Anybody who knows me now will not believe me when I say that up until the fourth grade in P.S. 157, I was shy and retiring. But at the beginning of the fourth grade my life's direction changed. I will never know what Mr. lames Cooper (a devilishly hand some African-American teacher) saw in me or for that matter what the other teachers saw who recommended me to him. But Mr. Cooper asked me to run for secretary of the student council. I ran and won, and as they say the rest is history. I remained in the student coun cil for the fifth grade and was voted vice president in the sixth grade. I went on to Junior High School 81, joined the school patrol, and graduated from the ninth grade as school leader with the obnoxious title of Head of Heads.
You can be a better boss. You can learn leadership. Thank goodness, because many people in managerial positions haven't the foggiest notion how to lead,They don't iced driven to attain the competencles of a boss--much less a great boss. NoW there is help. The Monroe Doctrine offfers educators, administrators, and business-folk simple, fundamental lessons on becoming--and remaining--a truly great boss.
Lorraine Monroe is a born leader. She caught the bug early, as secretary of the student council in the fourth grade at P.S. in Central-Harlem She went on to found the Frederick Douglass Academy in Harlem, a remarkably successful and innovative public school, and became one of the most respected education reformers in America. Now Dr Monroe translates her extensive experience in public schools into the "Monroe Doctrine" to show other education and business leaders how to create and maintain high-achieving organizanons.
The Monroe Doctrine offers readers concrete lessons in the craft of leadership. Its brief, catchy lessons and anecdotes will help potential leaders tap into their natural gifts and harness those gifts to lead seemingly by instinct. With ThE Monroe Doctrine by their side, readers will be able to lead any organization--whether a hospital, house of worship, a sorority, a family, a school, or a business with reneged passion and results.
Introduction
Aa
Abandon
Accustom
Analyze
Apply
Ask
Assess
Attach
Awaken
Bb
Balance
Bear
Believe
Break
Build
Burn
Cc
Calm
Capture
Change
Check
Compete
Construct
Create
Cultivate
Dd
Dare
Deepen
Demand
Dream
Drop
Ee
Emanate
Encourage
Escape
Experience
Ff
Feel
Find
Focus
Free
Fulfill
Gg
Give
Hh
Have
Ii
Imagine
Indicate
Inspire
Intuit
Ij
Joke
Kk
Keep
Know
L1
Leave
Linger
Listen
Live
Love
Mm
Meditate
Mingle
Nn
Name
Oo
Observe
Obsess
Pp
Participate
Penetrate
Permit
Pilot
Plan
Prepare
Present
Preserve
Qq
Quest
Rr
Recall
Reduce
Reflect
Release
Rest
Rethink
Retreat
Ss
Sacrifice
Sanctify
Select
Shed
Shelter
Simplify
Stretch
Tt
Take
Think
Transcend
Uu
Uplift
Vv
Value
Ww
Wait
Write
Xx
X-ray
Yy
Yield
Zz
Zigzag
Epilogue: Monroe's Twelve Pieces of Parting Advice
Postscript
Appendix: The Action Plan Worksheet
Acknowledgments