The Cadet Leader Development System - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The Cadet Leader Development System

Description:

Celebrating 200 years of Excellence. Duty - Honor - Country: West Point at 200 years ... Competence a career of continuous learning and study ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:165
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: NM81
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Cadet Leader Development System


1
The Cadet Leader Development System
  • An organizing framework designed to coordinate
    and integrate cadet developmental activities
    across the entire West Point Experience.
  • It is designed to organize cadets experiences
    so that USMA achieves its institutional goals,
    accomplishes its assigned mission, and realizes
    its strategic vision.
  • Provides the structure, process, and content for
    cadets 47-month journey from new cadet to
    commissioned leader of character.

2
Why CLDS?
  • Few other institutions enjoy both the mandate,
    and the opportunity, to fundamentally change so
    much human potential in such a comprehensive way.
  • The West Point Experience is all about planned
    change, about systematically transforming people,
    about fundamentally shaping who they are, what
    they know, and what they can do.

3
Purpose of CLDS
  • Provides a common understanding of how we
    organize the West Point Experience
  • Aligns and synchronizes tactical execution of
    programs and activities within USMAs strategic
    guidance.

4
Strategic
Operational
Tactical
5
CLDS and Officership
  • The practice of being a commissioned Army leader,
    inspired by a unique professional identity that
    is shaped by what an officer must KNOW and DO,
    but most importantly, by what an officer must BE.
    This unique self-concept incorporates four
    inter-related roles
  • ? Warfighter
  • ? Leader of Character
  • ? Servant of the Nation
  • ? Member of a Time-Honored Profession

6
The Officer as Warfighter
  • The Functional Imperative
  • This characteristic of officership distinguishes
    Army officers from all other professionals.
  • Warrior Ethos
  • Tactical and Technical proficiency in the threat
    and application of violent force
  • Intellectual and Physical in nature
  • Characterized by a Winning Spirit

7
Servant of the Nation
  • This characteristic of Officership
  • Describes the fundamental nature of the
    relationship between the military profession and
    society,
  • Establishes the principle of military
    subordination to civilian control,
  • Establishes each officer as an agent of the
    nation - a servant,
  • Creates the moral foundation for the officers
    individual duty, and
  • Is formally embodied in the Commission itself

8
Member of a Profession
  • This characteristic of Officership describes the
    nature of the Army officer corps as a corporate
    body
  • Unique competence or expertise (Warfighters)
  • Authority delegated by society (Servants)
  • Distinct culture
  • Ethically-based
  • Leaders of Character
  • A life-long calling, not a job

9
Leader of Character
  • Leadership - the process of influencing others to
    accomplish a mission.
  • Character - those moral qualities that constitute
    the nature of a leader and shape his or her
    decisions and actions.
  • Leader of Character - seeks to discover the
    truth, decide what is right, and demonstrate the
    courage to act accordinglyalways.

10
Principles of Officership
  • Duty personal interests subordinate to
    requirements
  • Honor includes the virtues of integrity and
    honesty
  • Loyalty up and down chain of command
  • Competence a career of continuous learning and
    study
  • Teamwork primacy of the groups mission over
    self
  • Subordination to civilian authority not
    politicized
  • Leadership lead by example, always
  • Service to Country Provide the Nations security

11
Developmental Domains
  • Intellectual
  • Critical, creative thinking for effective
    response
  • Physical
  • Success in combat depends on physical condition
  • Military
  • Officers are warfighters
  • Spiritual
  • Character is rooted in who we are as individuals
  • Ethical
  • Reconcile ethical norms of officership with
    personal values
  • Social
  • Determine appropriate behavior

12
Design Principles
  • Consistent with Army Culture
  • Goal-Oriented and Standards-Based
  • Sequential and Progressive
  • Integrated and Coordinated
  • Cadet Perception of Ownership of Experience
  • Different Paths, but Common Outcome
  • Common Core
  • Required Experiences (Baseline and Enrichment)
  • Appropriate Balance between Quantity and Quality

13
Five Keys to Development
  • Readiness
  • Cadets must be ready to learn from experiences
  • Developmental Experiences
  • Marked by novelty, difficulty, and conflict to
    set occasion for growth
  • Feedback Support
  • Multiple formal and informal sources for cadets
    throughout entire 47 months
  • Reflection
  • Essential to development, but must be facilitated
  • Time
  • Cadets must assimilate discrete experiences into
    larger developmental process

14
What Develops?
  • Who cadets are
  • Facilitating process of how cadets make sense of
    what happens to them is the fundamental challenge
    of developing their self-concept as officers.
  • It is more important than knowledge and skills
  • More to our professional identity than knowledge
    and skills.
  • The BE in BE, KNOW, DO
  • How we help cadets develop a professional
    identity while simultaneously acquiring
    professional knowledge and skills.

15
The Challenge
  • How we respond to individual differences
  • From different starting points, through multiple
    paths, to the same outcome
  • How we help cadets take ownership of their
    development
  • Ultimately, it is up to cadets to make sense of
    USMAs developmental experiences in a way that
    promotes their development as Army officers
  • How we help cadets develop from success and
    failure
  • We constantly look for opportunities to reinforce
    success
  • How cadets respond to failure is more important
    than the failure itself

16
For You to Think About
  • What is your primary role developing cadets as
    commissioned officers for the Army?
  • What else can you do to help develop cadets as
    commissioned officers for the Army?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com