A team of students recently earned a regional championship in 51ԹϺ Davis’ first-ever entry in the .
Fielding the team was easy. Finding a regional event closer than Kansas City, Missouri, was impossible. Our team ended up in Cleveland (the dates worked out better) for one of the other five regionals, held at John Carroll University, competing against 10 teams from the Great Lakes Region.
THE TEAM
- Vanessa Holmes, animal biology major, second year
- Mengmeng Luo, sustainable agriculture and food systems, second year
- Matt Licina, sustainable agriculture and food systems, fourth year
- Jubi Lin (Yung-Ling), biotechnology, third year
- Sonal Patel, managerial economics, fourth year
- Neha Rathi, managerial economics, second year
In addition to winning the regional title, the 51ԹϺ Davis ranked third among all 51 teams in all of the regional events in the United States and Canada. Not bad for a first-time entrant.
The team had been in training since January, coached by Christie Navarro, director of the Center for Leadership Learning, and Corrine “Co” Hawes, student leadership development coordinator in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences; and sponsored by the Center for Leadership Learning (a unit of Undergraduate Education) and CA&ES.
The College Leadership Competition, a nonprofit program founded in 2015, creates “a dynamic practice field” where student leaders can apply what they’re learning in a context that stretches them to the boundaries of their leadership knowledge, skills and abilities. “The CLC makes leadership a real, tangible experience for future leaders,” the program declares on its website.
Each year’s competition comprises a series of six puzzles and activities, with each team member having the opportunity to lead one activity. Neither coaches nor students know the activities prior to the competition.
Activity leaders and team members are judged on two dimensions: observed behavior throughout the activities (i.e., process) and how quickly/accurately the team accomplished the objective (i.e., results).
Navarro described the final challenge in Cleveland: “Pixel Project,” which called on teams to re-create a Post-it note mural — a duplicate of a mural in the hallway outside the “arena” (activity room). Each member of each team could view the original mural only once, individually or with teammates, during the course of the challenge — requiring each team to carefully consider when to send people into the hallway, to make observations or double-check the team’s work.
“The ‘Pixel Project’ really challenged our team to use their strategic planning, communication and conflict management skills, but above all, their emotional intelligence since it was the last opportunity to earn as many points as they could,” Navarro said.
The challenge had a 45-minute time limit and offered a maximum 100 points to teams that completed the task in less than 25 minutes. The 51ԹϺ Davis team did it in 22 minutes, and, with the resulting points, pushed past the other teams for the regional title.
Leadership potential surfaces
Lin, one of the 51ԹϺ Davis team members, had the following to say in an email to her coaches: “Training for CLC was truly a valuable, impactful and rewarding experience for me. Thank you again for bringing out the leadership potential in me and making me view leadership from a completely different lens throughout the training sessions and the competition.
“I will be forever thankful that you believed in me (a ‘quieter’ yet cheerful and enthusiastic leader/team member who intervenes as appropriate) and provided me the opportunity last quarter to develop a variety of leadership skills weekly. I learned a lot from others and I hope others were able to learn from me as well.”
How to get involved
The invites all undergraduates to participate in the center’s activities, and encourages staff and faculty to refer and recommend students to the center’s programs. Established in 2007, the center served more than 550 students in 2017-18. Here are some of the center’s programs:
- , offered in fall, winter and spring quarters
- Certificate programs, one for student leadership, the other for diversity leadership, each lasting two quarters (winter-spring)
- Aggies Leading the Way! undergraduate leadership conference held every February
- Collegiate Leadership Competition, on the schedule again for next winter
Contact the center:
- Phone — 530-752-6908
Media Resources
Dateline Staff, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu