What is leadership? Jim Collins, author of one of my favorite books, Good to Great, has a great article on this very topic. According to Collins, it is really a battle between managing and leading. Monroe Bridge is a discourse on my interaction with life. Any and all views expressed in this blog are mine alone.
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Monday, September 27, 2010
Leadership
What is leadership? Jim Collins, author of one of my favorite books, Good to Great, has a great article on this very topic. According to Collins, it is really a battle between managing and leading. Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Good Questions
Sunday, September 12, 2010
North Adams, MA
Here is a nice picture of downtown North Adams, Massachusetts. This was the big city for me as a kid. I went to high school in this city and began college here as well. I have not been back in a long long time. Finding this picture brings back many good memories of my high school years. I remember meeting my parents on Main Street after school in the cold winter. I remember hot coffee and Dunkin Donuts after basketball with friends. I remember Jack's Hot Dog Stand and the best hot dogs. I remember playing baseball on Noel Field. I remember enjoying my four years at Drury High School,. I still actually wear an old high school shirt around occasionally. I remember Friday night basketball at the YMCA. I remember Saturday football games and homecoming parades. North Adams will always have a place in my heart, and even though I am far away these days, I still think of her often and plan to visit again soon.
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Process and Product
Process and product: these are two terms we use at Westminster a lot these days. We believe the process is actually more important than the product most of the time. What do we mean?We believe how we do the things we do matters greatly in the lives of our students. The product is part of our thoughts, but it does not dominate our thoughts. Whether it be athletics, drama, band, debate or class, the process is examined in great detail along with the product, and both must be done in an excellent Christ-centered way.
Athletics is a great example. In the paper this morning is yet another story about another coach who bent the rules in order to win. We, at Westminster, want to practice, prepare and play to win, but not at the expense of the process. Because we care deeply about the process, the wins (the product) might take a little longer to achieve, but they will come. And, our students will understand that it is not only about the wins, but it is equally about the work, the lessons, the team and the game.
We, as a society, have allowed the wins to dominate the games we play, and have forgotten that the games are only games and are for lessons in life as well. When our focus is only on the product (the wins) we will miss all the lessons and the joy that come with playing the games. Process and product: both are always in our thoughts at Westminster because both are important to us, and both are necessary in producing students who will grow and mature into the next great leaders of our day. This is what the Lord is doing at Westminster!
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Education and Culture
When we think of education we should think of culture. Culture is the full range of learned human behavior patterns. The term was first applied by English Anthropologist Edward B. Tylor in his book, Primitive Culture. In his book, Tylor stated that “culture is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man [kind] as a member of society.” Many will agree that culture is a powerful human tool for survival, but it is also in constant flux. Many believe that culture is a fragile phenomenon that exists only in our minds.
When examining various resources regarding culture, the consensus is that culture is a mental map of the world, and it influences decisions and behaviors.
According to Dennis O’Neil, it is also thought to have three layers. O”Neil states that the first and most obvious layer is the cultural traditions that distinguish your own personal shared society. Children born in northern
The third layer of cultural consists, O’Neil writes, of cultural universals which are learned behavior patterns that are shared by all human beings in one way or another. Examples of these cultural behavior patterns are verbal communication, age and gender, parenting, and the concept of privacy. The problem with culture for the Christian today is that there has been and still is a shift occurring in this third level of culture. Make no mistake, this shift will influence our children and be seen in them. The family structure, the concept of good and bad, and humor, to name but a few, all have changed greatly, and these changes, in turn, are all being accepted as normal behaviors today. What does Christian education then have to do with culture?
Back to our definition of culture, the complex whole that is culture consists of knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man [kind]; all are greatly influenced by education because most occur in education. I have gone to great lengths to explain the power that education wields; now I am positing that Christian education can influence the cultural whole for Christ.
Knowledge is acquired through education, and law, morals, custom, and all other habits and capabilities are acquired in an environment built for the acquisition of learned behavior. With this knowledge of culture, it is even more important that those of us in Christ spend much time in prayer when considering education and culture. Culture is a powerful tool, but it is greatly influenced by education. Education will cut through the layers of culture because culture forms when we teach and model “human behavior patterns” like the Christian worldview to our students.