Charitable Trust • RICHARD SOFFE
Chaos… Conflict… Courage… leadership in the 21st Century Tom Peters recently observed that “Leadership is as confusing as hell”. So what happens when you gather together 60 people from the US, Finland, Mongolia, Albania, Malaysia, Nigeria, Kenya and the UK to spend a week talking about it? In Harvard University last April it was Chaos, Conflict and Courage… but luckily that was just the subtitle for an intensive one week programme on Leadership for the 21st Century, as Richard Soffe explains. IN 2001 I received an award from The Farmers Club Charitable Trust to attend the Leadership Educators Program at Harvard University, Boston, USA. The aim was to develop my role in leadership education. It was an intensive two-week program (I’ll stick to the US spelling throughout) involving 33 participants from 10 countries, and it proved to be a great opportunity to exchange views, learning much from other people’s experiences of facilitating leadership education across the globe. Attending and participating in the Leadership Educators Program led to a number of further opportunities: •
Microsoft sponsored a series of regular telephone conference calls (these normally lasted over an hour), where six to 10 educators were able to keep one another upto-date and share their experiences on topics of mutual professional interest.
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I was invited to Kuwait to present a paper on Quality in Education at an international conference of educators.
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Contact with participants widened our network with international firms to discuss leadership education and management development.
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I was invited to take part in an important new development at Harvard University, selected as one of only two people from the previous year’s Educators Program to help lecture, teach and facilitate on their flagship programme, ‘Leadership in the 21st Century’. This was a great opportunity, as I was keen to teach leadership in business rather than meet other educators in the subject (for a second time).
As a result of this last invitation, I returned to Harvard in April 2002, as part of the lecturing team, to help deliver the program, the only Briton on the team. It was an intensive one-week program with 50 senior executives from nine countries around the world, the program being as much about developing people as sharpening their leadership skills (the use of LEADER as a noun was outlawed for the week).