Leadership Report: The richest man in Babylon
Your report should provide some summary of the material you read, but also situate it within the broader context of the common elements of the class. This is the value added that will make it more than just a book report.
As a leader, you are going to have to be precise in your written communications. People with whom you communicate will continually be suffering from informational overload. Therefore, you will have to organize your thoughts clearly and make your points logically and with supporting rationale. This leads to the following suggestions:
Organize your report: What are the main points? How will you support them?
Reflection: Link your ideas to class concepts. Integrate with other readings, speakers, personal experiences, etc. Connect to leadership and the role of leadership in sport organizations. Analyze your own leadership within the context of what you have read.
Transfer of knowledge: Show your own independent thinking. Focus on new understandings. Answer What have I learned that I can/will apply?
Cohesiveness: Tie together information from readings and class discussion. Demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between readings and class discussion. Present your ideas cleanly, clearly, and logically. Style is important.
In the past, these reports have had a cover page, been approximately five pages long, double-spaced, in APA format — but that is purely a guideline. Use your discretion to match the assignment to the value that you uncover. Your class presentation should be 5 minutes.
No two people can read the same book! Coordinate.
Intro
Why I picked this book?
What this paper is about?
What I wanted to get out of the book?
What I got out of the book?
Background
Of arthur
of book
Summary
Key storyies
take ways
What did I learn from the book?
how does it relate to the what I learned
Stan_Learned experiences
Time mangemts_key to succes
Conculuse
Your leaders weakness and strengths
how to improve both