Title: Leadership and Career Development
1Leadership and Career Development
- Angela Barron McBride
- Distinguished Professor-Dean Emerita
- Indiana University School of Nursing
2A Short Quiz
- Do you want to be a leader?
- How do you define or describe leadership?
- Do you know what you should be working on in your
current career stage? - What do you do to stay optimistic about nursing
and your own career?
3Overview of Presentation
- Reflections on leadership
- Key transitions in a research career
- Sustaining career optimism
- Final thoughts
4Leadership Is More Important than Ever Before
- Leadership as personal qualitiesthoughtful,
creative, resilient, courageous, responsive,
self-aware - Leadership as goal attainmentinterpersonal and
communication effectiveness, resource development - Leadership as transformationalstrategic vision,
innovation, altering organizational realities
5The Leadership Hierarchy
- Level 1. Highly capable individualskilled,
knowledgeable, good work habits - Level 2. Contributing team memberhelps achieve
group objectives and works well with others - Level 3. Competent managerorganizes people and
resources to achieve predetermined objectives
6- Level 4. Effective leadercatalyzes commitment
to and pursuit of a vision that stimulates higher
performance - Level 5. Executivebuilds enduring greatness
through a paradoxical blend of personal humility
and professional will - J. Collins, 2005, Good to great and the social
sectors.
7Geriatric Nursing Leadership
- a process whereby the leader, either emergent
or formally designated, catalyzes others in order
to achieve shared values in an environment where
the meaning of healthy aging is evolving along
with structural supports
8The Overlap between Leadership and Research
- communication, collaboration, building morale,
understanding the demands of the larger
environment, thinking in a fresh way about
issues, strategizing, designing processes to
achieve goals, obtaining resources, evaluating
outcomes, and using any successes in furtherance
of the next round of goals
9What are the key transitions in a research career?
- Preparation
- PI Stage
- Program Development
- Development of Field
- Gadfly (or wise person) Stage
10Career Steps From Novice to Expert
Center Grants
(P30, P50, P60)
Research Training
Grants (R37,
T32)
Research
Project Grant
(R01)
Expert
Planning or Exploratory Award
(R21)
Mentored Career Awards
(K01, K08, K23)
Small Pilot Grant
(R03)
Post-Doc
(F32)
Novice
Pre-Doc .
(F31) developed by Dr. Taylor Harden
11Stage I. PREPARATION
- Central Activity Learning
- Primary Relationship Student, Teaching/Research
Assistant - Major Theme Assimilating values, knowledge
base, and inquiry skills important to a research
career
12PREPARATION
- Obtain formal education (undergraduate, graduate,
postdoctoral research training) and appropriate
additional credentials - Seek socialization experiences, including joining
professional organizations and working as a
teaching and/or research assistant
13- Develop the habits of precision (e.g., time
management, bookmarking internet sites,
organizing files and lists of contacts) - Attend to information technology (IT) learning
needs - Learn to network
- Observe/analyze the successful, and seek their
mentoring
14- Find workable strategies for personal stress
management, so you can manage the long run - Seek validating outcomes, e.g., funding,
refereed presentations and publications, honors - Honestly analyze strengths and limitations
15Stage II. PI STAGE
- Central Activity Moving from fledgling to
competence - Primary Relationship Colleague
- Major Theme Dealing with the inevitable gap
between ideals learned and the realities of work
setting
16PI STAGE
- Develop program of research
- Build collegial network, clinical connections,
and research team - Take full advantage of strengths, opportunities,
and aspirations of home setting - Obtain needed resources
17- Join discourse community of field as a first
(or sole) author and a peer reviewer - Figure out how to turn all investments into
outcomes - Learn to give and get criticism
- Learn to articulate the meaning of your work in
a range of groups
18Stage III. PROGRAM
DEVELOPMENT
- Central Activity Facilitating home institution
- Primary Relationship Mentor, Administrator,
Supervisor - Major Theme Assuming responsibility for
development of others and of setting
19PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT
- Nurture colleagues in earlier career stages
- Build home settings infrastructure and resources
- Engage in strategic planning around research
development of home institution
20- Build program(s) on home settings strengths
- Learn to juggle multiple grants
- Develop political savvy and a tolerance for
ambiguity - Expand purview of own work, e.g., establishing
multi-site and/or multidisciplinary
collaborations - Build institutional image
21 IU Center for Enhancing Quality of Life in
Chronic Illness Umbrella Conceptual Framework
Perceptions Related to illness Related to health
behaviors Related to stress
Translation into Practice
Contextual Characteristics Person
characteristics Physical characteristics Disease
and treatment characteristics Family and
environment
Quality-of-Life Outcomes Physical
well-being Neuro-cognitive well-being Psychologica
l well-being Social well-being Spirituality
Tailored Behavioral Interventions
Behaviors Coping behaviors Treatment/illness
behaviors Health promotion behaviors
22 Interdisciplinary Collaboration Formal Links
Between Nursing and Other Fields
Regenstrief Institute for Health Care Dr.
William Tierney Dr. Tom Inui Dr. Rich
Frankel IUs Center for Excellence in Womens
Health Dr. Rose Fife IUs Center for Aging
Research Dr. Christopher Callahan IU Center
for Bioethics Dr. Sandra Petronio IUs General
Clinical Research Center Dr. Munro Peacock IUs
Cancer Center Dr. Stephen Williams Dr. Hal
Broxmeyer IU Center for Health Services and
Outcomes Research Dr. Brad Doebbling Bowen
Research Center Dr. Terry Zollinger Dr.
Bob Saywell IUs Diabetes Center Dr. David
Marrero IUs Alzheimer Disease Center Dr.
Martin Farlow Dr. Mary Austrom IU
Leadership Education in Adolescent Health
(LEAH) Dr. Donald Orr IU Clinical Research
Curriculum Dr. Kurt Kroenke Rehabilitation
Psychology, School of Science (IUPUI) Dr. Gary
Bond, Child Psychiatry Dr. David
Dunn Biostatistics Dr. Susan M.
Perkins Clarian Health Partners Dr. Steven
Ivy Dr. Ora Pescovitz IU School of
Medicine, Childrens Health Services Research
Dr. Nancy Swigonski
- CENTER FOR ENHANCING QOL IN CHRONIC ILLNESS
- Institutional Research Training Grant in Health
Behavior Nursing - Mary Margaret Walther Program in Oncology Care
- Behavioral Cooperative Oncology Group
formal role/CEQL formal role on
research training grant formal role on
another research-related
committee or project of School of
Nursing
23Stage IV. DEVELOPMENT OF FIELD
- Central Activity Shaping profession and health
care - Primary Relationship Leader
- Major Theme Exercising power of authority and
creating a vision for the future
24DEVELOPMENT OF FIELD
- Serve as advisor to regional, national, and/or
international efforts and organizations - Build fields infrastructure/resources
- Work with other fields to achieve common goals
- Participate in consensus conferences
25- Articulate research agenda of specialty or field
- Link research to policy formation
- Prepare successor generations
- Establish reputation/legacy, e.g., new programs
within a professional association - Build image of field
26- Consider whether you will seek positions that go
beyond the discipline specific, e.g., program
officer, vice president for research - Prepare for multidisciplinary leadership
27Stage V. GADFLY or Wise Person STAGE
- Central Activity Continue to shape profession
and health care - Primary Relationship Advisor, Coach
- Major Theme Exercising power of authority when
no longer constrained by institutional obligations
28(No Transcript)
29GADFLY STAGE
- Serve as a consultant to regional, national,
and/or international efforts and organizations - Speak and write provocatively about issues of the
day, and how issues of the day are embedded in
history of field and of health care
30- Function as a wise, affirming (wo)man, e.g.,
recommending colleagues for honors/special
experiences - Take on special projects that require
synthesizing skills and high-level integrative
abilities - Coach the next generation of leaders
31Sustaining Career Optimism
- Expect failure
- Monitor how you think, particularly your
explanation patterns - Learn the art of reframing The bright know
what the ideal might look like, so it is not
surprising that they regularly feel inadequate in
the current situation - Build on your strengths
- Associate with the optimistic
- See self as an executive property deserving to be
well maintained - Manage anger
32Final Thoughts
- Leadership in the 21st century will involve
increased collaboration across fields - Publishing in interdisciplinary journals
- Leadership positions in interdisciplinary
organizations - Shared training and developmental opportunities
33- For the first time, we truly have the opportunity
to build the science - Developing individuals and infrastructure
supports - Developing programs and centers
- This will require more collaboration across
institutions - Consortia arrangements
- Synthesizing structures
34- Remember that you live each day suspended between
maximizing your strengths/opportunities and
ruminating about your limitations/ problems.
Focusing on the former will give you energy
focusing on the latter will drain you.
35(No Transcript)