Engaging Emerging leaders: Working
with Young and Nontraditional
Student
Leaders
For many youth, the perception that they may be
included in the broad category of being "a leader"
doesn't always feel natural. Often, the larger
population of students in a school identifies or
segregates the "leaders" from the others. In their
minds, they perceive that leaders are those who run
for (and win) student council, lead the athletic
teams, or serve on advisory boards -for the
principal. In some settings, this student perception
may be an accurate reflection of the leadership
development efforts of staff and faculty at the
school. However, conscientious leadership educators,
increasingly sensitive to the immense diversity of
characteristics and behaviors of leaders, should be
capable of identifying emerging leaders outside the
traditional positions, and likewise, develop
programs and opportunities that assist those youth
in expressing their leadership potential. Most
significant in developing the leadership potential
of youth is paying attention to two student
populations-- young leaders on the cusp of taking on
more significant leadership roles, and
nontraditional student leaders, individuals who are
leaders in their own right yet have not been widely
identified or nurtured because of limited
opportunities to display these talents.
Working with Young Leaders In some ways, young
leaders are a step ahead of nontraditional leaders
because they generally have already engaged in some
type of visible leadership experience. These
experiences may include participation in a school
committee, athletic participation through childhood,
running for a secondary leadership position, club
membership, youth group participation, or attending
a leadership workshop. In doing these activities,
these students have started to self-actualize
whether or not they enjoy taking on the roles
related to being a leader.
Depending upon the school culture
(positive/negative) and intrinsic or extrinsic
rewards of experiences, young leaders are vulnerable
to ceasing to go on with developing leadership
skills. At this point, it is crucial for adults who
work with these youth to take time to expose them to
additional leadership experiences that reinforce the
value of being a leader. Most important, these
experiences must be meaningful, not simply token,
and should require the use of personal skills that
demonstrate leadership ability. As a young leader
develops greater self-confidence in his or her
ability to make a difference in the school and
community, the attractiveness of being a leader
increases.
Young leaders must have opportunities that not
only build upon personal abilities but also provide
a safe environment for trying new things. For
example, if a young leader attempts to plan an event
without support or formalized skill development, he
or she likely will become frustrated and step away
from future opportunities. Likewise, if a young
leader makes a mistake and is not given a chance to
reflect on and apply the lessons of that mistake,
apprehension about taking on the responsibility of
leading will overshadow the rewards that could come
from future successes. Adults can greatly affect
these emerging leaders by respecting their present
experiences rather than wanting them to demonstrate
more sophisticated leadership skills than for what
they are prepared. Adults can also encourage greater
leadership involvement by providing leadership
development efforts that reflect how leadership
skills apply in daily life and for the future.
Working with Nontraditional Leaders
Nontraditional leaders are those who have not taken
intentional steps to be recognized as leaders in
school. These students are active in volunteering,
tutoring others, being a student assistant, or
working outside of school; are members of a club
without holding a position; or have informal
leadership within their group of friends.
Nontraditional leaders are also those who may be
viewed by adults and peers as high-risk or lacking
potential to make a positive difference in school.
Most can agree, however, that informal leaders often
have greater influence on peer behaviors than
student leaders who are insensitive to the broader
student population or remain in cliques comprised
only of other student leaders.
As with young leaders, it is important to inspire
these youth by acknowledging the leadership skills
and experiences they have gained through their
existing involvement. For example, a student who
actively volunteers develops strengths in
communication, team work, resourcefulness,
dependability, working for the greater good, and so
forth. The simple act of inviting this student to
participate in a formal leadership experience such
as a workshop or class echoes the value of his or
her skills even if they have not been exhibited in
school. Many nontraditional leaders will be less
likely to participate in leadership activities if
they have to develop a campaign or be selected by
others, primarily because they tend to recognize
their internal strengths and successes as leaders,
even if their ability isn't apparent to others.
A latent talent group of nontraditional leaders
are those viewed by others as at-risk-delinquents,
special needs students, non-attenders, teen parents,
and so forth. In general, these teens are overlooked
and undervalued with regards to their potential
contributions as leaders. Ironically, their innate
leadership skills are incredible because they often
struggle to survive in a complex environment, with
the truth of this environment hidden from the
greater awareness of adults and peers. When equipped
with leadership skills, at-risk youth become
resilient youth who are able to take care of their
destinies instead of drifting through school. Again,
a simple invitation to participate gives these
nontraditional leaders the sense that someone else
believes in them.
Suggestions and Action Steps Following are some
actions that can help transform the leadership
potential of young and nontraditional leaders, as
well as inspire these youth to continue on the path
to explore more deeply what leadership means in
their lives:
* Develop meaningful leadership experiences that
allow youth to self-select for participation (rather
than relying upon votes, nominations, or other
selection processes)
* Provide consistent, frequent, and diverse
opportunities for youth to take on leadership roles
within the communities or organizations most
influential to youth (e.g., schools, youth groups,
community centers).
* Respect and be sensitive to the power of
pre-adolescent and adolescent experiences and help
students relate these to their roles and
responsibilities as leaders.
* Deliberately select different students for
leadership opportunities (workshops, conferences,
etc.) so that the same students are not repeatedly
selected.
* Involve high- or at-risk youth in
school-related leadership roles. Overlooking this
population or believing that leadership development
should serve as a reward increases the
attractiveness of negative social experiences to
take precedence (e.g., gangs, negative
peer-pressure, drug culture).
* Take advantage of formerly missed opportunities
to develop leadership. Use detention time to conduct
leadership skills activities. Challenge the
paradigm-who says students must sit doing nothing?
Teach a leadership class specifically for emerging
and nontraditional leaders, create broader selection
criteria for advisory boards, promote leadership
opportunities in new and creative ways, and so
forth.
* Develop an understanding of the diversity and
cultural differences expressed through leadership
behaviors and incorporate different styles into
leadership experiences.
* Empower and allow youth to take on significant
responsibilities and leadership roles without
expecting perfection. Recognize that everything
takes time and leadership learning occurs even when
mistakes are made.
* Encourage all students to develop a
co-curricular transcript or portfolio and emphasize
the variety of ways that leadership can be
demonstrated without only identifying elected or
selected positions.
* Recognize students who demonstrate
nontraditional leadership skills through
volunteering, taking on greater responsibility in a
job, or serving as student assistants, and promote
the power of one person or a small collective of
individuals to make a difference in your school.
* Be flexible to learn from spontaneous classroom
or group discussions rather than maintaining an
over-programmed setting where leadership issues are
only addressed by student council or the principal's
advisory board.
* Evaluate and explore your own definition and
beliefs about leaders and leadership so that you are
open to involving a greater variety of students in
leadership development efforts, even if it requires
additional time to identify and invite students who
don't naturally rise to the top.
Using these ideas or other productive efforts
will engage these two student populations into
developing and contributing their leadership talents
more deliberately with others. Ideally, creating
opportunities for meaningful participation will
increase the number of youth involved in leadership
activities, and decrease the tendency to rely on the
same students, event after event, class after class.
An ultimate outcome of inviting hesitant youth
leaders, in addition to providing broader diversity
in the views, voices, and visions represented, is to
enhance the overall climate and culture for everyone
by having a greater proportion of students connected
to school-based leadership development efforts.
By Mariam
G. MacGregor
Copyright
© National
Association of Secondary School Principals, March
2001
All
rights Reserved
Email:
info@youthleadership.com