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- Youth Leadership Personality Characteristics
Development -
Why Emphasize
Personality Characteristics?
Why
does the model for initiating Youth Leadership Values Training start
with identifying and developing Four Key Personality
Characteristics for Youth Leadership Development Emphasis? Why
were they selected?
We
found that the four traits of +Self-Esteem,
+Self-Confidence, +Attitude of Expectations, and
+Moral/Ethical Life’s View are clearly the foundation
personality characteristics that must be present to some significant
degree, and in turn must be subjected to further development in a
Values matrix, in order for Leadership values to grow and skills
flourish.
Think
of it this way; by emphasizing these four Personality
Characteristics, they will become the growth medium in which the
four Leadership Core Values take root and grow – if properly
nurtured.
The
balance of this overview will be devoted to an individual examination
of each of these Four Key Personality Characteristics for Youth
Leadership Development Emphasis. Our goal is to give the reader
a solid understanding of the supporting role these Personality
Characteristics play in leadership values development, and the
need to nurture them in a Youth Leadership Values Training
initiative.
Let’s
start by illustrating how you might think of these Personality
Characteristics as fitting into a conceptual framework around
which you can construct your own approach to Youth Leadership Values
Training.
As
we examine, one-by-one each of these four key personality
characteristics in the side panel to the right (click on icons to
review), we will do so
against the background of the following postulate:
Although
there are many Personality Characteristics that are important for
emphasis in a Leadership Values Training Initiative;
-
These
four Personality Characteristics of +Self-Esteem,
+Self-Confidence, +Attitude of Expectations, and
+Moral/Ethical
Life’s View are crucial, and must be further developed as a
foundation from which key Youth Leadership Values can grow and
flourish.
Which is more important, a healthy Self-Esteem, an abundance
of Self Confidence, an upbeat and positive “can do”
Attitude of Expectations, or the ability to use key Values in
order to “navigate” with our own internal Moral/Ethical Life’s
View?
Logic and common sense tell us the answer is “all of
the above”. The answer is that each of these four personality
characteristics are interrelated as pieces of the same overall
leadership development puzzle, with one or the other playing a more
dominant supporting role or even a Cameo performance as
circumstances dictate.

Understanding
the Conceptual Framework for the Four Personality Characteristics
Notice
that there are four numbered Leadership Development Quadrants in the preceding graphic
representation that correspond to the 4 Key Personality Characteristics for Youth
Leadership Development Emphasis:
Ø Start
with Leadership Development Quadrant Four
(LDQ4) labeled
+Self-Esteem,
and described as “My Inner View – Self Concept”.
Ø Note
the logical progression to LDQ3 as you move from a situation where
the presence of +Self-Esteem is at a sufficient level for
+Self-Confidence
“My
relationship with others – Belief in Self” to now begin to flourish.
Ø This
leads to forming the foundation for an
+Attitude of Expectations
in
LDQ2 to start to produce an upbeat outlook on life that leads to a
greater sense of personal control, thereby fostering the belief that
one is “worthy” and justified in thinking that he or she can indeed
achieve their goals and ambitions.
Ø What
remains in LDQ1 is to lay the Leadership Core Values track
for these now robust personality traits to run on in the context of
our own unique and internal
+Moral/Ethical
Life’s View.
Note that
the main focus is on further developing and fine tuning the
Leadership Core Values so that they become guiding principles.
The ongoing goal is that all four of the
Leadership
Values
that are a component of our internal Moral/Ethical Life View
have also become interlocked and imbedded as a component of our
Self-Esteem, Self-Confidence, and Attitude of Expectations –
“outlook on life”.
These four Personality Characteristics affect our will to act
and therefore shape and determine how we behave (i.e. confidently,
with pride, self-assured, with energy and enthusiasm, expectantly,
ethically, courageously, resolutely, ambitiously, etc.). We can
think of these behaviors as coming from what Rokeach, (1968)
described as the behavioral dimension of our personality. According
to Rokeach, feedback from the behavioral dimension of our
personality shapes the following: our attitudes about ourselves, our
self-image, our abilities, and our values and ethical perspective.
In
turn, our environment, our thoughts, our emotions, and our actions
are also influencing this behavioral personality component.
At
this point, the Personality Characteristics for Youth
Leadership Development emphasis have been described in detail and
identified conceptually to reside in four Leadership Development
Quadrants. As we will
introduce
here, the key
Leadership
Values
of Integrity, Achievement, Responsibility, and Courage also fit into
the various quadrants. This
website
will also explain in more detail how these four key Leadership
Values interrelate in a synergistic and overlapping fashion with
Personality Characteristics that are the focus of this page.
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