The Seven Values of the Social Change Model
Consciousness of self and others – Being aware of the values, emotions, attitudes and beliefs that motivate one to take action, including how one understands others.
Congruency – Thinking, feeling, and behaving with consistency, genuineness, authenticity, and honesty toward others.
Commitment – Implies intensity and duration. It requires a significant involvement and investment of one’s self in the activity and it’s intended outcomes. It is the energy that drives the collective effort.
Collaboration – The primary means of empowering others and self through trust. Collaboration can occur when one has trust in the diversity of multiple talents and perspectives of the group members and the power of that diversity to generate creative solutions and actions.
Common Purpose – To work with shared aims and values. It implies the ability to engage in collective analysis of the issues at hand and the tasks to be undertaken. It requires that all members of the group participate actively in articulating the purpose and the goals of the leadership development activity.
Controversy with Civility – Recognizes two fundamental realities of any group effort: that differences in viewpoint are inevitable and valuable, and that such differences must be aired openly but with civility.
Citizenship – The process whereby the self is responsibly connected to the environment and the community. It acknowledges the interdependence of all involved in the leadership effort. Citizenship thus recognizes that effective democracy involves individual responsibility as well as individual rights.