EMERGING ADULTS LEADERSHIP IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT THROUGH FAMILY STORYTELLING: A Narrative Approach
Author(s) -
Kate D. McCain,
Gina S. Matkin
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of leadership education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1552-9045
DOI - 10.12806/v18/i2/t3
Subject(s) - storytelling , narrative , identity (music) , narrative identity , sociology , leadership development , gender studies , narrative inquiry , psychology , political science , aesthetics , public relations , art , literature
The purpose of this article is to introduce a narrative framework for leadership education as a lens for exploring how emerging adults make sense of their leader identity development. This narrative framework, called Communicated Narrative Sense Making (CNSM), looks at identity through storytelling processes. Emerging adults in higher education have different experiences and come to a new awareness of themselves in a context in a variety of ways. Part of this development process is establishing an identity as a leader. We propose a narrative framework as an approach for exploring the experiences and sense-making processes of leader identity development in emerging adults.
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