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1.
Holist Nurs Pract ; 25(4): 211-4, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21697663

ABSTRACT

Leadership coaching is becoming an increasingly important intervention that helps individual nurse executives and managers develop and use the best of their strengths, gifts, and talents. As the need for leadership in nursing becomes urgent and brave souls move into the positions of greater authority and potential impact, they will face challenges as they move up in rank. This article identifies the hidden and often-overlooked challenges that are faced by new leaders as they transition into roles of increased responsibility, and it demonstrates how leadership coaching can help new leaders make successful transitions. As the current health care crisis creates opportunity for new leaders, those who opt for promotions and lateral shifts encounter both expected and surprising challenges. The expected challenges include mastering new content skills, learning new organizational structures, and getting to know new teams. The less obvious stressors include issues of self-esteem, assertiveness, self-consciousness, self-criticism, perfectionism, new boundaries, changing identities, and finding one's own leadership style. These important issues are often kept out of conscious awareness and overlooked at great cost to the individual leader and her institution. Leadership coaching can provide support and practical strategies for managing and overcoming these hidden challenges.


Subject(s)
Career Mobility , Leadership , Nurse Administrators , Nursing/organization & administration , Professional Competence , Staff Development/methods , Humans , Organizational Innovation
2.
J Prof Nurs ; 25(4): 204-10, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19616188

ABSTRACT

Despite attention given to the nursing shortage and now the nursing faculty shortage, what is perhaps less visible but equally critical are the pending retirements of most of the current cadre of academic nursing administrators in the next decade. With only 2.1% of current deans, directors, and department chairs in 2006 aged 45 years or younger, there may be a pending crisis in leadership development and succession planning in our nursing schools and colleges. This article describes an innovative leadership development program for largely new nursing academic administrators, which combined a formal campus-based leadership symposia and executive coaching. This article is particularly useful and practical in that actual case studies are described (albeit modified slightly to protect the identity of the individual administrator), providing a real-life narrative that rarely makes its way into the nursing academic administration literature. The executive coaching focus is very sparsely used in nursing academia, and this college's success using this professional development strategy is likely to become a template for other institutions to follow.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing, Continuing/organization & administration , Faculty, Nursing/organization & administration , Leadership , Nurse Administrators/education , Universities/organization & administration , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/organization & administration , Faculty, Nursing/supply & distribution , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Nursing Administration Research , Professional Autonomy , Workforce
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