Learning About Leadership
"Learning About
Leadership" is adapted from Patrol and Troop Leadership,
the handbook on leadership development written for Patrol Leaders and
published by the Boy Scouts of America in 1972.
Why Leadership?
In most football teams the quarterback is
the team leader. Why is that? Is there something magic about the position?
Does he automatically become the leader -- the guy who makes the team go
-- when he is named quarterback by the coach?
No, there's more to it than that. Lots
more. Usually he is named quarterback because he's already a leader. He's
already the kind of guy the other players like to follow.
And if the coach is wrong about him, he
probably won't stay quarterback very long. If he can't lead the team, he
won't have much value even if he can hit a receiver at 40 yards. Because
every successful team must have a leader.
That goes for your Scouting team, too --
your patrol and your troop. In fact, if the patrol and troop are to
succeed, you need several leaders. Guys like yourself who want to try
"quarterbacking" in Scouting. One of the aims of your local
council Junior Leader Training Conference is to show you how to become a
better leader.
Let's begin by being honest about it.
This handbook is not going to make you a good leader. You are not going to
find 5 or 10 simple rules to follow to become a good leader. If leadership
were as easy as that, almost everyone would be a good leader. And you know
that most people are not.
There are no rules for leadership. But
there are certain skills that every good leader seems to have. You learned
about them at your local council Junior Leader Training Conference and
have practiced some of them in your troop at home.
Some of these skills you may already have
even without knowing it. That's the funny thing about leadership -- a good
leader doesn't necessarily know how he does it. He just does what comes
naturally and the others follow him. Although he may not know it, he has
mastered the skills of leadership.
This doesn't mean we guarantee that
you'll be elected student council president next year. Or that you will be
the Super Bowl quarterback 15 years from now or President of the United
States in 35 years. But we do guarantee that you can make yourself a much
better leader in just a few weeks or months.
What Is Leadership?
Leadership is a process of getting things
done through people. The quarterback moves the team toward a touchdown.
The senior patrol leader guides the troop to a high rating at the camporee.
The mayor gets the people to support new policies to make the city better.
These leaders are getting things done by
working through people -- football players, Scouts, and ordinary citizens.
They have used the process of leadership to reach certain goals.
Leadership is not a science. So being a
leader is an adventure because you can never be sure whether you will
reach your goal -- at least this time. The touchdown drive may end in a
fumble. The troop may have a bad weekend during the camporee. Or the
city's citizens may not be convinced that the mayor's policies are right.
So these leaders have to try again, using other methods. But they still
use the same process the process of good leadership.
Leadership means responsibility. It's
adventure and often fun, but it always means responsibility. The leader is
the guy the others look to to get the job done. So don't think your job as
a troop leader or a staff member will be just an honor. It's more than
that. It means that the other Scouts expect you to take the responsibility
of getting the job done. If you lead, they will do the job. If you don't,
they may expect you to do the job all by yourself.
That's why it's important that you begin
right now to learn what leadership is all about.
Wear your badge of office proudly. It
does not automatically make you a good leader. But it identifies you as a
Scout who others want to follow -- if you'll let them by showing
leadership.
You are not a finished leader. No one
ever is, not even a president or prime minister. But you are an explorer
of the human mind because now you are going to try to learn how to get
things done through people. This is one of the keys to leadership.
You are searching for the secrets of
leadership. Many of them lie locked inside you. As you discover them and
practice them, you will join a special group of people-skilled leaders.
Good exploring -- both in this handbook
and with the groups you will have a chance to lead.
The Tasks of Leadership
In this section, we will consider several
common statements about the people who serve in leadership positions
throughout our world. After you have read the statement, decide for
yourself whether you feel it is true or false and why you think it is.
Here is the first one. True or false?
The only people who lead have some
kind of leadership job, such as chairman, coach, or king.
Do you think that's true? Don't you
believe it. It's true that chairmen, coaches, and kings lead, but people
who hold no leadership position also lead. And you can find some people
who have a leader's title and ought to lead. But they don't.
In other words, you are not a leader
because you wear the leader's hat. Or because you wear the patrol leader's
insignia on your uniform. You are a leader only when you are getting
things done through other people.
Leadership, then, is something people do.
Some people inherit leadership positions, such as kings, or nobles, or
heads of family businesses. Some are elected: chairman, governor, patrol
leader. Some are appointed, such as a coach, a city manager, or a den
chief. Or they may just happen to be there when a situation arises that
demands leadership. A disaster occurs, or a teacher doesn't show up when
class begins, or a patrol leader becomes sick on a campout.
Try this statement. Is it true or false?
Leadership is a gift. If you are
born with it, you can lead. If you are not, you can't.
Some people will tell you that. Some
really believe it. But it's not so.
Leadership does take skill. Not everyone
can learn all the skills of leadership as well as anyone else. But most
people can learn some of them -- and thus develop their own potential.
You don't have to be born with
leadership. Chances are, you weren't. But you were born with a brain. If
you can learn to swim or play checkers or do math, you can learn
leadership skills.
How about this statement. True or false?
"Leader" is another word
for "boss."
Well, what do you mean by
"boss"? A guy who pushes and orders other people around? No, a
leader is not one of those. (But some people try to lead this way.)
Or do you mean a boss is somebody who has
a job to do and works with other people to get it done? This is true. A
leader is a boss in that sense.
True or false?
Being a leader in a Scout troop is
like being a leader anywhere else.
This one is true. When you lead in a
Scout troop, you will do many of the same things as any leader anywhere.
The important thing now is Scouting gives
you a chance to lead. You can learn how to lead in Scouting. You
can practice leadership in Scouting. Then you can lead other groups, too.
The skills you will need are very much the same.
What Does a Leader Deal with?
Every leader deals with just two things.
Here they are: the job and the group.
The job
is what's to be done. The "job" doesn't necessarily mean
work. It could be playing a game. It could be building a skyscraper. It
could be getting across an idea.
A leader is needed to get the job done.
If there were no job, there would be no need for a leader.
The group,
such as a patrol, is the people who do the job. And in many cases, the
group continues after the job is done. This is where leading gets tough,
as you'll see later.
Think about this situation. Mark has a
lot of firewood to split. There he is, all alone with his ax. He's got a
job to do. Is he a leader?
We have to say in this situation that
Mark won't be leading. Why? No group. There's nobody on the job but Mark.
Here's another example. Danny and three
of his friends are on their bikes. They have no place to go. They're just
riding slowly, seeing how close they can get to each other.
Is Danny -- or any one of the others -- a
leader?
From what we know, we have to say no.
Why? No job. There's a group of friends, but nothing special to be done.
You don't need a leader for that. (You don't need a group, either.)
The Job of a Leader
A leader works with two things: a job and
a group. You can always tell when a leader succeeds, because:
1. The job gets done.
2. The group holds together.
Let's see why it takes both.
Frank was elected patrol leader. That
same week, the patrol had a job cleaning up an old cemetery.
It was Frank's first leadership position,
and he wanted it to go right. In his daydream he could see the Scoutmaster
praising him for the great cleanup job. So when Saturday morning came,
Frank and the patrol went over to the cemetery, and Frank started to get
the job done.
He hollered. He yelled. He threatened. He
called them names. He worked like a tiger himself. It was a rough day, but
the cemetery got cleaned up.
Frank went home sort of proud, sort of
mad, and very tired.
"How'd things go, Frank?"
the Scoutmaster asked a few days later.
"Good."
"No problems?"
"No." Frank wondered what
he meant by that.
"Oh! Well, a couple of the boys
in your patrol asked me if they could change to another patrol. I
thought maybe something had gone wrong...."
And that was how Frank learned that
getting the job done isn't all there is to leadership. He had really given
the group a hard time, and now they wanted to break up.
Almost anybody with a whip and a mean
temper can get a job done. But in doing it, they usually destroy the
group. And that's not leadership. The group must go on.
Another new patrol leader called a
meeting at his house. Everybody seemed to be hungry when they came. So
they got some snacks from the kitchen. Then they tossed a football around.
It began to get dark, and one by one they went home. Everybody had fun.
But the patrol meeting -- the job -- never started.
One of the following statements is the
message of this section. Which one?
a. Nice guys finish last.
b. Mean guys finish last.
c. Leaders get the job done and keep the
group going.
d. Leaders have a special title or badge
that makes others like to follow.
We'll take the third one. Will you?
What Affects Leadership?
Leadership is not magic that comes out of
a leader's head. It's skill. The leader learns how to get the job done and
still keep the group together.
Does this mean that the leader does the
same things in every situation? No. Here's why.
Leadership differs with the leader,
the group, and the situation.
Leaders
-- like other people are all different. No leader can take over another
leader's job and do it the same way.
Groups
are different, too. A great football coach might have difficulty leading
an orchestra. A good sergeant might be a poor Scoutmaster. So when a
leader changes groups, he changes the way he leads.
Situations
differ, too. The same leader with the same group must change with
conditions. A fellow leading a group discussion needs to change his style
of leadership when a fire breaks out. As a Scout leader, you probably
can't lead the group in the rain the same as you do in the sunshine.
An effective leader, then, must be alert
at all times to the reaction of the members of the group; the conditions
in which he may find himself; and be aware of his own abilities and
reactions.
Leadership Develops
Picture a long scale like a yardstick. On
the low end, there are no leadership skills. On the other end, there is a
complete set of leadership skills.
Everyone is somewhere between those
ends!
Where do you find yourself at this time?
Unknowingly, you may be further up the scale than you realize. As a staff
member you'll now have the opportunity to find out.
How Will You Know You are Improving?
You learn leadership best by working with
groups. That is something like learning swimming best by getting into the
water.
Yet you can't keep track of your progress
without a guide. You must know and understand what you are trying to
learn. This means you have to know what the skills of leadership are.
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