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LDCP Coaches

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LDCP Coaches are College of Agriculture faculty or administrative/professionals who have completed the Coach’s Training Workshop. They are not the student’s academic advisor, rather another individual who will support, encourage, and guide students in their leadership development journey.  The Leadership Development Certificate Program office in the Office of Academic Programs will assign students to coaches. During any one semester, a coach may have one to three students.

1 ⁠— APPLY NOW

To start the process, coaches need to complete the coach application survey.

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CONTINUING COACH APPLICATIONS COMING SOON
 

2 ⁠— GET TRAINED

Training Sessions Coming Soon!

3 ⁠— GET A STUDENT

Get assigned a student to coach from the Office of Academic Programs.

 

4 ⁠— LEAD BY EXAMPLE

Review the list of coaching expectations, coaching discussion ideas and recommended coaching strategies.

REVIEW COACH EXPECTATIONS

Coaching Resources

  • Create a coaching “contract.”
    • What do you expect of each other?
    • How often will you meet and for how long?
    • What is the best way to communicate?
    • What are the individual responsibilities for each discussion?
  • Ask questions such as the following:
    • Will you tell me about yourself?
    • What are your strengths and/or weaknesses in this particular area?
    • What is the most valuable lesson you will learn from this experience?
  • Review the student's Leadership Self-Assessment.
    • In which areas of leadership development does the student feel most confident and knowledgeable?
    • What skills did the student check on the assessment as ones to develop?
    • How could the student make improvements in these areas?
    • Help the student create improvement objectives and leadership goals.
  • Place strong emphasis on the Personal Development Plan (PDP). The PDP should be completed within the first few weeks of entering into the program.
  • Discuss the student’s timeline or plan for completing the certification program.​

  • What group/team activities do you want to participate in (or use towards completing the certificate)?
  • What classes are you interested in taking?
  • Which seminars, events or conferences are you interested in attending? When are they? Can you fit them into your schedule?
  • When will you complete your PDP? Determine a deadline.
  • Instead of asking why the student participated in activities say, “Tell me more.”
  • Do not say, “You should have …” or “I think you should…” Instead say, “Maybe you could…,” “Another option may be…,” or “What if we tried to…”
  • Ask the student to do a pre-reflection before the event as well as a reflection afterwards. Ask the student to project or predict what he or she will get out of an experience or to hypothesize what will happen before the experience and then reflect on the results.
  • Other questions may include, but are not limited to:
    • In what areas do you need to improve and grow?
    • How are you really going to be able to stretch yourself?
    • How will you apply this successful experience to future opportunities?
  • Remember, the PDP must be submitted and approved by you on Passport for the student to begin achieving points towards their badge completions for all four leadership domains. ​

  • Ensure the student is submitting reflections on Passport regularly.  Reflections should be written following each leadership-related experience.
  • Review personal assessment results and provide feedback.  Results should be used to compose the PDP.
  • Discuss reasons for choosing each improvement objective.
  • Discuss how the PDP ties into the Leadership Development Certificate Program effort and how the specific skills help the student achieve his/her goals.
  • At least one or two meetings per semester may be necessary in order to review progress and badge completion.
  • Review the student's e-portfolio regularly in order to provide prompt feedback for each event submission.  Do the submissions sufficiently demonstrate growth in the four stated goals?  Have the student explain their progress in person.
  • Ask the student the following:
    • “How can you articulate the entire process as a whole?”
    • “How will you describe your leadership skills in an interview?”
    • “What has been the most beneficial part of this process?”
    • “How will you continue to learn and practice leadership once you leave Purdue?”
  • Remember the coach determines if and when the student completes each of the 4 leadership badges for completion of the certificate.​

  • Share your experiences with the student. Develop a relationship in which you and the student know and respect each other.
  • Sit side-by-side or at an angle, rather than face-to-face.
  • Highlight the student’s accomplishments.
  • Provide support for future tasks and experiences.
  • Talk genuinely with the student. To understand the student’s PDP, you must get to know the student.
  • Keep the conversation informal and friendly, rather than rigid and rehearsed.
  • Offer suggestion on how to improve or ask what other options the student may have taken, rather than telling the student what to do.
  • At the end of discussions, ask the student for suggestions on how to improve your coaching.
  • At the end of discussions, ask the student to write two or three things he or she has learned to reinforce learning and create satisfaction from the discussions.​