timmy0110
Jan 22, 2014
Undergraduate / Resident Staff program - personal qualities and professional skills [2]
What personal qualities and professional skills will you bring to the Resident Staff program? In what ways do you think these qualities and skills will help you in a role as a Resident Advisor?
Abilities to communicate, analyze, and lead are three essential skills in a role as a Resident Advisor. These three skills were and still are significant in my life as they assisted me in the maturity both as a person and as a leader. There is no doubt in my mind that I will be able to bring these three skills, among others, to the Resident Staff program in the years to come.
Ability to communicate provides a channel in which information could be exchanged effortlessly. During my time as the head researcher of the pharmacology researches, I learned the importance of efficient communication as such skill was the key to success in a field that failure would often lead to a detrimental consequence in the well-being of others. Communication is not only the key in academia success; it is also a crucial component in social interactions. Through conducting studies in healthcare disciplines, I learned how to communicate, a skill that could allow be to contribute to the lives of incoming First Year Students as they make one of the most life-changing adjustment.
Analytical ability is influential in everyday lives. Judgments and assessments of situations are required as one goes on throughout the day. However, my analytical ability was developed through a non-conventional way. When learning first started learning English, I started to gain awareness and became cognizant of things around me. After becoming trilingual, I established an analytical mind that allowed me to look at situations through a scope that consisted of three distinct perspectives as corresponded with the three different cultures I was accustomed to via the study of languages. Furthermore, during my tenure as a diagnostic team leader, I became adopt at quick and precise decision making as such action is necessary for successfully solving a case.
Leadership was usually a skill that was learned and developed over time through proper trainings; however, due my ambition at a young age, I found myself at a point where those trainings were no long available. Through the analytical perspectives I developed as well as countless trials and error, I learned to be a leader. As a member of the First Year Council, there was a fair amount of success in leading the council. At the same time, due to an extreme schedule the first semester of nineteen credits and medical research, I took a back seat in the council as I accepted a supporting role for others. It is an astonishing feeling to perceive the same thing of being a leader from a different point of view. This experience as a supporter allowed me to grow into a better leader as I now finally was able to feel what other felt. Different perspectives presented a whole new level of appreciation for the role as a leader.
Thank you all so much for the help!
What personal qualities and professional skills will you bring to the Resident Staff program? In what ways do you think these qualities and skills will help you in a role as a Resident Advisor?
Abilities to communicate, analyze, and lead are three essential skills in a role as a Resident Advisor. These three skills were and still are significant in my life as they assisted me in the maturity both as a person and as a leader. There is no doubt in my mind that I will be able to bring these three skills, among others, to the Resident Staff program in the years to come.
Ability to communicate provides a channel in which information could be exchanged effortlessly. During my time as the head researcher of the pharmacology researches, I learned the importance of efficient communication as such skill was the key to success in a field that failure would often lead to a detrimental consequence in the well-being of others. Communication is not only the key in academia success; it is also a crucial component in social interactions. Through conducting studies in healthcare disciplines, I learned how to communicate, a skill that could allow be to contribute to the lives of incoming First Year Students as they make one of the most life-changing adjustment.
Analytical ability is influential in everyday lives. Judgments and assessments of situations are required as one goes on throughout the day. However, my analytical ability was developed through a non-conventional way. When learning first started learning English, I started to gain awareness and became cognizant of things around me. After becoming trilingual, I established an analytical mind that allowed me to look at situations through a scope that consisted of three distinct perspectives as corresponded with the three different cultures I was accustomed to via the study of languages. Furthermore, during my tenure as a diagnostic team leader, I became adopt at quick and precise decision making as such action is necessary for successfully solving a case.
Leadership was usually a skill that was learned and developed over time through proper trainings; however, due my ambition at a young age, I found myself at a point where those trainings were no long available. Through the analytical perspectives I developed as well as countless trials and error, I learned to be a leader. As a member of the First Year Council, there was a fair amount of success in leading the council. At the same time, due to an extreme schedule the first semester of nineteen credits and medical research, I took a back seat in the council as I accepted a supporting role for others. It is an astonishing feeling to perceive the same thing of being a leader from a different point of view. This experience as a supporter allowed me to grow into a better leader as I now finally was able to feel what other felt. Different perspectives presented a whole new level of appreciation for the role as a leader.
Thank you all so much for the help!