Hear from masters students on the impact individualized leadership coaching made on their summer internship. April, 2022.
As part of our Leadership Initiative, all Master of Public Policy students at the Ford School are paired with a leadership coach and receive “real-time” individual and group coaching while completing their required internship during the summer between their first and second year of study.
Master of Public Affairs students are paired with a leadership coach while taking PubPol 590: A core course on leadership taught by Dr. Morela Hernandez.
Transcript:
One of the aspects of the
Leadership Initiative at
the Ford School is
to pair master of
public policy
students who are on
their summer internship with
an outside leadership coach.
And that coach
works closely with
the student in whatever issues
the student brings to the table.
Whether it's strengthening
their leadership presence,
showing up with confidence,
finding their voice
at the table.
Those are the types of
issues that we have
found students bringing
to the coaching
and really growing
over the course of
their internship as
the professionals
and the leaders that
they want to be.
I think the pairing that
Jennifer does is excellent.
They look at you as
an individual and then
they match you with
a coach that's going to help
you best with this process.
So for me, I was
paired with Adam.
I've never worked with
a leadership coach.
So first time I was
definitely nervous.
I didn't know what it
was going to look like.
It was via Zoom, so we didn't
get to meet in person.
So that always has
another layer of,
Oh, how's this going to look
and how are we
going to interact.
But meeting him was awesome
because right when I
did all my worries went away
I am Air Force veteran.
So I just got out of the service
and came to the Ford School.
And Adam did the same.
He was easy to talk to,
very comfortable,
very knowledgeable,
and just a warm,
safe place to kinda just
discuss anything I
need to discuss.
So I'm going through a period
where I have the GI Bill.
So I want to stick around
maybe and do some more school.
But that's something I
really wasn't sure about.
Is that a right move
professionally?
Is that a right
move for my family?
Adam really gave me a
great piece of advice,
head, heart, and gut method.
He said if everything's
in alignment,
you're making the right choice.
So I was able to work
with Adam to know,
all right, what I want to do
is continue school here at
the University of Michigan and
he has been helping me since,
work on what I need to work on.
My coach was Sandra
Buteau she is a founder of
a DC based consulting firm
that specializes in
executive coaching.
She is incredibly warm
and very straightforward,
which were two things I really
appreciated in having in a coach,
I felt like I was very
comfortable with her.
I worked as a fellow at the
Chicago mayor's office.
So we take on any project
across the city of Chicago
that would be interested
in an extra hand.
So in addition to the challenge
of having to interact
with a lot of different people
and stakeholders
across my projects,
another challenge I had
was needing to bring
value onto projects and
teams where I might
not have a background.
And I had worked on a
few sanitation projects.
I have no background on
waste management and I
really struggled with really
getting into the core material.
And I remember talking
to Sandra about like,
how can I better learn
this material when
it's so foreign to me?
And they advice she
gave me was Linh you're
not going to work
on waste management
for the rest of your life.
So instead of really
like trying to go
as deep as you can,
think about what is it
that you can actually,
how can you make
connections across
the content you're
familiar with and,
and leaning on your skills as a,
as a people navigator
to actually be
able to provide a more
valuable deliverable.
So last summer I had
the opportunity to
serve as an intern
for the governor of
Michigan, Governor Whitmer.
And specifically in
the Department of Labor
and Economic Opportunity.
I had the privilege of receiving
coaching from an individual
named Alan Booth.
Within maybe five to ten
minutes of interacting,
I was able to see someone who is
deeply invested in
my development.
What stood out to me
about Alan's leadership
is he never said
this is what you should do
or this is how you should do it.
But rather gathered my
perspective and asked questions.
What information do I
need to be successful?
And what information
do I need to
communicate to others on
my team to be successful?
And this can be
exceptionally hard
when you're the
youngest on the team,
you have the least
experience on the team,
and individuals are
relying on you to deliver.
This idea of him
shifting my mindset
to seeking out answers
when I needed support,
but also trusting that
the Ford School has
prepared me to do this job.
Not having the opportunity
to work with
Alan would have impacted
both my internship
experience as well
as my development as a
person and as a leader.
And what he pushed
me to understand is
the importance of my work
and to believe in myself.