Going Back to the Future

A Leadership Journey for Educators

By (author) Robert Palestini Professor of Educational Leadership Emeritus; Former Dean of Graduate and C

Publication date:

09 September 2011

Length of book:

238 pages

Publisher

R&L Education

Dimensions:

239x162mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781607095866

It was Edmund Burke, the British Statesman and philosopher, who said that those who don't know history are destined to repeat it. In this book, at least as far as educational leadership is concerned, Robert Palestini helps ensure that we do not fall into the trap of ignoring history.
Dr. Palestini rightly points out that effective leaders have been utilizing the same leadership behavior for centuries. He uses this evidence to support the perennial and lasting impact of situational leadership theory which posits that no single way of leading works in all situations. Rather, appropriate leadership behavior depends on the circumstances at a given time. For centuries effective managers have been diagnosing the situation, identifying the leadership style or behavior that will be most effective, and then determining whether they can implement the required style.
At the turn of the last century, the editors of Life Magazine identified the 100 leaders who they believed had the most impact of the global society during the second millennium. Using this list as a backdrop, Palestini chose ten of the twentieth century individuals on the list to explore what it was about their respective leadership behavior that allowed them to have such a significant and lasting impact on our society.
When we examine the leadership behavior of the ten great leaders profiled in this book, we will most certainly find that the most effective of them operated out of all five leadership frames—the lesson learned being that if one wishes to hone one's current leadership skills or become a future leader, one can learn to do so by reflectively looking to the leaders of the past.

There’s no better way to learn about leadership than to study great leaders looking for insight into the habits of mind and heart that enabled them to make a difference. That’s just what Robert Palestini does in Going Back to the Future, taking readers on a journey through the lives of figures as diverse, fascinating and instructive as Jane Addams, Walt Disney, Pope John Paul II, and Mao Zedong. Anyone interested in leadership and the lives of emblematic leaders should find much to like in Palestini’s book.