leadership Studies Ripon College, Ripon WI Executive Director, Wisconsin Leadership Institute

  27. Collaborative leadership is a reciprocal process of encouraging and supporting relationships within which people can pursue a variety of shared goals over extended periods of time. • Jack Christ, Chair • Leadership Studies • Ripon College, Ripon WI • Executive Director, Wisconsin Leadership Institute

  28. Leadership is a reciprocal process of encouraging and supporting… Collaborative leadership is a reciprocal process of encouraging and supporting… …people in the pursuit of goals shared by members of a group, organization, or community. … relationshipswithin which people can pursue a variety of shared goals over extended periods of time.

  29. I Went on a Search I went on a search to become a leader. I searched high and low. I spoke with authority, people listened. But at last there was one who was wiser than I and they followed him/her. I sought to inspire confidence but the crowd responded, “Why should we trust you?” I postured and I assumed the look of leadership with a countenance that glowed with confidence and pride. But the crowd passed by and never noticed my air of elegance. I ran ahead of the others pointing new ways to new heights. I demonstrated that I knew the route to greatness. And then I looked back and I was alone. “What shall I do?” I queried. “I’ve tried hard and used all that I know.”

  30. And then I listened to the voices around me. And I heard what the group was trying to accomplish. I rolled up my sleeves and joined in the work. As we worked I asked, “Are we all together in what we want to do, and how we’ll get the job done?” And we thought together and we struggled towards our goal. I found myself encouraging the faint hearted. I sought the ideas of those too shy to speak out, I taught those who knew little at all. I praised those who worked hard. When our task was completed, one of the group members turned to me and said, “This would not have been done but for your leadership.”

  31. At first I said, “I did not lead, I just worked with the rest.” And then I understood -- leadership isn’t a goal. I lead best when I forget about myself as a leader and focus on my group, their needs and their goals. To lead is to serve, to give, to achieve together. • ~ Anonymous

More Related