A scholar-practitioner integrates original empirical investigation with service-oriented leadership, striving for professional excellence grounded in theory and research. They form knowledge through experimentation and reflection, in the context of one's personal worldview and core values. A community of scholar-practitioners builds on the contribution of all participants, faculty and students. They learn from each other, cultivating a deep commitment to applying knowledge and reasearch into leadership practice. As such, our community fosters an environment that values unity of action with diversity of thinking, inquiry and information with creativity, individuality and uniqueness with a profound sense of community and society.
We understand that as we live our lives, the following core values are connected to one another: community, service, integrated life, and human dignity. These are explained below, with particular behaviors described in an effort to capture the way the core values are lived out by participants in the Leadership program.
Ethical Principal: Leaders recognize that community is foundational to learning and change.
Leaders understand that human beings need to be in relationships with other. Therefore, they encourage collaboration, cooperation, and dialogue so that groups may accomplish common goals.
Behaviors: Leaders/participants who accept this value will:
Ethical Principle: Leaders help other people realize their unique purpose in life and help unleash their capacity to serve and lead.
Leaders meet the needs of others. They give time, knowledge, and skills to help other people.
Behaviors: Leaders/participants who accept this value will:
Ethical Principle: Leaders recognize the importance of integrating life into a balanced whole.
Leaders pursue the harmonious development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual faculties in order to maximize human potential.
Behaviors: Leaders/participants who accept this value will:
Ethical Principle: Leaders respect human dignity and safeguard the conditions for moral well-being
Leaders recognize the universal conditions of moral well-being: privacy, autonomy, community, and identity. Privacy is represented by the need for confidentiality and time for reflection. Autonomy is the need to make independent choices tht impact one's life. Community is the need to be a memeber of a group with a shared vision. Identity is the need to be unique and different from others. Leaders often make judgements and take actions whereby one or more aspects outweigh another, but they will acknowledge and explain the reasons for their choices.
Behaviors: Leaders/participants who accept this value will: