Traits of Good Leadership

As you grow and learn more about leadership, thinking about your own skill sets and goals is important. Start thinking about your own leadership goals, such as developing leadership skills, learning about specific leader characteristics, and how to develop your leadership plan. For the next few weeks, you will start to develop your own Leadership Style Action Plan, applying knowledge of leadership principles to personal and workplace situations.

 

Prior to starting your Leadership Style Action Plan, review the following article:

23 Traits of Good Leadership

Then, respond to the following:

 

Based on your research, the course materials, and what you have reviewed, choose 1 leader whom you admire who shares a few of your same leadership traits. Explain these similarities.

Identify 1 leadership theory that matches your style, and explain the key leadership concepts of that theory.

What did you already know about your leadership style?

What is 1 new thing that you learned about your leadership style?

Sample Solution

After researching the 23 traits of good leadership, I have identified a leader who shares a few of my own leadership qualities and whom I admire: Michelle Obama. Obama’s charismatic and confident persona are two attributes that we both share. In her memoir Becoming, she remarks “I have always been willing to take on new challenges even if it means leaving behind what is comfortable” (Obama 2019). This demonstrates an ability to be resilient in difficult situations which is something that I too try to embody in my everyday life.

Furthermore, Obama has exhibited strong communication skills throughout her career as well as when giving speeches, such as her notable address at the Democratic National Convention in 2008 where she discussed her commitment to making our country better by “being active citizens who stand up for one another—and serve our communities” (CNN 2008). Similarly, I recognize the importance of clear and effective communication when speaking publicly or with colleagues/peers.

Much like myself, Obama possesses strong problem-solving capabilities that she puts into practice through advocating for policies which benefit those most vulnerable; this includes initiatives around education reform & health care access among other topics—allowing her voice to be heard on matters that matter most while helping others at the same time (The White House 2021).

that time and used adjectives describing characters and settings that belonged to the period but also showed the reader exactly how the characters that inhabited this town viewed them. “Maycomb was an old town, but it was a tired old town when I first knew it. In rainy weather the streets turned to red slop; grass grew on the sidewalks, the courtyard sagged in the square,” (Lee 5) our protagonist Scout comments at the beginning of the novel. These descriptions are old-fashioned, developing the setting magnificently, but again, this could be hard for the reader to connect with since this is an unfamiliar setting. In The Perks of Being a Wallflower, the grammar and language used is very intimate and personal. Charlie begins the novel with “I am writing to you because she said you would listen and understand and didn’t try to sleep with that person at that party even though you could have.” (Chbosky 2) From the first sentence in the book, we learn about the introverted mindset of the character, which adds to the reader’s empathy towards our protagonist and his unique modern worldview. Paper Towns has an abundance of “John Green-isms”, certain stylistic choices in Green’s writing that make his novels contemporary and sets them apart from others. Quentin tells Margo before their quest of revenge that “I’m IM’ing with Ben Starling.” (Green 25), and later, Margo tells Quentin that “Everything’s uglier up close.” (Green 57) These statements are exclusively used in our 21st century, and so the reason John Green’s novels have struck chords as tales of adventure and self-discovery with modern youth readers is because the slang used in his stories’ amusing situations remind us of our own eccentric lives. Through these examples, we can understand that prose tends to be emphasized in literary fiction whilst mainstream fiction will utilize unique stylistic writing in order to get to the meat of the narrative. In literary fiction, the plot isn’t the main focus of the novel; rather, the social issues and character developments at the time are infused throughout the writing. This also proves my point that language and grammar can also affect how modern readers read literary vs. mainstream stories of self-discovery.

 

 

The contemporary setting of the 21st century has changed self-discovery, or how people “come of age” in fiction, therefore changing the viewpoints of millennial readers. History, conflict, and language changes, just like anything else over time. The farther away we stray from traditional values, the harder it can be to connect to characters coming of age in stories set in times that we no longer live i

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