Site Map  ~  Forum
 
HOME
 
Forum
 
Knots
Pioneering Projects
Cooking
Ceremonies
Games
Troop Meetings
J L T
Woodbadge
Powderhorn
Hike Itineraries
Roundtable
BSA Links
Troop Links
Contact

 


Woodbadge Leadership Skills





  1. Communicating

  2. Knowing and Using Resources

  3. Understanding the Characteristics and Needs of the Group and Its Members

  4. Planning

  5. Controlling Group Performance

  6. Effective Teaching

  7. Representing the Group

  8. Evaluating

  9. Sharing Leadership

  10. Counseling

  11. Setting the Example

Skills of Leadership

Leadership Skills

The Boy Scouts of America has long been involved in the development of leadership in both its adult and youth members. A number of years ago, research and experiments led to the idea that leadership could be taught much as any other skill. Eleven leadership skills were identified as those crucial for success to a Scouting leader-although they clearly applied to other leadership roles as well. These skills of leader ship are now a part of Boy Scout Leader Wood Badge, Junior Leader Training Conference, and Post Leader Workshop and are scattered throughout items of Boy Scouts of America literature.

In the years during which these skills of leadership have been explored by the Boy Scouts of America, much research has taken place in the behavioral sciences. As a result, these skills have been brought up to date to agree with current thinking and application. As training programs are revised, the approach to leadership skills will be slightly modified to overcome these concerns.

Leadership Defined

For our purposes, leadership is defined as "the process of persuasion or example by which an individual influences a group to pursue objectives held by the leader or shared by the followers." Thus, the leadership process is a function of the leader, the follower, the goals, and the situation at the time. It is active, exerts influence, requires effort, and is related to goals.

Leadership skills become the vehicle by which the leader achieves given objectives. Leadership is the active and dynamic process of applying those leadership skills called for in given situations.

Applying Skills of Leadership

Any musician knows that an individual part in an orchestral work can sound strange if played alone. It is only when an instrument's part is blended with the other instruments in the orchestra that the beauty of the symphony or sonata emerges. The same can be said for each of the individual skills of leadership. Each functions well only when combined with the others to produce an effective leadership style.

An individual skill of leadership seldom is able to stand alone. Used in concert, each complements the other and the result can be greater than the sum of the parts. In counseling, for example, one must first evaluate the needs and characteristics of the individual to be counseled and the resources that are available. Counseling involves clear communication, an element of control, and setting a good example of representing the group's needs to the individual and vice versa. An effective teaching situation will probably involve all eleven skills to a greater or lesser extent. In a symphony orchestra, French horns are often silent, sometimes play solo passages, but more often add a richness and harmonic variety to the total work. The same applies to other instruments--and to a balance of leadership skills.

Participants in leadership or management training (and Wood Badge) often return to their home situations to make dramatic changes in leadership styles, using- the new skills they have acquired. A disaster often results. Leadership skills and management training are not designed to cause a dramatic change, but rather to help a person fine-tune the skills he or she already has. If something runs, don't fix it! Yet almost anything can be made to run a little more smoothly with some minor adjustments. A skilled mechanic seldom adjusts more than one thing at a time, however. This is the only way the mechanic can find out if the adjustment produces the desired results. The wise use of the skills of leader ship will result in an improvement if applied subtly and discreetly over a considerable period of time.

Avoid the temptation to oversimplify by asking the leader to identify a problem and one or two skills of leadership that could be used in its solution. Leader ship skills simply don't work that way--they must be used in concert with each other.

Email the Webmaster
Leadership Skills
Communicating | Knowing and Using Resources | Understanding the Characteristics and Needs of the Group and Its Members | Planning | Controlling Group Performance | Effective Teaching | Representing the Group | Evaluating | Sharing Leadership | Counseling | Setting the Example

HOME | FORUM | Knots | Pioneering Projects | Cooking | Ceremonies | Games | Troop Meetings | J L T | Woodbadge | Powderhorn | Hike Itineraries | Roundtable | BSA links | Troop Links | Contact

 

Site created, hosted & maintained by Web of Roses Web Design