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Lisa Levinson

Fixed vs. Growth: The Two Basic Mindsets That Shape Our Lives - Brain Pickings - 0 views

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    Maria Popova's blog, brainpickings, on Carol Dweck's work on mindset. Even in children, open or growth mindset is a key factor in learning, while fixed mindset is too focused on being perfect or the best or knowing all the answers. Growth mindset leads to curiosity, learning, exploration, and creativity. Fixed mindsets lead to the status quo and adhering to what exists. Growth mindset sees problems and challenges as growth and learning opportunities, fixed mindset views challenges as failure and underperforming. Great graphic of the 2 mindsets from Dweck's book.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Continuous learning : it's a mindset not a technology or product | Learning in the Mode... - 0 views

  • So how can organisations support continuous learning at work?
  • Continuous learning is a mindset not a product or technology.
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    nice blog post by Jane Hart on working with organizations and individuals to build learning mindset and behavior
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

AACRAO - SEM Newsletter - Transparency: The Millennial Mindset's Effect on Your Web 2.0... - 0 views

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    Article on web 2.0 marketing to millennials by Strategic Enrollment Management February 2009. "Although we are not going to dedicate our article to a recap of millennial marketing, we do want to reinforce the importance of understanding the millennial mindset before you begin to build your Web 2.0 plan. Consider that 64 percent of your audience (teens 12 to 17 years old) are reported to engage in at least one type of online content creation, up from 57 percent just four years ago. Understanding what they are doing online allows our plans to be more comprehensive and effective and fully integrated into a successful enrollment plan. There is even an emerging classification of teenagers using a host of technology options for dealing with family and friends, including traditional landline phones, cell phones, texting, social network sites, instant messaging and e-mail. These "super communicators" represent about 28 percent of the entire teen population (Guess 2008). And possibly the most interesting statistic to watch comes out of Noel-Levitz's "E-Expectations: The Class of 2007" report, which claims that 43 percent of high school juniors have a profile page designed for use in researching colleges (Lenhart & Madden 2007). This all means that if you are not already participating in an active use of online marketing you are overlooking a large group of your audience. Frankly, they are keenly aware of marketing, and as marketers we need to understand their mindset to build effective plans to reach and educate them. We cannot expect that they will conform to marketing as it has been done in a traditional way. Tools of the Trade: Components to Consider The goal of any Web 2.0 is to inform and connect. Simply stated, the tools you choose should work to reinforce that goal and integrate with the other tools of the trade you are using. Enrollment managers who know their audience understand the need to consider a variety of marketing options, from traditional adve
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

MindSet: A Book written by Carol Dweck. Teaching a growth mindset creates motivation an... - 0 views

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    promotional page on Carol Dweck's Mindset with many good links
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Being a Growth Mindset Facilitator | User Generated Education - 0 views

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    wonderful growth mindset facilitator list of beliefs, Jackie Gerstein, good visual
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Start Every Day as a Producer, Not a Consumer - 0 views

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    blog by Clay Johnson on Lifehacker, 2.23.12, on starting every day as a producer of information, not as a consumer. Excerpt: "The production of information is critical to a healthy information diet. It's the thing that makes it so that your information consumption has purpose. I cannot think of more important advice to give anyone: start your day with a producer mindset, not a consumer mindset. If you begin your day checking the news, checking your email, and checking your notifications, you've launched yourself into a day of grazing a mindless consumption. Starting your day as a producer means that your information consumption has meaning: the rest of the day means consuming information that is relevant to what it is that you're producing. Waking up as a producer frames the rest of your habits. You're not mindlessly grazing on everyone's facebook's statuses. You're out getting what it is you need to get in order to produce. Waking up as a producer is procrastination insurance. But there's something else that being a producer does: it gives you more clarity about what it is that you think."
Lisa Levinson

How To Keep Your Entrepreneurial Spirit Alive As The Company You Work For Grows - 0 views

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    Forbes, 10/22/13, by Jacquelyn Smith "Entrepreneurial spirit is a mindset. It's an attitude and approach to thinking that actively seeks out change, rather than waiting to adapt to change. It's a mindset that embraces critical questioning, innovation, service and continuous improvement. "It's about seeing the big picture and thinking like an owner," says Michael Kerr, an international business speaker, author and president of Humor at Work. "It's being agile, never resting on your laurels, shaking off the cloak of complacency and seeking out new opportunities. It's about taking ownership and pride in your organization." Sara Sutton Fell, CEO and founder of FlexJobs, says: "To me, an entrepreneurial spirit is a way of approaching situations where you feel empowered, motivated, and capable of taking things into your own hands. Companies that nurture an entrepreneurial spirit within their organization encourage their employees to not only see problems, solutions and opportunities, but to come up with ideas to do something about them." Entrepreneurial companies tend to have a more innovative approach to thinking about their products or services, new directions to take the company in, or new ways of doing old tasks, she adds. "Entrepreneurial spirit helps companies grow and evolve rather than become stagnant and stale." According to Jay Canchola, an independent human resources consultant, entrepreneurial spirit is also associated with taking calculated risks, and sometimes failing. "
Lisa Levinson

I-WE-IT Framework: Transformative Leadership for Social Change | Beth's Blog - 0 views

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    "This leadership is less about current position, authority, management, or control, and much more about facilitating the work of others: engaging, connecting, and catalyzing people, and helping them to self-organize and innovate around shared goals. It requires new mindsets, tools, and skills" This leadership is less about current position, authority, management, or control, and much more about facilitating the work of others: engaging, connecting, and catalyzing people, and helping them to self-organize and innovate around shared goals. It requires new mindsets, tools, and skills. nice graphic of ALF journey to impact
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Educator with a Growth Mindset: A Professional Development Workshop | User Generate... - 0 views

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    great piktochart and motivational videos
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Why Organizations Don't Learn - 0 views

  • Biases cause people to focus too much on success, take action too quickly, try too hard to fit in, and depend too much on experts.
  • Challenge #2: A fixed mindset. The psychologist Carol Dweck identified two basic mindsets with which people approach their lives: “fixed” and “growth.” People who have a fixed mindset believe that intelligence and talents are largely a matter of genetics; you either have them or you don’t. They aim to appear smart at all costs and see failure as something to be avoided, fearing it will make them seem incompetent.
  • people who have a growth mindset seek challenges and learning opportunities.
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  • A partner at the firm, Karena Strella, and her team believed the answer was individuals’ potential for improvement. After a two-year project that drew on academic research and interviews, they identified four elements that make up potential: curiosity, insight, engagement, and determination.
  • Challenge #4: The attribution bias.
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    great HBR article by Gino and Staat on what organizational leaders need to do to learn and help their employees learn with reflection after doing among other actions. November 2015
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

L&D as Agents of Change | Learning in the Social Workplace - 0 views

  • broader definition of workplace learning;  one that encompasses all learning experiences that take place in the organisation – not just those that are organised and managed by L&D – but ones that happen as a result of individuals and teams working together on a daily basis.
  • “The role has shifted over the years, from leader of a portfolio of training elements to enabler of learning,” he said. “More than anything else, it’s a shift in mindset.”
  • But it’s not a matter of waiting for the change in mindsets to happen before you start your new work; it means starting your new work to bring about this change in mindsets.
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    Jane Hart's blog post (4.13.2015) on how learning happens everywhere in an organization and how L & D needs to support learning wherever it happens.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

A New Leadership Development Mindset: Leadership Development Hiding in Plain Sight | Le... - 0 views

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    Very powerful blog post in the Leadership Learning Community by Deborah Mehan, June 28, 2013, on collective leadership through networks, and how customized supports such as coaching can help these groups learn and take successful action.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Collaboration or Cheating: What Are the Distinctions? - 0 views

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    Maryellen Weimer writes for faculty in educational settings and is focused on when collaboration crosses into cheating and how to know when students have really learned vs. mimic answers they had to real part in developing. Raises questions for me about the mindset that people carry from education into the workplace...wasn't there research on how research papers get credited with the most senior or male person first and those that followed (graduate students, less experienced faculty, women) did not get the same respect?
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

12 Critical Competencies For Leadership in the Future - By Tanmay Vora - Linkis.com - 0 views

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    Article by Tanmay Vora, January 2016 on VUCA world (Volatile, Uncertain, complex & ambiguous) Traditional hierarchical structures are fading away to give way to purposeful networks and communities of people working together to achieve a shared purpose. The cumulative impact of these forces demands a new mindset and competences for leaders to be able to stay relevant and make a positive difference to people and hence, business.
anonymous

6 Important factors for Getting from Where You Are To Where You Want To Be | Martina Mc... - 0 views

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    "Dr. Joe Vitale, a motivational speaker and author, is quoted as saying, "the fastest way to get where you want is to be happy with where you are." Believe it or not, this mindset is actually effective. It may take making some changes and soul searching on your part, but in the end, it will be more than worth the effort to adopt this positive mentality."
Lisa Levinson

Creating A Connected Organization for the 21st Century: The Future of… - 0 views

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    Great slideshare presentation on creating a connected org, with simple visual comparisons of 20th century to 21st century mindset and skills.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Reinventing Yourself After 60: Where Do Baby Boomers Go from Here? (Video) - 0 views

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    Margaret Manning interviews John Tarnoff, reinvention guy who writes for Huffington Post Reinvention each week. Our initial challenge is our mindset and finding out who we are now after 55 or 50 years of living. Then reframing who we are to avoid or discard stereotypes of old-aging ideas.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The NOW Literacies Through the Lens of Sharing - 0 views

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    love slide 18 on digital literacy by creating, curating, accessing, and selecting capabilities. Also like slides 46 & 47 on consulting, speaking, collaborating, and learning with the world. Also like slide 50 on global mindset. The series on the Global Educator profile starting at slide 51 is well done, too. (52-explorer attitude; 53-global connectedness; 54-global imagination) Slideshare by Sylvia Tolisano on the NOW Literacies through the Lens of Sharing. Program has 65 slides.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

2014.08.18_CoP Priorities for Design Lab - Google Sheets - 0 views

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    An open Google Document set up by Leadership Learning Community with categories--network culture, network mindset, network behaviors, processes, skills, network structure, and personal mastery--with attributes for each, and a column for voting,
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

PDF.js viewer - 0 views

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    An interview by Kellye Whitney, 2013 for Talent Management Magazine with Evan Rosen on "Can Collaboration be Forced?" The short answer is no because that would only continue the command and control mindset and decision making that stifles collaboration. Instead design structures and processes that bring people together to partner and collaborate across disciplines, locations, etc. Uses example of BMW reducing development time needed for new car with workers in Germany/S. Carolina being matched up to work together to solve problems, design issues.
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