Discovery 2000The National Park Service General ConferenceGo to ParkNet Home
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    Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir, Yosemite National Park

SUMMARY OF SESSIONS:
Leadership
Thursday, Sept 14 (10:30 am - 12 Noon)

Morning Keynote Address
Afternoon Plenary Session

 
    There are 21 sessions listed below. Click on a Session Number to view a detailed description. Session numbers followed by a are continued to session numbers followed by b. Session numbers followed by r are repeated in a different time slot.
L-01 -- Why Americans Deserve to Know How the National Park Service Spends Its Money -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 180; Summary: House Committee reports criticize how we do business and are thus viewed as a threat to our management. How can we make performance management more relevant to our future and to the decisions Congress makes about us?
L-04a -- What is the Conservation Ethic Today? And What is it in the Future? How Does the NPS Fit In? -- (Continues to Session L-04b); Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 75; Summary: The strengths and weaknesses of the NPS conservation ethic are examined to understand our role in a new century of globally interconnected conservation efforts.
L-06a -- Bringing Our Best Qualities Forward: An Alternative Approach to Problem-solving -- (Continues to Session L-06b); Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 40; Summary: This dialogue session uses a process called "Appreciative Inquiry" to uncover existing best practices and to challenge the organization to make these practices routine rather than exceptional.
L-08 -- Park Development as a Means of Park Preservation: Tradition -- or Rationalization? -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 75; Summary: Park development is often seen as a means of managing and preserving park resources. Managers who "build" are often considered successful superintendents. What are the ethics of building in parks, and how is decision-making affected by fundraising?
L-09 -- Park Development and Future Park Preservation: Alternative Transportation Planning and Gateway Communities -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 75; Summary: Many presume that the message project will bring increased visitation to the National Park System. If this assumption is true, how do we get ahead of the curve in satisfying visitor access and needs while preserving resources?
L-11a -- Anticipating and Preparing for Change: Leadership Roles in Tomorrow’s Reality -- (Continues to Session L-11b); Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 110; Summary: Like many organizations, the NPS has been accused of being over-managed and under-led. If true, what leadership roles -- both individual and organizational -- should we be assuming to increase our effectiveness in a rapidly changing future?
L-12 -- Accountability and Commitment: The Key to High Performance -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 28; Summary: This session discusses the reasons why it is so hard to do what we say we will do -- even though keeping commitments is pivotal to both personal success and organizational high performance.
L-13r -- Leadership Beyond Park Boundaries -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 20; Summary: National parks influence local and regional decisions and plans. Can they influence land use and conservation decisions on a broader, national scale? How do we, or should we, make it so? (Repeated as L-14r)
L-16r -- Leadership Ecology: How Differences Ensure Dynamic, Sustainable, and Relevant Organizations -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 36; Summary: How can we see differences as valuable and necessary contributions to an array of networks, expertise, and experiences -- and learn to actually seek them out? (Repeated as L-17r)
L-18 -- National Park Service American Indian Law and Policy: Government-to-Government Relations in the 21st Century -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 70; Summary: Explore the important challenge we face in working in partnership with indigenous peoples -- and examine ways to balance best conservation practices, public visitation, and the ability of indigenous people to be stewards of their ancestral lands.
L-19 -- From Crisis-of-the-Moment to Visionary Thinking: Making the Transition -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 36; Summary: What is the incentive for managers to grapple with tomorrow’s problems today, when today is already full of problems? Are there steps we should be taking to make it easier and more natural for managers to deal with the future?
L-20 -- The Legacy of Reorganization in the National Park Service: Alternatives in Leadership, Management, and Administration -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 44; Summary: In looking back at the 1995 NPS restructuring from our current position, what strengths did we add to our organization? What lessons did we learn and how can we apply them today and in the future?
L-21r -- I’ve Seen the Face of Change -- and I Don’t Like It! -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 25; Summary: Is the NPS any different than any other tradition based organization when it comes to reacting to change? What are the changes we foresee affecting the NPS in the future, and how can we affect the outcomes and prepare for them? (Repeated as L-22r)
L-24r -- A Safe Place for Dangerous Truths -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 20; Summary: For organizations to thrive, leadership must be willing to hear and deliver unpleasant information. Do NPS work environments foster, or deter, constructive change through truth telling and truth testing? (Repeated as L-25r)
L-26 -- Collaborating with Business for Environmental Responsibility -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 20; Summary: How can the NPS look beyond park boundaries to help determine environmentally sound business practices? Can we apply the same standards to concessionaires and ourselves and hold our heads high?
L-27 -- Responding to Changing Constituents -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 20; Summary: The demographic composition of the population is changing rapidly. How will ethnic group attitudes change the practices and values of the NPS and its partners?
L-28 -- Core Values -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 50; Summary: Explore how our core values can guide the organization. Now that we are developing our core values, what must we do to ensure they remain or become part of our worklife, operations, and leadership philosophy?
L-29 -- Leading the Way to a Green Infrastructure -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 20; Summary: This session will examine the Service’s role in furthering the concept of Green Infrastructure and in helping to develop and encourage these systems nationwide.
L-30 -- Reflective Places -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 20; Summary: Is it possible to bring about broad acceptance of sustainable practices in the U.S., such as has been done in Sweden with The Natural Step? Do such approaches will work better than regulatory approaches?
L-31r -- Parks: Welcoming -- or Exclusionary? -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 20; Summary: Do potential visitors avoid parks in order to avoid people who are dissimilar? Do NPS policies, practices, and operations cause or contribute to parks acting to unify, or to divide people? (Repeated as L-32r)
L-34 -- Fire in the Paint Locker! How We Respond When Everything Goes Bad -- Time: 10:30 am - 12 Noon; Capacity: 25; Summary: It has been said that a crisis brings out the best in good people and the worst in bad ones. Learn about NASA’s crisis-management strategies and engage in dialogue on how to plan for crisis and implement those plans when necessary.
 
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