The Mind of the Leader

The Mind of the Leader

The Matt Townsend Show - Season 1, Episode 1481 , Segment 3

Episode: College Food Scholarships, Lead With Authority, Mind of the Leader

  • Apr 19, 2018 4:00 pm
  • 34:03 mins

Jacqueline Carter is an International Partner and the North American Director for Potential Project. She has over twenty years of experience working with organizations around the globe to enhance effectiveness and improve performance. She is also the co-author of the book “The Mind of the Leader”. When some people think of leaders sometimes the phrase, “they talk the talk but can they walk the walk” comes to mind. With high expectations leaders are put into a different class because of their status. When stress mounts and deadlines hit, they are pushed to the brink. In her new co-authored book Jacqueline Carter takes us inside the mind of a Leader and shows what the most important quality they can have.

Other Segments

Food scholarships could help more students finish college

47m

Daphne Hernandez, Ph.D., earned her PhPh.D.in Applied Developmental & Educational Psychology at Boston College. She is currently an assistant professor in the department of health and human performance at the University of Houston. Her research is centered around family-related factors, such as poverty and family structure, and their influence on food insecurity/food assistance program participation (i.e. indicators of poverty) and obesity. With the cost of a college education rising more and more students are struggling to make ends meet. As a result, some students are going hungry and that makes it incredibly difficult for them to focus and succeed in school.  Dr. Daphne Hernandez believes campus hunger is a significant factor behind inequality in college completion rates, and that “food scholarships” may be a solution.

Daphne Hernandez, Ph.D., earned her PhPh.D.in Applied Developmental & Educational Psychology at Boston College. She is currently an assistant professor in the department of health and human performance at the University of Houston. Her research is centered around family-related factors, such as poverty and family structure, and their influence on food insecurity/food assistance program participation (i.e. indicators of poverty) and obesity. With the cost of a college education rising more and more students are struggling to make ends meet. As a result, some students are going hungry and that makes it incredibly difficult for them to focus and succeed in school.  Dr. Daphne Hernandez believes campus hunger is a significant factor behind inequality in college completion rates, and that “food scholarships” may be a solution.