Monthly Archives: March 2009

A classic tale

Little Red Riding Hood: The Play from Steve Krizman on Vimeo. They didn’t shy away from death in the classics. Modern versions, such as this adaptation of Little Red Riding Hood, are sanitized. Even though Granny isn’t eaten in this version, the “wolf in sheep’s clothing” trope is alive and well. Thank you to the [...]
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Freedom isn’t free

The students lined up at the front of the lecture hall to take a crack at the professor. He had the audacity to argue that annihilation of the Native American cultures was inevitable. Two weeks of this Colorado History class at CU-Boulder was consumed by students trying to jar the professor from his position. But [...]
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Otterly excellent

Julie Zickefoose never disappoints me when she tells one of her animal stories on NPR. A recent story about her encounter with a 6-foot-long Amazon otter had several notable storytelling elements: § Suspense. You know the adorable otter is going to bite her, but she keeps you on tenterhooks all the way to the point [...]
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Great ideas for improving meetings

Lencioni, P. (2004). Death by Meeting. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. When you stop to think of the resources an organization invests in meetings, you realize what a tremendous return is needed to justify them. Unfortunately, very little attention is paid to the conduct of a meeting and this valuable tool is largely wasted. Lencioni’s fictional leadership [...]
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Is storytelling the “sixth discipline?”

Denning, S. (2005). The Leader’s Guide to Storytelling. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. As a knowledge management leader at the World Bank, Denning gained influence by gathering and using the organization’s success stories. He went on to study the historical and anthropological roots of storytelling and he joined a storyteller group. The result is a scholarly analysis [...]
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Quantum physics meets dialogue

Bohm, D. & Nichol, L. (Ed). (1996). On Dialogue. New York: Routledge. During his career as a theoretical physicist, David Bohm’s writings and lectures took side trips into dialogue and collective thought. In this book, editor Lee Nichol compiles Bohm’s ideas to suggest a coherent theory of co-creation of meaning. There is a flavor of [...]
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Opening your mind, step by step

Stone Zander, R., & Zander, B. (2000) The Art of Possibility. Boston: Harvard Business School Press. The authors urge leaders to shed “scarcity thinking” and embrace possibility. It is the difference between plugging away within confines and exploring boundless possibilities. Stone Zander, a family therapist, and Zander, the music director of the Boston Philharmonic, argue [...]
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Best vision of ideal culture

Senge, P.M. (2006, Rev.). The Fifth Discipline. New York: Currency Doubleday. Senge started a movement with this book, which outlines the first five disciplines (there may be more, he says) that are required to create a “learning organization.” Members of a learning organization understand how they create their reality and how they can influence it. [...]
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Best book on teams

Katzenback, J.R. & Smith, D.K. (1993, Rev.). The Wisdom of Teams. New York: HarperBusines. Team building in organizations too often attends to the interrelationships of individuals and neglects performance. Organizations that create a culture that monitors and values group achievement are more flexible, innovative and efficient, Katzenbach and Smith say. They lay out the fundamentals [...]
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Best book for daily centering

Dreher, D. (1996). The Tao of Personal Leadership. New York: HarperBusiness. Dreher, an educator, aikido practitioner, and student of the Tao organizes passages from the Tao Te Ching to guide leaders to awareness, centeredness, honor, and humility. The first section of the book addresses inner processes that help leaders achieve personal confidence in their role. [...]
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