• Director’s Cut
• They Gave Us Something to Talk About
• Stay Connected!

 

Director’s Cut

Betsy Myers and Ron Heifetz on Promoting Global Conversations

THE ALUMNI PROGRAMS OFFICE completed its first distance-learning program last fall. It was a lecture series called “Breakfast With Heifetz & Linsky” with Ron Heifetz MPA 1983 and Marty Linsky IOP 1973, authors of a new book called Leadership On The Line. The program started from Cambridge with Heifetz and 50 grads. Linsky and 30 alumni joined in from New York via videoconference, along with alumni at sites in Washington and London. The Bulletin talked in January to Betsy Myers MPA 2000, director of Alumni Programs, and Heifetz about the project.

What was the idea behind the series?
BM It’s hard for many of our alumni to come back to Cambridge. This is one way to bring the Kennedy School to them. We thought that by piloting this program, we could gauge alumni interest in this format for learning and networking. Aside from the fact that Ron and Marty are revered by grads, we knew that if anyone could navigate our audience through the bumpy ride that accompanies working with this technology for the first time, Ron and Marty could.

Ron, why did the idea of doing a global lecture series with alumni interest you?
RH First, it’s just wonderful to reconnect with people years after working with them at the Kennedy School. Second, it’s terrifically interesting to hear new questions they’re now asking as they reflect on their experience. Third, alumni help me improve my work by telling me what’s useful and what’s misleading in what I teach.

What’s the biggest challenge for alumni trying to implement the lessons from your leadership course?
RH All of us are inclined to fall back on our default habits of behavior, particularly in tough professional moments, and the ongoing implementation of the lessons our students work hard to learn requires not only professional discipline, but also supportive opportunities to keep learning, to keep questioning, and to keep working on the development and application of new ways to respond. Some of our alumni have been meeting regularly for breakfast in cities like Minneapolis/St. Paul for years. It seems like a great idea that support groups form in cities around the world that would bring together alums for regular, informal, collegial discussion around leadership issues in their daily lives.

How do you think this experiment worked?
BM To be honest, we didn’t know how interested alumni would be in a lecture with a videoconference format. So we were thrilled to see it sell out in just days! Since then, we’ve been especially happy with the feedback. People liked the opportunity to come together each week to listen and learn from Ron and Marty and from one another. We are really on to something that we can build on in the future. I’d like to see us add more regions to the mix.
RH Marty and I enjoyed doing this immensely. The technology worked very smoothly, particularly by the second and third sessions, and far more smoothly than we had anticipated. The sense of connectedness with folks in London, Washington, New York, and Boston seemed quite real to us. We also learned from the kinds of questions people asked. The questions were serious and pointed to the need for ongoing opportunities for networking support from colleagues.

Do you see a role for distance learning initiatives in the future?
RH There are enormous opportunities to provide direct support as well as encourage self-generating networks of collegial support through distance-learning initiatives. I’d like to see us build on this project in ways that reach out more consistently and widely to our amazing alumni, so many of whom are putting themselves on the line to serve the greater good in institutions and communities around the world.