Title: People%20Centered%20Leadership%20Post%20Graduate%20Course%20in%20Effective%20Leadership
1- People Centered LeadershipPost Graduate Course
in Effective Leadership - Alberto Zucconi
- World Academy of Art and Science (WAAS)
- World University Consortium (WUC)
- Person Centered Approach Institute (IACP)
- azucconi_at_iacp.it
- azucconi_at_worldacademy.org
- Inter- University Centre (IUC), March 31-April
3, 2015 , Dubrovnik, Slovenia
2- WE live in a period of globalization and of
growing complexity. - In order to meet our present and future
challenges every community needs effective ways
to cope.
3- WE need to facilitate the emerging of effective
leaders at every level of society - We need effective leaders at every level
- We need leaders that are healthy, not
narcissistic or psychopathic ones - We need leaders that are people centered
- and emphatic
- We need leaders that are generous and not
selfish ones - We need leaders that empower their people not
those that enslave them
4- Independent, resilient and
- empowered people
- are more creative
- and capable of
- effective crisis management than those who are
just passive followers
5- How well do you listen? Listening is a key
leadership skill - Gail Reichert
6- Carl Rogers is a good example of a people -
centered leader, a firm believer on empowerment - When he was asked, "What is a good leader?" Carl
would pull a crumpled piece of paper out of his
wallet and read aloud what Lao Tzu had written - When his task is accomplished and things have
been completed, all the people say, we ourselves
have achieved it!
7- In my early professional years I was asking the
question How can I treat, or cure, or change
this person? Now I would phrase the question in
this way - How can I provide a relationship which this
person may use for his own personal growth? - Carl Rogers
8- When I look at the world I'm pessimistic, but
when - I look at people
- I am optimistic.
- Carl Rogers
-
9- The only person who is educated is the one who
has learned how to learn and change. - Carl Rogers
10- Classic economic theory, based as it is on an
inadequate theory of human motivation, could be
revolutionized by accepting the reality of higher
human needs, including the impulse to self
actualization and the love for the highest
values. - Abraham Maslow
11- "Of all the tools available to us in dealing with
conflict, none is more important than attentive,
intentional listening. - Listening helps reduce resistance and opens our
thinking to creative solutions. - Listening not only clarifies the message but
changes both the messenger and the listener.
Listening makes it possible for both sides to
have a change of heart." - Brian Muldon
12- Man's inability to communicate is a result of
his failure to listen effectively. - Carl Rogers
13- It is better to lead from behind and to put
others in front, especially when you celebrate
victory when nice things occur. You take the
front line when there is danger. Then people will
appreciate your leadership. - Nelson Mandela
14- Courageous people do not fear forgiving, for the
sake of peace - Nelson Mandela
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16- When a person realizes he has been deeply
heard, his eyes moisten. I think in some real
sense he is weeping for joy. It is as though he
were saying, "Thank God, somebody heard me.
Someone knows what it's like to be me. - Carl Rogers
17- "When I ask you to listen and you start giving
advice, you have not done what I have asked. - When I ask you to listen and you start telling me
why I shouldn't feel the way I do, you are
invalidating my feelings. - When I ask you to listen and you start trying to
solve my problems, I feel underestimated and
disempowered. When I ask you to listen and you
start telling me what I need to do, I feel
offended, pressured and controlled. When I ask
you to listen, it does not mean I am helpless.
18- When I ask you to listen and you do things that I
can and need to do for myself, you hurt my
self-esteem. - But when you accept the way I feel, then I don't
need to spend time and energy trying to defend
myself or convince you, and I can focus on
figuring out why I feel the way I feel and what
to do about it. - And when I do that, I don't need advice, just
support, trust and encouragement. - Please remember that what you think are
irrational feelings always makes sense if you
take the time to listen and understand me." - Mark Brady
19- "Of all the skills of leadership, listening is
the most valuable and one of the least
understood. - Most captains of industry listen only sometimes,
and they remain ordinary leaders. - But a few, the great ones, never stop listening.
- That's how they get word before anyone else of
unseen problems and opportunities." - Peter Nulty - National Business Hall of Fame
Fortune Magazine
20- Big egos have little ears.
- Robert Schuller
21- "The ear of the leader must ring with the voices
of the people." - Woodrow Wilson
22- Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak
courage is also what it takes to sit down and
listen. - Winston Churchill
23- Participative vs. Autocratic Leadership
- A growing body of research shows that companies
with a participative management style are more
financially successful than those with autocratic
styles. More and better ideas, free flow of
information, improved decisions, higher
productivity, higher morale, less absenteeism,
lower turnover - all have a positive impact on
the bottom line. - A 10-year study of 30 companies published in 1996
demonstrated that organizations that
consistently practice good people management
create an environment that reduces--even
eliminates--significant workplace stressors--have
higher sales, profit, growth and margins -
(Kravetz, 1996)
24- Leadership is a set of functions that are the
property of the group and should be distributed
to group members. - The most effective leader is one who creates the
conditions by which s/he will give up the
traditional leadership role and become more of a
group member. Consequently, group members will
then carry out some of the functions of the
leader. - Group problems require participative group
problem-solving. - Leaders create the conditions in which all the
group members feel safe to communicate their
ideas and feelings. - Group-centered leaders set a model of empathic
listening , - Group-centered leaders convey acceptance of the
members communication. - Thomas Gordon
25- Emotional Intelligence
- is the ability of people to recognize emotions
both in themselves and in others to understand
and communicate about their emotions hear and
understand others feelings - and build and maintain satisfying relationships
with others. - Research has shown that EQ is more important than
IQ in determining ones success in life, both as
individuals and in relationships with others.
26- Social Intelligence (SI) is the ability to get
along well with others, and to get them to
cooperate with you. SI informally referred as
"people skills," includes an awareness of
situations and the social dynamics that govern
them, and a knowledge of interaction styles and
strategies that can help a person achieve his or
her objectives in dealing with others. It also
involves a certain amount of self-insight and a
consciousness of one's own perceptions and
reaction patterns. - From the standpoint of interpersonal skills, Karl
Albrecht classifies behavior toward others as
falling somewhere on a spectrum between "toxic"
effect and "nourishing" effect. Toxic behavior
makes people feel devalued, angry, frustrated,
guilty or otherwise inadequate. Nourishing
behavior makes people feel valued, respected,
affirmed, encouraged or competent.
27- Characteristics of the Most Effective Leaders
- They decrease the power differential between self
and team members - They create conditions for distributing the
leadership function throughout the group - They show respect for the intrinsic worth of
team members - They show respect for team members as individuals
who are different from the leader - They deeply feel that people arent there to be
used, directed, or influenced to accomplish only
the leaders aims - They listen with empathy
- They demonstrate acceptance
- They express their own beliefs, needs and ideas
honestly, clearly, and without blame - They work to resolve conflicts in a win-win way
that creates mutual need satisfaction
28- Do I really trust the capacity of the team and
of the individuals on it to solve the problems
facing us? Or do I basically trust only myself? - Do I create a climate in which my team can have
creative discussions by being willing to hear,
understand, accept and respect all input? Or do I
find myself trying to influence the outcome of
discussions? - Do I honestly express my own beliefs and ideas
without trying to control those of others? - When there are problems and conflicts, do I make
it possible for them to be brought out into the
open, or do I subtly communicate that they should
be kept hidden?
29- Skills to meet group members needs
- 1. Behavior that increases group members
self-esteem and personal worth. - 2. Behavior that increases group cohesiveness and
team spirit. - Skills to meet organizational needs
- 1. Behavior that motivates productivity and the
achievement of group goals. - 2. Behavior that helps members reach goals
planning, scheduling, coordinating,
problem-solving, providing resources. - Skills to resolve conflicts
- 1.The effective leader must learn skills to
resolve the inevitable conflicts that arise among
his team members
30- Promoting processes that protect and foster the
development of fully functioning persons,
families, groups, organizations and communities
and that foster the development of effective,
compassionate and people centered leaders is not
only of vital importance for human survival and
welfare but also for the welfare of the entire
planet.
31 Humanistic Psychology instead of
focusing only on pathology has studied people
that are particularly healthy and fully
functioning, investigating the common
denominators of those people
Humanistic Psychology instead of focalizing only
on pathology has studied people that are
particularlHumanistic Psychology instead of
focalizing only on pathology has studied people
that are particularly healthy and fully
functioning, investigating the common
denominators of those people y healthy and fully
functioning, investigating the common
denominators of those people
32- Kurt Goldstein described self-actualization as
the tendency to actualize, as much as possible,
the organism's individual capacities in the
world. - The tendency toward self-actualization is the
only drive by which the life of an organism is
determined.
33- Abraham Maslow based his theory on his case
studies of historical figures whom he saw as
examples of self-actualized individuals
including Albert Einstein, Ruth Benedict,
Frederick Douglass, Jane Addams Eleanor
Roosevelt, Max Wertheimer, Henry David Thoreau.
- Maslow examined the lives of each of these people
in order to asses the common qualities that led
each to become self-actualized.
34- In general he found that these individuals were,
accepting of themselves and of their life
circumstances very creative focused on finding
solutions to cultural problems rather than just
to concentrate on personal problems open to
others' opinions and ideas had a strong sense of
privacy, autonomy, human values and appreciation
of life and a few intimate friendships rather
than many superficial ones. - They also all reported the frequent occurrence of
peak experiences . These occasions were marked by
feelings of harmony and deep meaning feeling at
one with the universe.
35- For Carl Rogers human nature has a fundamental
tendency, the actualizing tendency where
self-awareness generates self-regulation.
36- The research of Carl Rogers and his group on the
fully functioning person found the following
common denominators - Self aware, integrated, in touch, deep,
authentic, trusting, creative, good capacity for
affiliation and communication, balanced and
realistic - Psychological health, maturity, existential
depth, effective self- regulation, respect for
themselves and others - Openness to experience (instead of the rigid
defense stance of the person feeling under
threat) - Personality mature, fluid, absence of rigidity /
fundamentalism - Maximum of adaptability
- Trust in themselves, their organism, intuitions,
feelings and values - Sense of direction, purpose, leadership qualities
37- The process of the fully functioning person is
seen by Rogers as a challenge - This process is not, I am convinced, a life for
the faint-hearted. - It involves the stretching and growing of
becoming more and more of one's potentialities. - It involves the courage to be.
-
-
(Carl Rogers 1961)
38- Carl Rogers research over the last 70 years has
identified specific qualities in relationships
which promote the development of fully
functioning people as well as the healing of
partially functioning people - Respect
- Empathic understanding
- Authenticity/congruence (deep contact)
39- People that are related to in this nourishing way
tend to reproduce these qualities in their - new relationships.
40- We need more people and especially more
leaders that relate to themselves, to others and
to the planet with more - Respect
- Empathy
- Authenticity/congruence (deep contact)
41- By fostering the conditions that protect and
promote individuality, people centered leadership
in all the processes of the construction of
reality, identity, social roles and behaviors. - By relating to others in respectful, emphatic,
genuine and congruent ways in the fields of - Parenting
- Schooling
- Workplaces
- Community
- Society
- Culture
42- We will be part of the solutions
- and not of the problems afflicting present
society
43 44- Alberto Zucconi
- azucconi_at_iacp.it
- azucconi_at_worldacademy.org
- World Academy of Art and Science
- www.worldacademy.org
- World University Consortium (WUC)
- www.wunicon.org
- Person Centered Approach Institute (IACP)
- www.iacp.it