Taylor Yazzie Academic and Career Strengths

Relator

Consider coaching, teaching, managing, supervising, and caregiving as possible outlets for your talent.

Find a workplace in which friendships are encouraged, and you can continuously learn about your clients and associates.

Become a mentor and always have a mentor.

Develop a college lifestyle through which you share your academic progress and performance with people who care about you, both inside and outside the college environment.

Discuss class lectures with friends.

Input

You will want to work in an environment that expects you to be continuously engaged in learning.

You will enjoy a career where you are always on the cutting edge of knowledge and where you are stimulated by ideas and creative approaches to problems and issues.

Give yourself research deadlines within your overall timelines for completing papers. Without them, you might continue to read and read, never feeling like you have enough information.

Select classes that help you increase your general knowledge base. That would include classes in which research is valued.

Select classes in which class discussion is valued and in which you can share your ideas and the information that you have gleaned.

Ideation

Find work in which others like your ideas and in which you are expected to keep learning.

Select an organization where the leaders encourage and solicit your divergent thinking, stimulating them to consider some new approaches.

Take on an independent research project in which you can generate and explore numerous ideas.

Brainstorm with your friends about topics you are studying. Let your mind “go wild,” knowing that you can sort through the ideas later.

Join a group that values and stimulates creative ideas.

Delibrative

Choose a career in which you and others can benefit from your careful thinking and deliberation.

You will be a good questioner of actions, helping others to think through their decisions before moving ahead too quickly.

If you work best alone, study on your own before engaging in group discussions. This will allow you to reinforce what you have learned with the group, without needing to rely on the group.

Look for job opportunities and internships in which you will be recognized for your seriousness and your ability to raise ques­tions about decisions that are made.

Choose friends who have academic goals similar to yours, so you reinforce one another in your serious pursuit of studying.

Achiever

Realize that you cannot work in just anywhere. Affiliate yourself with organizations that a known for their serious, results-oriented workers.

Select a career that provides you with numerous opportunities to excel as an individual. Control your workflow, schedule, productivity, quality level, and action plan.

Ask to review papers, projects, research studies, or tests of several students who consistently earn higher grades in a class than you do. Try to equal or surpass one or two things they do.

Review your goals-achievement log. Look for evidence that you are progressing toward your objectives. Outline the steps you took to acquire one particular skill or master one key concept.

Sequence the order in which you take classes. Each term, enroll in one course that is more demanding than any you have ever taken. Repeat this process each semester.