• Home
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Women on Business

Business Women Expertise, Tips, Advice and More to Build Winning Careers and Brands

You are here: Home / Personal Development / Leadership Development and Educating our Young

Leadership Development and Educating our Young

November 22, 2010 By Sylvia Lafair

Think back to when you began your school years. Did you wake up eager and ready for the learning and relationship challenges that were there each day? Were you a social butterfly or more prone to stand on the sidelines? Were you an academic star or just muddled through?

There is lots of conflicting research about what really matters in the process to educate children. It leads to so many deep philosophical questions about what really matters in life. After little ones step out beyond their first organization, the family, they are all required to enter the school organization.

They, as we did, bring with them the patterns of behavior learned for security and survival. Each family has its own history and legacies that are filtered from generation to generation. So it is with all organizations. The patterns of learning in most schools come from our European roots. The training we get is partly also a residual of the Industrial Revolution.

Where is it written that standardized tests really tell us who has a keen mind and who does not? It tells us more about who has harnessed the learning style that standardized tests indicate is a key to success; maybe, maybe not.

In the past schools were geared for boys to become the men who would lead our society into the future. Girls were to become the mothers and housekeepers for our men. Then Betty Freidan wrote “the Feminine Mystique” and women heard the call for a new order of relating to men, to the world.

We know how to do peaceful revolutions and I believe we must become more vocal now for the sake of the children. Education is not bringing forth from the core of the young the ability to learn and discern. Mostly kids are still being taught the way it was to get workers ready for working in mills;  where there time cards to show when we got to work and when we left, and bells ringing for shifts to change.

I recently received this fascinating and clear view of how we are robbing our young of exciting educations because we are stuck in an old paradigm. In “Don’t Bring it to Work” I discuss how patterns from the past can keep us stuck and ways to transform them. Please let me know what you think of the following video.

Click this link to view Brene Brown video on YouTube.

We can and need to take part in the larger dialogue about education whether we have biological children or not. This is a revolution that is part of the female DNA, to gently, yet forcefully to ask the questions and make change our priority for the good of everyone.

Sylvia Lafair

Sylvia Lafair, PhD, is President of CEO – Creative Energy Options, Inc., a global consulting company focused on optimizing workplace relationships through her exclusive PatternAware™ Leadership Model. Dr. Lafair is the author of Don’t Bring It to Work: Breaking the Family Patterns That Limit Success published by Jossey-Bass. As an executive coach and leadership educator, she has more than 30 years of experience with all levels of management from leading corporate officers of global companies to executives of non-profits and owners of leading family-owned businesses. She is now offering GUTSY Women Weekends, giving women the opportunity to dialogue and clarify next steps.

More Posts - Website

Follow Me:
TwitterFacebook

Filed Under: Personal Development, Women On Business, Work-Home Life, Workplace Issues Tagged With: Biological, Brene Brown, Communication, Don't Bring It to Work, Female, School, women

Sponsors

Recommended Reading

ultimate guide to email marketing

Awards & Recognition

Categories

  • Board of Directors
  • Books for Businesswomen
  • Business Development
  • Business Executive Team
  • Business Travel
  • Businesswomen Bloggers
  • Businesswomen Interviews
  • Businesswomen Profiles
  • Career Development
  • Communications
  • Contests
  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
  • Customer Service
  • Decision-making
  • Discounts & Offers
  • Education
  • Equality
  • Ethics
  • Female Entrepreneurs
  • Female Executives
  • Female Executives
  • Finance
  • Franchising
  • Freelancing & the Gig Economy
  • Global Perspectives
  • Health & Wellness
  • Human Resources Issues
  • Infographics
  • International Business
  • Job Satisfaction
  • Job Search
  • Leadership
  • Legal and Compliance Issues
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Networking
  • News and Insights
  • Non-profit
  • Online Business
  • Operations
  • Personal Development
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Productivity
  • Project Management
  • Public Relations
  • Reader Submission
  • Recognition
  • Resources & Publications
  • Retirement and Savings
  • Reviews
  • Sales
  • Slideshow
  • Small Business
  • Social Media
  • Startups
  • Statistics, Facts & Research
  • Strategy
  • Success Stories
  • Team-Building
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Women Business Owners
  • Women On Business
  • Women On Business News
  • Women On Business Offers
  • Women On Business Partners
  • Women On Business Roundtable
  • Women on Business School
  • Work at Home/Telecommute
  • Work-Home Life
  • Workplace Issues

Authors

Quick Links

Home | About | Advertise | Write for Us | Contact

Search This Site

Follow Women on Business

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 Women on Business · Privacy Policy · Comment Policy