This week we talked more about shared leadership and how our books we read related to it, and putting that information into a pecha kucha presentation, which is a presentation that all slides are 20 seconds with no words. The slides are used more as a visual aid to what you are supposed to be presenting, which in this case is shared leadership. My book choice was 1985, this book is about a man named Winston living in a society ran by ''big brother'' a really powerful central force, there are really no actual rules, like you can drink as much smoke as much as you want but you basically have to live for big brother. you have to listen to what they say and believe it no second guessing big brother because they are always right. that's what they want you to believe. if they say 2+2=5 then 2+2=5. Anything you think against big brother is known as a thought crime and is punishable by death. Its not something you can get away with easily either. you will always be caught. their are thought police everywhere, even children thought police so there's no way of escaping it. Big brother is powerful enough to make you think and or feel whatever you're told. and as a single electorate you're too scared to speak up and form together with everyone else to create something better because you and everyone else is too scared of what will happen if they do. Even though all of them together could make the needed change. https://nonprofitquarterly.org/2014/04/21/doing-more-with-more-putting-shared-leadership-into-practice/
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March 2017
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