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WELCOME! The Academy for Advanced Leadership and Development www.chairacademy.com OVERVIEW: VALUES What are values? Do values matter? Values and Choice Life’s Priorities Personal vs. Professional Values The objective side of values Cultures and Values Organizational Values Review and Reflection VALUES DEFINED Important and lasting beliefs or ideals shared by the members of a culture about what is good or bad and desirable or undesirable. Values have major influence on a person's behavior and attitude and serve as broad guidelines in all situations. Some common business values include fairness, innovation and community involvement. SIGNIFICANCE It is our personal philosophy that establishes our individual attitude. It is our attitude that determines both the quantity and quality of our level of activity. That activity produces a final and proportionate result, and that result produces the lifestyle we live. Jim Rohn, 1991 BELIEFS, VALUES, AND ATTITUDES BELIEFS Spiritual Moral Social Intellectual Economic Political VALUES ATTITUDES Values are global, abstract principles that serve as guiding principles in people’s lives (e.g. freedom, honesty, equality, beauty, harmony, competitiveness, happiness, order, and wisdom. Three components: • Cognitive: What we believe • Affective: Our feelings • Behavioral: Learned associations Serve a number of motivational functions • Ego-defensive • Value-expressive • Instrumental: gain social acceptance or avoid disapproval • Knowledge: organize social world MOTIVATION BEHAVIORS PERSONAL VALUES SURVEY Personal values are those things that may matter most to you. They represent what you believe and stand for. Examine the list of common values represented in the table provided to you. Start by choosing 10 words that reflect what you value most. Some words are similar, so select the words that best represent the way you feel. In the empty space at the bottom of column four, add other words that may come to mind. MAKE YOUR TOP 10 CHOICES Why is each experience truly important and memorable? Use the following list of common personal values to help you get started – select your 10 top values. Value Value Value Accountability Curiosity Focus Accuracy X X Decisiveness Freedom Achievement Democraticness X Fun Adventurousness Dependability Generosity Altruism Determination Goodness Ambition Devoutness Grace STEP 2 – LIST TOP 5 From the list of 10, list the top 5 values that best represent your personal and professional lives. Value What are your beliefs behind this value What behaviors do you exhibit relative to this value 12- 345- “Mathematics expresses values that reflect the cosmos, including orderliness, balance, harmony, logic, and abstract beauty.” ― Deepak Chopra STEP 3 – CONSOLIDATE YOUR VALUES After you have listed your top 5, share your top 3 personal and professional values. At your table, develop a comprehensive list of the top 3 personal/ professional values represented at YOUR table. VALUE INVENTORIES Over 12 major Personal Value Surveys have been published since the early 1960s, Cheng and Fleishmann conclude the following values emerge. Values (Frequency) Values (Frequency) Freedom (9) Intelligence (6) Helpfulness (9) Responsibility (6) Accomplishment (8) Social Order (6) Honest (8) Wealth (6) Self-Respect (8) Competence (5) Broad Mindedness (6) Justice (5) Creativity (6) Serenity (5) Equality (6) Spirituality (5) VALUES INVENTORY What’s not on the list? Money? Romance? Fun? Leisure? Family? Work? LIFE’S PRIORITIES What makes a good life? Do you have a list of priorities for achieving it? PICK 5 THINGS IN LIFE THAT MAY MATTER MOST TO YOU Love Bigger House Talent Fame Enjoyment Generosity Contentment Happiness Self Discipline Good Job Spirituality Good Health Children Romance Respect Long Life Safety Recreation Travel Friendship Other: Meaningful Work Adventure ???? Leisure Wisdom ???? IF you could ONLY have ONE, which one do you pick? HOW DO WE KNOW THEY ARE REALLY OUR VALUES Assume you have just inherited $150 million, it will be deposited in your bank tomorrow morning, the net value after taxes will be $100 million. You have to decide how and submit a plan to spend it TOMORROW. How do you plan to develop the plan and what’s on your list of priorities? If you don’t stick to your values when they are being tested, they’re not values, they’re hobbies. Now assume . . . DO VALUES MATTER? Monday Morning Choices Values Actions Relationships Most of us DON’T ASK! Mahatma Gandhi “Your beliefs become your thoughts, Your thoughts become your words, Your words become your actions, Your actions become your habits, Your habits become your values, Your values become your destiny.” VALUES PRIORITIES THE OBJECTIVE SIDE OF VALUES Are values purely subjective or is there an objective side to value? Subjective: relating to or determined by the mind as the subject of experience; characteristic of or belonging to reality as perceived rather than as independent of mind; phenomenal; arising out of or identified by means of one’s awareness. The subjective value is based on perception. Objective: existing independent of mind; belonging to the sensible world and being observable or verifiable especially by scientific methods; expressing or involving the use of facts; derived from sense perception. The objective value is fact based on perception. ECONOMISTS AND PHILOSOPHERS Economists and philosophers use the word “value” differently. Philosophy points out that while economics discusses value as a subjective thing, philosophy tends to address value as objective. Rights, for example, are something everybody has to have. There’s no such thing as “human rights” unless every human has them. That’s as objective as you can get. When economists say value is subjective, this means, in the philosopher’s language, that people have different tastes and preferences and people value things differently. The way to know what something is worth is to say what it is worth to someone. Right VS Wrong; Good VS Bad; Pleasing VS NOT CONSIDER REAL ESTATE: WHICH HOUSE DO YOU BUY? Our values grow out of our perceptions, just as our values will inevitably influence our perceptions. VALUES AND CULTURE Do values differ from culture to culture? Are values reflective of some universal truth we should all ascribe to? If so, then what do we do with those who live outside our accepted framework. Descriptive relativism: presumes cultures differ in fundamental beliefs about values. Ethical relativism: presumes actions right in one culture may be wrong in another. Prescriptive relativism: presumes it is wrong to pass judgment on other cultures. WORLD VALUES SURVEYS 2004-2008 Source: Ronald Inglehart and Christian Welzel, "Changing Mass Priorities: The Link Between Modernization and Democracy." Perspectives on Politics June 2010 (vol 8, No. 2) page 554. LINKING MISSION, VISION AND VALUES Values don’t exist in isolation of mission and values. MISSION: States “what” work you are doing VISION: States “why” you are doing this work VALUES: States “how” the people will work PURPOSE OF VISION AND MISSION: PHYSICAL: Provides structure for the work EMOTIONAL: Gives meaning and a sense of pride MENTAL: The basis for decision-making SPIRITUAL: Clarity for manifestation THE COMPLEX WORLD OF VALUES Personal Values Common Good Transformation Self-Interest Value Detractors = Cultural Entropy Current Culture Values Desired Culture Values ORGANIZATIONAL VALUES AND CULTURE OUR MISSION... Suffolk County Community College promotes intellectual discovery, physical development, social and ethical awareness, and economic opportunities for all through an education that transforms lives, builds communities, and improves society. Where do we find evidence of organizational values. Public Statements Policy/Procedures Rules/Regulations Cultural Norms Budget ACADEMY MISSION - VALUES Our Mission is... ...to design and promote world-class training programs and services to advance academic and administrative leadership for postsecondary institutions world-wide in an era of change. Our Value Statement We are committed to excellence and continuous improvement in providing training to organizational leaders while recognizing the needs and respecting the diversity of our clients. BCIT VALUES Commitments to our Stakeholders--BCIT is committed to: • providing a learner experience that supports learners as individuals, provides superior returns on their investment, and actively supports lifetime career success; • the success of employers by educating and training practitioners capable of being immediately productive, being a source of new ideas, and advancing the state-of-practice; • being responsive and adaptive to the evolving needs of British Columbia; and • prudently stewarding resources entrusted to it in a manner that provides the citizens of British Columbia with the best possible return on their investments. Commitments to Ourselves--BCIT is committed to: • valuing employees as individuals . . .by supporting their ambitions, encouraging their development, recognizing their achievements and promoting their well- being. • continuous improvement and performance measurement. We will constantly ask ourselves how we define success, measure our results, and improve performance; • a culture of team work . . .decision-making processes are transparent and based on engagement with stakeholders. • a sustainable financial strategy that will ensure BCIT is appropriately resourced. NORTHERN ESSEX COMMUNITY COLLEGE NECC’s Core Values Student Engagement: We are committed to fully engaging our students as active learners by providing a diverse range of educational experiences. Collaboration: We are committed to developing productive, collaborative relationships within the college and among our various constituencies in the greater Merrimack Valley. Personal and Professional Growth: We are committed to the personal and professional growth of faculty, staff, and students alike. We believe that lifelong learning is essential to the personal enrichment and professional growth of each individual. Respect: We are committed to fostering mutual respect that enables faculty, staff, and students to grow and work together in a supportive environment of shared governance, open communication, and fairness. Diversity: We are committed to creating an institutional climate that deepens our appreciation for diversity and for the unique attributes of each individual. Access and Opportunity: We are committed to providing affordable access to educational opportunity. Excellence: We are committed to a high standard of educational excellence in teaching and learning. Nothing less than the best will do for and from our students and ourselves. LIST THE VALUES OF YOUR ORGANIZATION Are they listed for public view? How long have they been in existence? Are they codified in any way? What actual evidence is there that they exist? How well do they connect to you and/or the community around you? Three Levels of Organizational Culture Artifacts Espoused Values Basic Underlying Assumptions Edgar Schein CONSIDER COMPLEXITY Does the complexity of our culture impact the character and content of our values? If so HOW? Attributes Landscape Matters Simple Rugged Dancing Interdependent Diverse Adapt Connected HOW DOES COMPLEXITY INFLUENCE VALUES? Interdependency Diversity Adaptability Connectedness HOW THEY BLEW IT LEADER/ORG VALUE Bernie Ebbers Worldcom Power, Growth Dick Fuld Lehman Brothers Risk, Greed, Winning Ken Lay Enron Respect, Love, Harmony Ronald Reagan Iran/Contra Trust, Integrity Jamie Oliver & Tony Goodwin 2010 SUMMARY Values—represent deep seeded beliefs or ideals shared by other members of a culture or organization. Values—influence our priorities, the way we allocate our time and resources. Values—represent learned behavior and in general we make a choice about the values we choose to live by. Values—always more than one, they relate to every aspect of life: work, family, play, church, etc. Organizational values are intended to communicate “who we are and to remind us why what we do matters.” Organizations—may seek to codify or legislate values to ensure compliance and guide actions. REFLECTION Record 2-3 ideas, issues that came out of the discussion that were most meaningful to you. PERSONAL INVESTMENT PLAN (PIP) Personal/Professional Investment Plan 2013-2014 Personal Object of My Desire Time to complete. Things to do. Why this matters to me. How will I know I’m done; what does success look/feel like? Journal Discussion with mentor/buddy. Objective assessment. Professional Object of my Desire How will I know I’m done; what does success look/feel like? Time to complete. Things to do. Why this matters to me. Journal Discussion with mentor/buddy. Objective assessment.