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“Let the Journey Begin!” THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A STAFF CADET/OFFICER LEARNING POINTS Examine the Sea Cadet Creed Discuss the concepts of Responsibility, Authority, and Accountability Describe your Certificate of Appointment CORE VALUES HONOR - "I will bear true faith and allegiance..." Accordingly, we will conduct ourselves in the highest ethical manner in all relationships with peers, superiors and subordinates. We will be honest and truthful in our dealings with each other and with those outside the Navy. Illegal or improper behavior will not be tolerated. We are accountable for our professional and personal behavior. COURAGE - "I will support and defend..." Accordingly, we will have courage to meet the demands of our profession and the mission when it is demanding, or otherwise difficult. Courage is the value that gives us the moral and mental strength to do what is right, even in the face of personal or professional adversity. COMMITMENT - "I will obey the orders..." Accordingly, we will demand respect up and down the chain of command. We will care for the safety, professional, personal and spiritual well being of our people. And we will show respect toward all people without regard to race, religion, or gender SEA CADET APPOINTMENT This appointee will therefore carefully and diligently discharge the duties of the rate to which appointed by doing and performing all manner of things thereunder pertaining. And I do strictly charge and require all personnel of lesser rate to render obedience to appropriate orders. And this appointee is to observe and follow such orders and directions as may be given from time to time by superiors acting according to the articles governing the discipline of the NAVAL SEA CADET CORPS. LEADERSHIP Leadership Accountability RESPONSIBILITY “The obligation to carry forward an assigned task to a successful conclusion. With responsibility goes authority to direct and take the necessary action to ensure success.” RESPONSIBILITY Not only are we responsible FOR our subordinates, but we are responsible TO them. • Provide for well-being • Work performance, task completion • Development • Moral • Education/training • Maintaining standards of behavior • Effective leadership • Mutual respect and dignity • Environment free of discrimination/harassment • Be the example in behavior on ethics & values PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY Personal job performance Personal Behavior Behavioral problems Ethical behavior and leadership Sexual Harassment/Fraternization FOLLOWERSHIP Practice good followership Perform your duties to the best of your abilities Effectively supervise subordinates Consider the well-being of your subordinates Report inappropriate behavior AUTHORITY “The power to command, enforce laws, exact obedience, determine or judge.” BASIS OF AUTHORITY Legal Authority Earned Authority Moral Authority LIMITATIONS OF AUTHORITY Organizational authority beyond that necessary to fulfill assigned duties and responsibilities should not be delegated. Authority should never be delegated beyond the lowest level of competence and may be limited by command. ACCOUNTABILITY “The leader must be accountable ‘period’! I think that accountability is something that we’ve gotten away from in the last few years. We tend not to make decisions on our own, we do it by committee, and when we do it by committee, then no one person is accountable. The leader must be accountable for actions and decisions made, regardless of their outcome, and meet personal commitments promptly and fully. I couldn’t stress this more.” ACCOUNTABILITY ASSOCIATIONS Self Family Nation Command Spirituality COMMUNICATING WITH OTHERS COMMUNICATION ELEMENTS M E S S A TRANSMISSION G MEDIUM E Sender FEEDBACK Receiver PERCEPTIONS Perception is the act of gaining knowledge through one of the senses: seeing, hearing, touching, smelling or tasting. Since perceptions differ, successful communication occurs only when the receiver successfully interprets the message as the sender intended. ZONES OF INTERACTION Intimate zone Personal zone Social zone BODY LANGUAGE GESTURES Eye contact Face Hands Arms and legs PSYCHOLOGICAL BARRIERS Lack of common core experience Fear Distractions Filtering OPERATIONAL DEFINITION “Clean this table.” For a working table… For a table where people would be eating… For a table where surgery will be conducted… THE ELEMENTS OF LEADERSHIP LEADERSHIP DEFINITION Leadership is the art of inspiring, guiding, and directing bodies of men and women so that they ardently desire to do what the leader wishes. LEADERSHIP DEFINITION “Leadership is the process of influencing the activities of an individual or a group of individuals in efforts toward goal achievement in a given situation.” LEADERSHIP SKILLS Team Building Influencing Maintaining Self-control Advising and Counseling Developing positive expectations Developing Realistic Expectations Understanding LEADERSHIP QUALITIES High standards of performance Moral courage Dedication to the NSCC Leads by example Initiative Loyalty Accountability MOTIVES OF A LEADER Power Drive Personalized Achievement Socialized Ambition Initiative Energy Tenacity ONE-ON-ONE LEADERSHIP “There is no substitute for knowing your people.” MANAGEMENT DEFINITION “Management is the process of working with and through individuals, groups, and other resources to accomplish organizational goals.” MANAGEMENT FUNCTIONS Planning and budgeting Organizing and staffing Controlling and problem solving Process management and process improvement RESOURCE STEWARDSHIP “Stewardship is the management of another’s property, finances, or other affairs.” PDCA CYCLE A Method for Continual Improvement 1. Plan a change 4. Act on what or test was learned 3. Observe the effects of the change or test ACT PLAN CHECK DO 2. Carry out the change or test, preferably on a small scale 5. Repeat step 1, with new knowledge 6. Repeat step 2, and onward ETHICS AND CORE VALUES IMPACT OF VALUES Behaviors Individuals are more likely to “like” a situation that supports their values and to “dislike” those situations that do not. MORALS WRONG IS WRONG... “Wrong is wrong even if everyone agrees with it, and right is right even if everyone disagrees with it.” THE OATH Honor “I will bear true faith and allegiance . . .” Commitment “I will obey the orders . . .” Courage “I will support and defend . . .” NAVY’S CORE VALUES HONOR Vice Admiral Stockdale’s conduct while imprisoned. COURAGE John Paul Jones’ actions in battle during the Revolutionary war. COMMITMENT Adm. Sims set high standards for conduct of personnel, battle readiness and cleanliness preceding WWI.