Remove 2003 Remove Mentor Remove Problem Solving
article thumbnail

Coaching as a Vehicle for Change: Organizational and Individual Perspectives

International Coach Academy

Grant (2003) discovered that life coaching enhanced mental health and satisfaction with life in individuals, even though improving mental health was not the direct intention of the life coaching process. International Journal of Evidence-Based Coaching and Mentoring 16:2, pp. All of these are success factors in professional settings.

article thumbnail

Coaching in Social Work Development

International Coach Academy

The core functions of coaching in social work tend to focus on “transferring learning to practice, implementing evidence-based practice, skill building, problem-solving and staying on track, and modeling behaviors.” Supporting leaders in developing and problem-solving. Mentoring and coaching.InF.Ross-Sheriff Orme (Eds.),

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

The nuts and bolts of building a brand | Penelope Trunk's Brazen.

Penelope Trunk

Not as a BC write up, but as a person reaching out through social media to help, educate, and mentor the up coming generation of work force. I hope this comment didn't include too much problem solving for you ;) Also, what happened to your search box?? to speak to BC members in a personal way. You are the evangelist.

IT 72
article thumbnail

Asperger's at work: Why I'm difficult in meetings | Penelope.

Penelope Trunk

I find myself exhausted after a day of interacting in business situations where I'm not working based on my creative strengths – primarily photography or creative problem solving.

IT 111
article thumbnail

Five tips for asking better questions | Penelope Trunk's Brazen.

Penelope Trunk

It’s the best way to have a meaningful conversation and it’s the best way to rope in a mentor or look like a star performer. Great approach to problem solving. It takes a lot of practice and patience to get it "right" and you, your mentor, or anybody else for that matter have a finite amount of time to pursue answers.

Career 111
article thumbnail

Underrated career skill: Asking questions | Penelope Trunk's.

Penelope Trunk

The best and wisest question anyone ever asked me happened when I was flailing about worrying about something, and a mentor asked me: "What's the worst thing that can happen?" She often makes observational comments about stuff she thinks should be different, but she doesn't problem-solve.

Career 107
article thumbnail

Asperger's at work: Why I need a sick day to register my car.

Penelope Trunk

Driving problem solved. . :) Posted by Tzipporah on December 1, 2009 at 2:42 pm | permalink | Reply Stick two labels to the dashboard: a left arrow with the word LEFT and one for RIGHT. Then get a GPS. Posted by Brad on December 1, 2009 at 3:01 pm | permalink | Reply I have been a habitual nail biter for years.

IT 111