Saturday, July 26, 2014

Encouraging Stronger Leadership with the ALDS Program



Military training principles are often used in both the military and corporate world to varying degrees of success. They are intense programs designed to test the very nature and central identity of individuals. Lt. Colonel Beurskens discusses the nature and benefit of the 2013 Army Leader Development Strategy (ALDS) that develops critical and creative thinking that solves problems. 

ALDS uses training, experience, and education to create operational, institutional, and developmental spheres of leadership enhancement. Programs offer opportunities to blur the lines between these three spheres to develop something stronger. 

In 2010 the U.S. Army Combined Armed Center tested the success of the program to develop captains that have technical, tactical, knowledge, and skills to lead company size units and work within battalions and brigade staffs. 

They found that there is no substitute for a high quality leader in small group functions. Likewise, curriculum must be updated, relevant, and rigorous for the program to work well. The updating and alignment of technology to small group learning is important.

The programs are enhanced with knowledgeable instructors from diverse backgrounds, opportunities to social network, and time to recover, achieve, and rebalance after new milestones.  The components work together in a messy pathway of development to achieve their goals.

Whether one is working in the military or within the corporate center it is important to ensure that continuous improvement in training methods occur to foster the highest caliber of leaders.  People are cut from many different cloths and their development is often uniquely their own. Ensuring that the proper resources and structure are present fosters higher success rates.

 Beurkens, K. (2014) The Criticality of Captain’s Education. Military Review, 94 (2).

Friday, July 25, 2014

Call for Papers: ABE-2014 Las Vegas Fall Conference



Submission Deadline: August 10, 2014

The mission of IABE conference is to create a platform where academics, consultants and practitioners from economic fields can present their research results, can exchange their experiences or can find business solutions.

We invite papers/articles, abstracts, or cases on topics related to research, practice, and teaching in all subject areas of Business Administration, Economics, Marketing, Management, Human Resources, International Business, E-Business, Public Administration, Healthcare Administration, and related subjects areas. Please refer to our list for nearly 70 subject areas in 10 broadly defined tracks for the conference.

Online Submissions: Please submit your paper online at www.iabe.org. In case of difficulties with online submission, email your paper/abstract as an attachment to: review@iabe.org

Emotionally Intelligent Servant Leaders…a Compassionate Facilitator of Learning




By Dr Andree Swanson
 
One evening, I was exasperated over the loss of another student.  No, the student did not die, did not even move to another state or city.  This student was a loss in the program at the on ground school where I was teaching.  This student could not manage the rigor of higher education, did not come to class, did not submit work on time, and did not even try.  My mentor, Dr. Robert Throop, author of Reaching Your Potential: Personal and Professional Development, told me “you can’t save everyone!”  Throop told me that much like patients who have cancer, even though you try to save the patient (or in this case, a student), you lose some patients (students) some of the time. 

Since that date, over 15 years ago, I have been in higher education in a variety of capacities, mostly in the online arena.  I have seen many ideas to retain and support students.  Yet these ideas are like medicating the symptom without finding the root cause of the disease.  A few of them work and are often good, but a more empathetic facilitator may be more appropriate for the adult learners.  A paradigm shift must occur from getting the faculty member from the “sage on the stage” to the compassionate facilitator of learning.

 Emotional Intelligence in the Online Classroom 

In 2008, Berenson, Boyles and Weaver after doing research on emotional intelligence as a predictor for success, they concluded that knowing the soft skills attributes to student success.  If the emotional intelligence skill improves student success, woudn’t an emotionally intelligent instructor improve student success, which would, in turn, improve retention?

Many studies have been published on how individuals with high emotional intelligence can enhance and increase the potential for positive outcomes.  Those outcomes can be in the online classroom.  An example is that people can work to increase their emotional intelligence, thus, improving performance.  So, what is the performance for a compassionate facilitator of learning?   Helping the students instead of enforcing obstacles.  Adult learners WILL have obstacles, but the obstacles are not insurmountable. 

Emotional intelligence is a learned and practiced skill.  Daniel Goleman stated that for individuals in leadership positions, 85% of their competencies are in the emotionally intelligent domain.  Compassionate faculty can be trained in improving their emotional intelligence.

 Servant Leadership in the Online Classroom 

 Many faculty members may not admit this, but they are authoritarian in nature.  With courses being short, they lay down the ground rules early.  NO LATE WORK.  Ten percent deduction for each day late, etc.  Not only does this cause students stress, the professors are stressed by their own guidelines.

From my own experience, I was the instructor who stayed up until 12:01 (in your time zone) and by 12:06 I had posted all of my zeros for the next day.  Off to bed now for a good rest!  I reveled in deducting points per each day late.  This is how I will establish my grade variance, I thought.  Oftentimes, I was thankful for those that posted late just so that everyone would not “earn” the same grade.  Not only did this build stress on my students, it was very stressful for me.

It was about this time that I learned of the teachings of Robert Greenleaf, author of The Servant as Leader.   Greenleaf stated, “A servant-leader focuses primarily on the growth and well-being of people and the communities to which they belong.”  Dr. Niall Ferguson, the Laurence A. Tisch Professor of History at Harvard University, said, “As a teacher, my strategy is to encourage questioning.  I’m the least authoritarian professor you’ll ever meet.”  Some of the traits of a servant leader include humility, good listening skills, empathy, and commitment to the people who are followers.

The Compassionate Facilitator of Learning Model

  Step 1 – Learn more about improving your emotional intelligence and seek to bring these qualities into the classroom.

 Step 2 -- Humble yourself.  Establish yourself as an expert in the field.  Engage with the student in a way that shares this expertise but present yourself with humility.  This is the “you get more bees with honey” approach.

 Step 3 – Empathize with your students.  Remember the times when your baby was sick, your mother was dying, you just had a car accident.  Stuff happens.  Give the student a break.  That one break might be the one that student needs.

 Step 4 – Improve your listening skills (even in the online classroom).  Are you really reading what the student is writing to you?  When apply the Socratic method are you listening to what your student is saying?  Can you hear the real issue when the student says, “I don’t understand?”

Step 5 – Commitment to the students.  The bottom line is what you are being paid to do.  Grade papers?  Yes.  Submit your grades on time.  Yes.  Nevertheless, the most important aspect of an online faculty member’s job is helping the student be successful.

The other day Dennis Prager, a nationally syndicated talk show host, said the most important thing that parents can do is to raise children who are successful in their own right.  As online faculty members to achieve our mission is to be able to go to sleep at night and not count the zeros as they rest on your pillow.  Our daily mission is to help students achieve his or her dream.

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Little Italy’s Farmer Market Sets a High Standard



Farmer markets are a growing trend in the U.S. Little Italy’s Saturday 8am-2pm market is one of the largest in San Diego offering a wide range of products. Strolling numerous blocks of goods you will pass fruit, vegetables, bread, clothing, ethnic food, fresh fish, condiments, sculptures, live entertainment and much more. Just about anything you ever wanted out of a farmer’s market is present. 

Little Italy Farmer’s Market San Diego
8:00 am to 2:00 pm
Between W. Date and India Streets

The Italian culture seems to fit with outside displays of fresh fruit and small business artisans. Italian cuisine is loaded with red tomatoes, olive oil, oregano and other natural ingredients that are a regular draw for locals. For those who love to cook from scratch and make mouthwatering masterpieces out of their kitchens Little Italy’s Farmer Market provides them with just about everything they need.
 
Farmer markets also appeal to a broad spectrum of society and draws visitors to the business cluster increasing its influence. The average customer at a farmer’s market enjoys cooking, is female, lives with another adult and is not cost conscious (Zepeda, 2009). 

The market provides an opportunity for these customers to touch, taste, experience, and eventually purchase products making it a direct marketing strategy. One vendor of natural beauty cosmetics says she regularly receives customer feedback from around the country mentioning their first exposure to her products at the Little Italy Farmer’s Market. 

You may be more interested in household decoration and the productions of local artists. John opened his first business website at indiartster.com and hopes it will be up within a week or so. His sculptures look as though they fit well on a mantle, above a door, or in your office. All of his artistic productions have historical significance. 

Little Italy’s Farmers market occurs every Saturday making it a consistent place to go shopping and obtain supplies. Enjoy your experience and ask the vendors any question you desire. Most are more than willing to talk about their creations. Even if you don’t have anything to purchase immediately in mind you may just want to have a coffee, walk around, and listen to the music. 


Zepeda, L. (2009). Which little piggy goes to the market? Characteristics of US farmers’_market shoppers. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 33 (3).