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Praise in public

Exploring Praise in public in Student Leaders.
Introduction

Leadership Definitions

Leadership is influence + responsibility, not popularity, titles, or being liked. If no one is affected by your actions, you are not leading.

Point

Leadership ≠ authority
Leadership ≠ charisma
Leadership = decisions + consequences
Responsibility increases as influence increases

1
Phase 01

The Core Rule

Praise in Public, Criticize in Private: A Core Leadership Rule

Why This Rule Exists
One of the fastest ways to lose credibility as a leader is to humiliate someone publicly. One of the fastest ways to build loyalty is to recognize effort publicly.

The rule is simple:

Praise in public. Criticize in private.

This is not about being “nice.” It’s about power, dignity, and effectiveness.

Leaders who violate this rule often justify it by saying things like:
“People need to hear the truth.”
“I’m just being honest.”
“If I don’t call it out publicly, nothing will change.”

Those explanations confuse venting with leadership.

2
Phase 02

Why It Works

Why Public Praise Works

Public praise does three things at once

It reinforces the behavior you want repeated: When praise is public, others see exactly what is valued.

It builds morale and trust
People are more willing to work hard for leaders who notice effort.
It costs the leader nothing
Praise doesn’t weaken authority. In fact, it strengthens it.

Good leaders are not afraid to give credit. Insecure leaders are.

Why Public Criticism Fails

Public criticism often produces the opposite of the intended result:

It creates defensiveness, not reflection.

It damages relationships, even when the criticism is accurate.

It encourages compliance, not commitment.

When people feel embarrassed, their focus shifts from improvement to self-protection. They stop listening.

3
Phase 03

Effective Correction

Why Criticism Belongs in Private

Private criticism allows leaders to do what actually matters:

Be specific instead of performative.

Correct behavior without attacking identity.

Preserve dignity while still holding standards.

Private conversations also signal something important:

“I respect you enough to address this directly.”

That respect is what keeps people engaged—even when the message is uncomfortable.

A Common Mistake Leaders Make

Some leaders think public criticism shows strength. In reality, it often shows:

Poor emotional control

A need to assert dominance

Or frustration being misdirected

Strong leaders don’t need an audience to correct someone.

Lesson Finale

Exit Ticket

Exit Ticket: Important Exceptions

There are rare cases where public correction is necessary:

Safety violations

Behavior that harms others immediately

Situations where silence implies approval

Discussion Question: Why are these the only exceptions? How would you handle a safety violation in a way that remains professional?

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