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Pauline principles of leadership developmentElefson, Todd Philip. January 1985 (has links)
Thesis (Th. M.)--Dallas Theological Seminary, 1985. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [91]-97).
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Leadership and lifestyle : the portrait of Paul in the Miletus speech and 1 "Thessalonians /Walton, Steve. January 2000 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Doct. Th.--Sheffield, 1997. / Bibliogr. p. 215-239. Index.
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Character qualities for leaders in government lessons from King David /Garver, Michael R. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M. Div.)--International School of Theology, 1993. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 216-220).
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Forensic Participation as a Contributor to Students' Critical Thinking Skills at the College Level in China| A Multiple Case StudyHu, Yanan 12 December 2015 (has links)
<p> As a popular co-curricular activity, forensic participation is considered as an effective educational tool in sharping students’ logic thinking abilities (Allen & Berkowitz, 1999; Bellon, 2000; Lieberman, Trumble & Smith, 2000). However, in China, compared with the growing enthusiasm in debate among the Chinese students, research in this field is relatively thin. Therefore, in order to gain an in-depth understanding of how forensic participation influence students’ critical thinking abilities, I conducted this multiple case study which was grounded in the Paul-Elder Model of Critical Thinking.</p><p> My respondents are three national or regional champions from a well-known forensic team in Eastern China. My major data collection include three one-on-one interviews with the respondents, some secondary interviews with their coach and teachers, observations on their debate training, and some online data such as the official blog of the team, my e-mail correspondence with the students and information culled from their personal social networking sites. </p><p> My two research questions are “How does college students’ thinking change as a result of participating in forensics?” and “What features of forensic participation support students’ development of critical thinking?” In terms of research question one, I have found that first, as a result of forensic participation, my respondents’ questioning, critical reading, analyzing and evaluating skills have improved. Second, they developed some intellectual traits that are indispensable to their critical thinking abilities. Third, forensic participation has to some extent helped them to get rid of ego-centric and socio-centric thinking, which paved the way for them to become an accomplished and responsible thinker.</p><p> As to research question two, I found that both the educational and epistemic features support students’ development of critical thinking.</p><p> I also found out motivation plays such an important role in students’ critical thinking development that it could be added into the framework of Paul’s Model of critical thinking. My recommendations include improving the instruction methods in debate courses and enhance both the quantity and quality of the intercollegiate and national competitions.</p>
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Intersections among trust, duty, and organizational cultureGreen-Flint, Jennifer Elizabeth 12 December 2015 (has links)
<p> Understanding why some individuals trust the organization, why other individuals do not trust the organization, and how trust influences action and culture is an important organizational tool. For organizations, the relationship between these three concepts helps select, place, and manage employees.</p><p> This research examined the National Testing Site (NTS) in Mercury, Nevada during the Cold War as a total institution environment experienced by service members who were involved in the development and testing of thermonuclear weaponry. The intersection among the forces of trust, duty, and organizational culture, and how they affected a soldier’s professional and personal actions, were the study’s essential constructs. This study was guided by the following research questions: What role, if any, did the relationship among trust, duty, and organizational culture play as the service members experienced their environment? To what extend did the cultural imperatives of trust, duty, and organizational culture (including rank) influence the organization from the perspective of the service members at the NTS?</p><p> This research examined the service members’ sense-making processes related to their experience of their environment using Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis. Three sources of historical documents were analyzed: oral histories, court documents, and personal memoranda and letters.</p><p> Findings indicated self-identity determined the degree in which the individual trusted the command structure or scientific data and that self-identity predicted the object of the individual’s trust and the degree of influence duty had in compliance with the organizational culture. Findings suggested both trust and distrust were evident in service members’ experience of the NTS. However, distrust was a fluctuating construct and occurred in tandem with trust and in isolation from trust. Finally, analysis revealed no direct references to patriotism, a remarkable finding in the Korean War and McCarthy Cold War era on a military base. These findings provided support for the understanding of organizational culture as dynamic, interlaced with individual identity, and as key factors in the relationship with trust and duty.</p>
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Greater New Orleans' Public High School Leaders' Managerial Decisions and Marketization| A Qualitative StudyHunyadi, Stephen 13 June 2018 (has links)
<p> Greater New Orleans, Louisiana (GNO) is a highly marketized school environment. The purpose of this study was to examine how marketization informs GNO academic high school leaders’ managerial decisions. While much had already been written on areas in this topic’s periphery, nothing readily available in the theoretical knowledge base had sufficiently answered this question with respect to GNO high schools. This non-probability qualitative study provides rich descriptions of how a diverse range of GNO academic high school leaders’ experiences are affected by marketization. Participants were gleaned from GNO public high schools via expert sampling. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using the constant comparative analysis method (Merriam, 2009: <i>Qualitative research: A guide to design and implementation</i>). To this end, following each interview, the recorded interviews were transcribed and analyzed. After Interview 1, the responses from the remaining participants were compared to look for trends and consider additional questions. The overall findings from these responses indicated that academic high school leaders inform their managerial decisions in light of competitive school marketization. This is evidenced in working strategically to ensure full enrollments, from creating school-based teams and creating exciting, school-specific experiences, to the purported use of unethical and illegal practices.</p><p>
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Black Male Perspectives on the Impact of a Mentoring Program on Their University Academic ExperiencesHaywood, Marlon 13 June 2018 (has links)
<p> This study sought to investigate and explain how a mentoring program influenced the academic experience of Black males at a predominately white institution (PWI). Nine research participants were selected based on the following four criteria: self-identified as Black males, completed their undergraduate degrees from Northern Illinois University (NIU), were alumni of the Black Male Initiative (BMI) program, and were willing to participate in the study. The following two research questions guided the study. What are participants’ perceptions of the BMI program and its impact on their academic experience at a PWI? What are the factors that influence these perceptions? A qualitative methodology and case study research design was utilized to collect data. Critical Race Theory is the theoretical framework that informed this study. Key processes from case study analysis were used to triangulate the date collected from interviews, field notes, and a reflective journal. Pattern coding and theme identification for each research participant case was conducted. Cross-case comparison of the coded and themes for the nine research participants were used to draw conclusions. There were three themes that emerged from the data related to the two research questions. These themes included: 1) the role and function of BMI, 2) characteristics of BMI advisor, and 3) university life outside of BMI. The role and function of BMI encompassed the following subthemes: academic support, brotherhood, community outreach, building a network, and promoting a positive image. The second and third theme did not encompass subthemes. </p><p> The findings associated with these themes and sub-themes suggested that the BMI program had a direct positive and long-lasting impact on the educational experiences of the research participants. The limitations of this study can be found in the small number of participants that were included in this study. The implications and recommendations regarding future research are included.</p><p>
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The significance of 'crucible' experiences in the development of a selection of Northern Irish and other evangelical Christian leadersWilson, John S. A. January 2016 (has links)
Among terms used to describe the events and experiences that contribute to the shaping of leaders is Warren Bennis’ and Robert Thomas’ ‘crucibles’. Their use of the term emerged from a series of interviews with leaders who had come of age in two distinct eras: all the leaders interviewed referred to a transformative experience that had contributed to their leadership. The aim of this research was to explore the significance of such experiences in the development of Christian leaders. A sample of fourteen evangelical leaders was selected and each leader participated in an in-depth qualitative interview. Their experiences were classified using Robert Thomas’ three types of crucible: new territory, reversals and suspension. Analysis of the experiences demonstrated how crucible experiences had a part to play in shaping both the character and calling of a leader: at times crucibles functioned as intensified learning experiences in which a leader’s beliefs took on an existential intensity. The emerging themes of character and calling are significant in both Old and New Testaments and the project reflected theologically on these. While crucibles may be significant features in the development of a leader, they do not tell the whole story: a range of factors and influences, some of which work in a more gradual way, are also part of a leadership journey.
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Chasing Equity| A Study on the Influence of Black Leaders on Federal Education Policy-makingHarris, Khalilah M. 19 June 2018 (has links)
<p> Black students are persistently underserved by public education and have had significant gaps in performance, as compared to their white counterparts, on established assessments and measures of educational attainment regardless of socio-economical background (Ladson-Billings, 2006; Milner, 2012; P. Noguera, 2013; Steele, 1992). A great deal of education policy-making at the national level in the United States is aimed at decreasing gaps in achievement between students of color and white students (Barton & Coley, 2010; Berlak, 2001; Carter, 2009; Gardner, 2007). The federal government adopted this role with the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision of 1964 and was codified through the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. </p><p> Education reforms embedded in and promoted by federal policies are, at times, both embraced and shunned by members of the Black community (Murtadha & Watts, 2005; Scott, 2011; Warren, 2005), whose children are most readily affected based on the demographics of urban, rural and low-income communities. To cultivate equity in inputs and lasting, sustainable improvement in outcomes, members of those communities and leaders from those communities seeking to represent the voices of their community members should be involved at critical decision-making points in creating and implementing policies (Beabout & Perry, 2013; Leonardo, 2003; Warren, 2005). </p><p> Drawing on Critical Race Theory (CRT) (Dixson & Lynn, 2013; Ladson-Billings & Tate IV, 1995; Lynn & Parker, 2006) I set out to conduct a qualitative study targeted at identifying opportunities for Black people to have effective levels of influence in national education policy-making which heavily impacts their communities. I interviewed leaders active in the national education reform socio-political landscape in order to gauge their perspectives on leverage points in the process of federal education policy-making and the presence of Black voice and leadership at those critical points in the process. </p><p> CRT calls for exploration of phenomenon to the extent it can illuminate strategies to improve the conditions of a race of people (Delgado & Stefancic, 2012; Ladson-Billings, 2013; Lynn & Parker, 2006). Identifying ways in which race impacts education policy-making through examination of the narratives of those doing the work to influence those policies, can shed a light on gaps and opportunities for developing more thoughtful policies. Through inductive thematic analysis, this study mines strategies from the information shared by study participants, highlighting ways in which members of the Black community can be most effective at influencing federal education policies.</p><p>
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Remediation and Performance in Standardized Testing| Accuplacer Preparation and Placement Outcomes at a Large Community CollegeMcIntosh, Dwayne E. 19 June 2018 (has links)
<p> This dissertation examines the efficacy of a remedial education program on placement outcomes. Specifically, it asks whether exposure to a Preparing for ACCUPLACER Workshop in a large community college system impacts placement outcomes for students who have attended the workshop. While focused on a narrower pilot program, this question is answered within the broader theoretical context of the relevance of preparatory programs on performance on standardized tests, a locus that enjoys a long tradition of scholarship in education research. That is, do preparatory programs improve performance on standardized tests? Beyond this theoretical imperative, the research is also relevant to the question of educational access. Students who cannot score high enough on standardized tests but are placed in regular classes may encounter motivational problems, which may imperil perseverance and retention, and lead to school dropout. The dissertation explores the impact of test preparation by examining preparation in conjunction with other demographic and foundational factors known to impact performance, such as ethnicity, gender, grade point average (GPA), socioeconomic status (SES), age, and quality of school.</p><p>
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