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Glossary
- financial freedom
- accountability
- adaptability
- adaptive action
- ascii
- audit
- authentication
- authority
- benchmark
- business process
- business strategy
- cascading objectives
- character definition
- charismatic leadership
- codified knowledge
- cohesion
- commitment
- consensus
- context switching
- corrective action
- cost
- critical thinking
- culture
- cycle time
- decision
- decision analysis
- decision tree
- delegate
- direct influence
- distributed leadership
- eBook
- effect
- effective leadership
- emergent leadership
- emerging technologies
- encryption
- epub
- eReader
- essential outcomes
- ethical reasoning
- evaluation criteria
- experience
- forecast
- formalized process
- function
- Glossary and Acronym List
- granularity
- heuristic
- html
- hypothesis
- indirect influence
- initiatives
- inspect
- integrity
- intellectual capital
- intent
- interface
- IP
- ISO
- issue
- justification
- leadership
- legitimacy
- lesson learned
- management
- mentorship
- methodology
- mindmapping
- minimum viable quality
- mission statement
- model
- mutual influence
- objective
- PDCA
- perseverance
- pilot
- potential problem (or opportunity)
- principle
- prioritize
- problem
- procedure
- process
- process model
- project
- quality
- resilience
- responsibility
- responsiveness
- risk
- risk and opportunity management
- risk-based thinking
- rule of law
- schedule
- scope
- self-discipline
- service level
- socialization
- sound
- stakeholder
- strategic alignment
- strategy
- systems thinking
- tacit knowledge
- theory of constraints
- transactional leadership
- transformational leadership
- trust
- UML
- unicode
- value activities
- value chain
- values
- vision
- weighting
- work around
- Real Estate
- Lead Self
- Process
- Lead Teams
- Making a Website
- Lead Organizations
- Genealogy Consulting
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Teaching Kids Leadership
- Problem Solving Checklist
- Adjusting Leader Style to Personality Types
- Plan Do Check Adjust (PDCA)
- So what can adults do to help kids learn leadership?
- A rose by any other name is still a rose
- Natural Consequences Versus Coaching and Correcting
- Help Kids Develop Improved People Skills
- Five Year Old Laments 'My sister is making me mad!'
- Socratic question-based discussions
- Have the child report on what they saw that day'
- Great question for the adults trying to teach kids
- Teach Kids How to Deal With Stress Well
- Teach Kids the Pareto Principle, the 80/20 Principle
- Maslov Pyramid Perspective on Kids
- Reading Partner Questions
- Watching Examples and Discussing with the Youth to Help Them Process What They Saw
- Trust is crucial to leadership
- Teenage Decision Making
- Character Development - What is character anyway so kids can develop it?
- Defining Leadership
- Blog Vocabulary Not at Child's Level
- Encouragement for the Single Parent
- Giving children opportunities to lead
- Habits of Mind from Project 2061
- Horizontal Leadership-There are more chances to practice this type for children
- How young is too young to start?
- Introduction for those new to leadership
- Producer or Consumer of Leadership?
- Scouts provides opportunities to practice leadership
- Set High Expectations
- So why should anyone take on the challenge of leadership?
- The Beginning of My Journey of Discovery
- The Paradox of Service to Others
- The Well Trained Mind
- Vertical Leadership is not where kids typically start out
- What about cultural differences?
- What can children pick up about leadership anyway?
- What is age-appropriate for teaching kids leadership?
- What is the Payoff for the Hard Work of Leadership?
- What lessons did I learn trying to develop leadership in my own children (so far)?
- Who cares about leadership?
- Character Development - How do we grow strong character and help children do the same?
- How do we measure our current character?
- Character Development - Fairness as a Character Trait
- Children Can Learn Leadership
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Blog
- Gallons of Ink
- Got Yubikey Setup
- Experimenting with Ink Containers for Travel
- Cigar Case Pen Protector
- More Ink Mixing for Refill Bottles
- MacOS Sandboxing can Impact Reuse
- Python Programming
- Primary
- How to Make Family History Website and Book with Same Data
- Further Adventures Making DIY Fountain Pen Ink
- Cursive Writing
- Have Pens. Now I Need Paper
- eBook Conversion
- My Copper Metal Pen Arrived
- Do It Yourself (DIY) Mixing Fountain Pen Inks
- Microlearning
- Emergency Preparedness with Mobile Devices
- The Nature of Lisp and Writing with Pollen
- Fountain Pens
- Learning Simulation
- I Wish Familysearch.org Exported Data
- Raising Chickens in Florida
- Climbing the Learning Curve
- Gardening
- Dont Give Up
- The One Thing
- Opportunity Management
- Quote About Questions
- Mindset - Be sure you encourage kids toward 'growth' not 'born talent' with its fixed limits
- Demonstrating Respect and Choice versus Force and Coercion
- Behavioral Styles
- Applying Precepts
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Family History
- Author's Contact Information
- Conventions Used
- Family History
- Family History Frontmatter
- Family History Introduction
- Historical Timeline
- Note to Future Family History Maintainers
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Our Lanham Paternal Lineage
- Josias Lanham Family 1628 (Not our direct line)
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the Curtis Harden Lanham Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the Hiram D. Lanham Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the John Lanham (1661) Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the Jonathon Lanham (1630) Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the O.S. Lanham Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the Robert Lanham (1560) Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the Sylvester Lanham Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the T.B. Lanham Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the Thomas Lanham (1701) Generation
- Other Siblings and Cousins in the Thomas Lanham (1757) Generation
- Our Lanham Line - The Paternal Lineage
- The Amanda Francis Lanham Family
- The Andrew Shepherd Family
- The Archibald Lanham Family 1751
- The Benjamin Garfield Lanham Family
- The Burress and Ida Roberts Family
- The Calvin Powell Dorsey Family
- The Charles Selby Family 1762
- The Clifford Wayne Lanham Family
- The Curtis Harden Lanham Family 1813
- The Curtis Harden Lanham Family 1875
- The David Lanham Family 1595
- The Edward James Holt Family
- The Edward Lanham Family 1685
- The Elmer Harn Family
- The Emmitt F. Welborn Family
- The Eugene WILLIAMS Family 1855
- The Frank Robinson Family
- The Gideon Wilburn Ashley Family
- The Hiram Demarcus Lanham Family 1845
- The Issac Elam Family 1803
- The Jacob Shepherd Family 1812
- The James Bedford Ray Family (Cliffie M. Lanham)
- The James Kennedy Family
- The Jasper Shipman Family
- The Jeremiah Lanham Family 1755
- The Jesse Elam Family 1782
- The Joe A. Madden Family
- The John Hendrickson Corely Family
- The John James Roberts Family
- The John Lanham Family 1661
- The John Lanham Family 1690
- The John Nicholas Jacks Family 1740
- The John T. Scott Family
- The Jonathan Hammer Cook Family
- The Jonathan Lanham Family 1630
- The Josias Lanham Family 1590
- The Oran Stroud Lanham Family 1916
- The R.J. Craighead Family 1907
- The R.J. Craighead Family 1907
- The Richard Lanham Family 1697
- The Robert Lanham Family 1584
- The Roger Lanham Family 1560
- The Stephen Lanham (1726) Family
- The Stephen Lanham Family 1760
- The Stephen Lanham Family 1784
- The Sylvester Lanham Family 1790
- The Thomas Benton Lanham Family
- The Thomas Berry (T. B.) Lanham Family 1882
- The Thomas Lanham (1757) Family
- The Thomas Lanham Family 1700 or 1701
- The Thomas Sisk Family 1858
- The W.T. Lanham Family 1850
- The Walter Lee Ray Family
- The William Curtis Lanham Family
- The William Lanham Family 1699
- The Willie Green Scott Family
- The Wortha Leon Lanham Family 1907
- Reference Materials
- Rockwall Cemetery Listing, Rockwall, Texas
- The 2006 Journey to Find Thomas Lanham's Grave Site
- The Lanham family of Wortham (Research Details)
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The Maternal Side of Our Family Lines
- The A. Sion Wheeles Family
- The Aaron Jones Family
- The Abednego Chandler Family 1752
- The Adrian Alford Colbath Family 1893
- The Alex L. Baker Family
- The Alford Nolen Jones Family
- The Andrew Jackson (Jack) Kitchens Family
- The Beall Family
- The Benjamin Colbath Family 1758
- The Chisel True Baker Family
- The Daniel Horne Blackmore Family
- The David Amick Family
- The George Henry Slattery Family
- The J. E. Sisk Family
- The James McHale Family
- The John C. Colbath Family 1820
- The John Chandler Family
- The John Jones Family
- The John Lacey Family (bef 1778)
- The John Patrick Carmody Family
- The John Sappington Family 1723
- The Larkin (Lark) Patrick Williams Family
- The Lazarus Rufus Jones Family
- The Leah Unknown Family
- The Luther Jason Head Family
- The Luther Troup Baker Family
- The Mason Jones Family
- The Michael Gonzales Family
- The Michael Yost Family
- The Patrick Joseph Merrick Family
- The Patrick Merrick Family 1883
- The Patrick Williams Family
- The Perry Rufus Jones Family
- The Peter Logan Yost Family
- The Quirke Family
- The Richard Head Family 1802
- The Richard Merrick Family
- The Robert Chandler Family 1687
- The Stephen Grey Family 1894
- The Thomas Edmonson Head Family
- The Thomas Lacey Family 1808
- The Thomas Winthrop Colbath Family 1851
- The William Estes Family 1785
- The William J. Roberts Family
- The William Milton Jacks Family
- The William Patrick Williams Family
- The Willis Ashley Family
- The Winthrop Colbath Family 1786
- The Time and the Places
- Mental Models
- Contact
- Frequently Asked Questions
What is age-appropriate for teaching kids leadership?
0-8 years old
- Build strong character
- Watch the examples of adults around you
- Opportunities to practice their own budding decision making.
9-11 years old
- Decide how you want to be and begin becoming that person
- Demonstrate and continue to build strong character
- Develop your talents
- Create something
- Live according to your values or principles
- Participate in a service project with a trusted adult
- Participate in Cub Scouts or Brownies
- Learn the language used by leaders
- Learn how to solve problems and make decisions
- Learn to read body language
- Learn who you trust to do what they say
- Learn about consequences of choices people make
12-13 years old
- Demonstrate and continue to build strong character
- Practice leadership opportunities
- Feedback and coaching
- Plan and carry out an activity with friends
- Set two personal goals and follow through on them for at least two months
- Participate in Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts, set goals and follow through for meeting the requirements for rank advancement
- Learn advanced problem-solving and decision-making skills
- Experience the consequences of forgetting important things
- Practice problem-solving and decision-making in a group of peers and individually
- Begin to build others trust in you that you will do what you say and follow through
- Develop your talents, get good at something
- Learn what good judgment is and begin to apply it
- Learn how to communicate effectively and apply it in leadership practices
- Follow wise counsel
- Set a good example
14-15 years old
- Demonstrate and continue to build strong character
- Influence peers more than you are influenced by them
- Practice problem-solving and decision-making and talk over the results with an adult you trust
- Find opportunities to get things done with a group of people (ask an adult to help locate these opportunities)
- Talk confidently with adults
- Teach a group of peers a concept or skill for 10-20 minutes
- Learn how to delegate
- Effectively use body language to reinforce your messages
- Practice good judgment
- Practice positive, uplifting, and encouraging communication. Avoid trust-corroding sarcasm.
- Seek out and accept greater responsibilities in Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts
- Watch over younger children and uplift them
- Ensure delegated tasks are understood, supervised, and accomplished.
16-17 years old
- Demonstrate and continue to build strong character
- Influence peers more than you are influenced by them
- Be aware of ethical and moral dilemmas and make right choices to strengthen your character
- Stand your ground and choose not to participate if those around you choose to reject or violate correct principles or your values
- Balance confidence and humility
- Participate in at least two service projects
- Lead, or aid in leading, a service project
- Practice independent problem-solving and decision-making
- Practice delegation
- Demonstrate good judgment
- Teach peers and younger children in some form of organized activity
- Demonstrate adaptability because things rarely go according to plan
- Exercise leadership in Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts,
- Propose solutions to adult leaders in problem-solving
- Help those you lead learn to govern themselves
- Be willing to be presided over and accountable
18 - 21 years old
- Demonstrate and continue to build strong character
- Actual leadership opportunities followed by reflection and coaching
- Volunteer roles in leadership
- Journal writing about experiences
- Give a persuasive speech or talk to a group of people about a subject
- Practice independent and interdependent problem-solving and decision-making
- Become effective at delegation
- Learn how to hold people accountable for their commitments and how to talk to them when they don't follow through
- Build competence in a professional vocation
- Anticipate when emotions may fray and encourage as needed
- Know human nature and how to leverage it and counter it where necessary
- Search for correct principles and align with them
- Influence events rather than let circumstances happen.
- Make sound and timely decisions, taking advantage of fleeting windows of opportunity
- Seek opportunities to lead under trying conditions
- Learn to reason and anticipate in trying conditions
- Learn how people tend to behave differently in trying conditions
- Develop team spirit through shared hardship
- Learn how to plan in unfamiliar situations
- Counteract fear by building competence and confidence
- Give those you lead more challenges and responsibilities as you think they can handle them, give them more when they show they are ready
- Find ways to be in the presence of great people and learn from them
24-30 years old
- Study leadership from the example and writings of more effective practitioners and apply what you learn
- Learn what not to do from examples of ineffective leadership around you
- Practice listening
- Build trust with your team and with sponsors or organizational leaders - it goes both ways
- Demonstrate and continue to build strong character
- Formal refresher training and application opportunities
- Paid roles in leadership
- Volunteer roles in leadership
- Ask followers to commit, and follow up to help them grow
- Ask for more responsibility
- Identify talents in others, pick a project team of complementary skills
- Help others succeed
- Look for leadership mentors, understudy your current leader
- Ask
- What is happening?
- What is not happening?
- How can I influence the action?
- Sincerely care about those you lead, commit the time and effort to know them, understand what makes them tick, and learn what is important to them
- Develop a high tolerance for ambiguity and uncertainty
- Keep your team informed, and explain your decisions when conditions allow
30-35 years old
- Attend Graduate school
- Teach and coach others how to lead
- Create a possible future in your mind's eye that is clear, precise, vivid, then communicate that vision enthusiastically to other people
- Validate people one-on-one
- Know yourself and seek improvement from formal institutional learning, field experience, self-development, personal study, and professional reading
- Study leadership from the example and writings of more effective practitioners and apply what you learn
- Reflect often and write in a leadership journal your lessons learned as you grow in experience and capability
- Respect people's right to choose, avoid force or intimidation
- Develop those you lead to improve organizational bench strength
- Express adequate and specific appreciation
35+ years old
- Study leadership from the example and writings of more effective practitioners and apply what you learn
- Teach others how to develop leaders
- Teach and coach others how to lead other leaders and coach them for improvement
- Share what you have learned about leading people with another generation
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