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The Committee on Leadership Education (CLE) is a new knowledge
community, granted with incubator status for 20062007.
Incubator status is a time for a newly forming knowledge community
to document its history, organize current knowledge on leadership
education, and begin to develop resources for all members. This
also means opportunities exist for all members to participate,
share how they started their leadership education, and
assist in developing research.
Recent history of leadership education starts in "service to the
nation," the seventh goal of Ernest Boyer and Lee
Mitgangs seminal 1996 report, Building Community: A
New Future for Architecture Education and Practice. In the
report, the authors challenged the architecture profession to
actively embrace civic engagement as crucial to the future of the
profession and the country as a whole. Perhaps never before
in history have the skills, the broad vision and the ideals of the
architecture profession been more urgently needed, wrote
Boyer and Mitgang. The inaugural AIA Leadership Institute that
convened in Washington, D.C., in March 1997 was a direct response
to this challenge. Since then, successive classes of
architects have graduated from several conferences known as the
Leadership Institute.
At the AIA 2004 National Convention and Expo in Chicago, a group of
Leadership Institute alumni met and committed to the decision to
make leadership a core value for members. Over the next year,
the group worked diligently to apply for knowledge community
status. At the close of 2005, the Committee for Leadership
Education (CLE) was granted incubator status for
20062007. The CLE is committed to facilitating
research and providing training for all architects to lead in the
profession, community, or political realms while helping society
gain a greater understanding of the importance of architecture. The
CLE Advisory Group plans to develop its charter and seeks to
expand leadership opportunities for architects, empower new
leaders, nurture and promote leadership roles across the full
spectrum of an architects career, and advocate opportunities
for alliances with leaders in other professions.
Mission
The CLE supports the concept of leadership as a core value of
the AIA and the architecture profession through training,
outreach, advocacy, and education. Goals developed for this first
year include
- Research current leadership programs that exist both within and
outside the AIA, taken by AIA members
- Develop two leadership programs (focusing on civic and firm
leadership) in 2007 for use by AIA components to advance the
importance of leadership in the architecture profession
- Survey AIA members to determine what they seek in
leadership programs to ensure CLE programs match
members' learning objectives
- Collaborate with other knowledge communities and allied
organizations
- Create relationships with educational institutions that offer
PhD programs in architecture and business schools that
offer leadership programs to stimulate or commission new
knowledge pertaining to leadership in the architecture
profession
- Continue development of the CLE Web site as the leadership
education resource for members.
Year End Reports
2007
How to Become Involved in the
CLE
Editor's Note: Joining CLE and other knowledge communities is
now easier than ever. The AIA has updated its Web site to allow
members to join knowledge communities through their member profile.
We hope you will take advantage of this opportunity to sign up for
the knowledge communities of your choice. Remember, membership in a
knowledge community is a free benefit of AIA membership! Click here to join.
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