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CU Students and Faculty Ask: What Does Leadership Mean in Today's World?
CU Center for Leadership
The Center for Leadership unites 27 leadership programs across campus to support programming and research.
The Presidents Leadership Class is a four-year, comprehensive leadership development program focusing on academics, experience, service and community to expose students to leadership lessons on many levels.
provides student-athletes with resources and opportunities to explore and pursue their passion while preparing them to continually thrive and achieve long-term success.
The Leadership Studies Minor (LSM) encourages students to discover what the academic research says about leadership, including collaborative and inclusive leadership, ethical decision-making and issues of power and privilege.
The Boulder-CU Leadership Program provides opportunities for current CU undergrads to partner with professionals in the Boulder community for mentoring experiences.
For Brian Muriithi (AeroEngrâ22), leadership is about building community, bridging cultures and collaborating. While his ideas are largely informed by his Kenyan heritage and personal experience, Muriithi has found confirmation in the books heâs reading as a student in the Engineering Leadership Program (ENLP).
Take Speaker of the Dead, by Orson Scott Card, which he read for his âIntelligent Leadershipâ class this spring: âThereâs an ongoing, tense war between cultures that donât understand each other,â he said. âIt was the job of a few characters to find the common ground and get people to work together instead of eliminating each other. The book was really about the importance of empathy and understanding.â
Muriithi is one of five recipients of the 2020â21 Newton Endowed Chair in Leadership Student Leaders of the Year Award, from CU Boulderâs Center for Leadership. In 2021, he was one of 3,000 undergraduate students on campus who are focused on improving their leadership skills through new CU Boulder opportunities.Ìę
A new era of leadership at CU
As part of the universityâs Flagship 2030 vision to better address 21st-century humanitarian, social and technological challenges, CU introduced a Center for Leadership last year. The center is a top priority for Chancellor Philip P. DiStefano, who holds the Newton Endowed Chair in Leadership, and will distinguish CUâs approach from other universities.
âJust as there is no one way to lead, there is no single approach to developing the leaders of tomorrow,â said Aaron Roof, executive director of the center. âWe are a hub that will connect more students to the multidisciplinary leadership education they need, while also amplifying CUâs cutting-edge research in the field of leadership development.â
The Engineering Leadership Program Muriithi is involved with is one of 27Ìęinitiatives for the center. CUâs Shilo Brooks, a staunch supporter of the liberal arts with a discipline in political theory, was tapped in 2018 to help prepare future leaders to grapple with the impacts of advances in biomedical engineering, energy, social media and other rapidly evolving fields.
âMy view is that leadership education is, in essence, liberal education,â he said,âand that the kinds of challenges leaders face require a certain intellectual agility that can only come by way of a broad and deep curiosity and a vigorous mind that wants to encounter and engage all aspects of the world.â
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Along with Angela Thieman Dino (MAnthâ95; PhDâ07), an anthropologist and senior instructor in the program, Brooks focused the four-course curriculum on exploring leadership through philosophy, history, psychology, politics, literature and anthropology.Ìę
Students read biographies â of the Wright brothers, Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr., for example â and listen to podcast interviews as a way to understand human âpassions and longings and hopes and fears,â which Brooks said is critical to leading teams and also doing well by society.
âWe teach leadership as a philosophy, which is where art and science meet: a reasonable, rational knowledge of the world, combined with a humane sensitivity to guide us to wisdom,â said Brooks, faculty director for the ENLP program. âSome of the qualities that a good leader must possess â empathy; character; an appreciation for diversity; a sense for the right, the just and the good â are not purely numerical, measurable or scientific in character.âÌę
While the ENLP curriculum emphasizes character formation, Brooks appreciates the diversity of approaches to leadership on campus.Ìę
âThe Center for Leadership brings together all the programs, all the diverse interests, all the manifold ways of doing things,â he said. âSo, we all talk to each other and learn from each other.â
New metrics for leadership
For Stefanie K. Johnson, associate professor in CUâs Leeds School of Business, the art and science of leadership have become one and the same.âPeople study how leaders build empathy, and we can measure empathy,â she said. âSo, if you consider science to be what I do â which is using the empirical scientific method to test hypotheses âthen itâs all science.â
Specifically, Johnson studies the intersection of leadership and diversity. Her bestselling book, Inclusify: The Power Uniqueness and Belonging to Build Innovative Teams, was published last year, and in addition to teaching students, she has spoken across the U.S. as a consultant, including in the White House.Ìę
What matters most to Johnson is that leaders keep learning.
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âIf you were a great leader in 1980 and youâre doing the same thing today, then youâre not a great leader anymore.â
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âIf you were a great leader in 1980 and youâre doing the same thing today, then youâre not a great leader anymore,â she said. âBut if we can define certain competencies, then we can train people to be better at them. That makes leadership more accessible.âÌę
At Leeds, Johnson said they are focusing on building leaders who have moral, ethical character, not just people who can make money.Ìę
âFor a long time, we thought first you had to get your technical skills down â accounting, finance, marketing â and if you had extra time, you could focus on the more social skills like empathy and inclusivity. Now itâs the opposite. Our students want an education that aligns with their values and prepares them for a workplace that supports the triple bottom line of people, planet and profits.â
In that way, she believes CU Boulder is getting it right.
âOf course, we have to act on our values and make certain changes,â she said. âBut our Center for Leadership shows how progressive we are compared to other institutions.â
Learning the art of leadership
Peter Huang, professor and DeMuth Chair at Colorado Law, studies happiness in law and business. Among other courses, he teaches Law and Leadership, which focuses on what he calls âthe art of leadershipââ and includes skills such as mindfulness, emotional intelligence, self-discipline, grit and subjective well-being.
âThese skills are teachable and extremely important,â Huang said. âIf you can lead yourself, then you can lead others and lead change. If youâre distracted, youâre not fully present to hear what your client, or the jury or opposing counsel is saying.â
Huang is pleased that other Colorado Law professors are also teaching empathy and compassion, though the profession at large is embracing the concepts relatively late.
âDoctors realized the importance of bedside manner,â he said. âManagers understood the importance of being adaptive when a plan isnât working. But law is by its nature precedent bound. Lawyers want consistency over time, and theyâre also risk-averse.â
Huang is convinced that improving their leadership skills will help CU graduates stand out in the job market.Ìę
Allie Reuter (IntPhys, Neuroâ21) agrees. As a pre-med student and a member of the Presidents Leadership Class, she is graduating with a leadership minor. She serves on the Senior Class Council and conducts undergraduate research on mental wellness with engineering students.Ìę
After a friend died by suicide, Reuter started CUâs chapter of Active Minds, the national organization that promotes mental health for young adults. Like Muriithi, she was one of the top five student leaders for 2020â21.Ìę
Reuter believes her leadership training and experience at CU will help her standout when she competes for jobs and medical school admission.
âEveryone who applies will have a great resume and be decently smart,â she said. âBut what ends up differentiating people is whether they can have conversations and help others feel comfortable. Iâve met some really impressive doctors in the field, and the thing Iâve taken away is how compassionate they are and how comfortable others are in their presence. To me, thatâs really an art.â
Leading the way to change
Whether leadership is considered an art or a science, everyone agrees that the future requires leaders who have more than technical skills for their field.Ìę
Brooks says theyâll need the intellectual grounding to grapple with fundamental human problems. So, he wants all leadership students to âthink through the great question Aristotle first asked: âWhat is good for man?ââÌę
But thereâs more, said Muriithi, who plans to continue fostering the growth of future leaders within the Kenyan community in Colorado. He believes leaders will need to see the world as a diverse community whose problems cannot be solved alone.
âIn the Kenyan community, one of our big mottos is, âIt takes a village to raise a child.â That influenced me a lot growing up,â he said. âLeadership is about how you live your life and carry yourself on a daily basis.âÌę
âOur generation is more progressive, and weâre change-makers,â he said. âWhen we look to the past, we see that the top-down method hasnât worked, sowe want to do things a different way â to make our future and the future for our children better.â
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Illustrations by James Yang
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