lifelong learning final
a year ago
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AnnotatedBibliography540.docx
rubic540.docx
LifelongLearningfinal.docx
AnnotatedBibliography540.docx
Submit Annotated Bibliography: Career Development and Lifelong Learning and Upload Space
· Due Saturday by 11:59pm
Please complete your final section of your annotated bibliography with TWO peer reviewed articles related to your own career development and lifelong learning. Make sure to follow the APA standards when doing your annotation
Then share your final bibliography as an upload, or website url for your google doc.
Below is examples of what it is supposed to look like. I took this example from Chatgpt but please don’t use AI because the instructor knows what it looks like. My occupation is military so find info related.
Annotated Bibliography: Career Development and Lifelong Learning in U.S. Army Leadership
1. Wong, L., Bliese, P. D., & McGurk, D. (2003). Military leadership: A context specific review. The Leadership Quarterly, 14(6), 657–692. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.leaqua.2003.08.001
This article offers an in-depth review of military leadership and how it differs from civilian models due to the high-stakes, hierarchical, and mission-driven nature of the armed forces. It emphasizes how leadership development in the Army must be supported by continuous learning, both formal (such as professional military education) and informal (such as on-the-job training and mentoring). This work is especially relevant to my career trajectory in the U.S. Army, as it underlines the critical role lifelong learning plays in effective leadership and operational readiness.
2. Lester, P. B., Hannah, S. T., Harms, P. D., Vogelgesang, G. R., & Avolio, B. J. (2011). Developing leaders and building trust: The effects of a leader developmental readiness intervention. Journal of Applied Psychology, 96(6), 1179–1190. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0024686
Lester and colleagues examine a leadership development intervention used within the U.S. Army to assess how prepared individuals are to grow as leaders. Their findings highlight the importance of intentional, ongoing development as a career-long process rather than a single training event. The article supports the idea that fostering a culture of lifelong learning not only enhances leadership capabilities but also builds trust among subordinates—an essential component of Army effectiveness. This research directly informs how I plan to integrate structured developmental experiences and reflection throughout my military career.
Annotated Bibliography
1. Illeris, K. (2014). Transformative learning and identity. Journal of Transformative Education, 12(2), 148–163. https://doi.org/10.1177/1541344614548423
Illeris discusses the role of lifelong learning in shaping individual identity and adapting to changing life and work contexts. The article explores how adult learners engage in transformative learning processes that not only increase knowledge and skills but also alter how individuals understand themselves and their work. This article is useful for understanding how continual education and personal development contribute to career sustainability and adaptability, particularly in dynamic fields such as military leadership, where self-reflection and identity formation are critical.
2. Hall, D. T., & Chandler, D. E. (2005). Psychological success: When the career is a calling. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 26(2), 155–176. https://doi.org/10.1002/job.301
This article introduces the concept of “psychological success” in career development, emphasizing personal fulfillment over traditional markers like salary or promotion. Hall and Chandler argue that lifelong learning is essential to achieving a sense of purpose and adaptability in one’s career. For professionals in structured careers like the U.S. Army, the insights offer a compelling case for integrating formal education, reflective practice, and self-directed learning to maintain motivation and performance across changing roles.
rubic540.docx
Rubic
Make sure each section is clearly demarcated. Please make sure that you read the rubic, so that we can get the full 200 points or at least close to it.
Annotated Bibliography Rubric
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Annotated Bibliography Rubric |
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Criteria |
Ratings |
Pts |
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This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeAPA Annotated Bibliography Formatting and Writing Bibliography was formatted correctly using APA and writing was clear. |
40 to >35.0 ptsExcellent FormattingFormat follows APA style with little or no discernible errors. Writing is clear and written at the graduate level. 35 to >0 ptsGood to FairStudent has a few discernible APA formatting errors and writing needs work. |
40 pts |
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This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeSection One Two peer review articles are annotated properly and connected to the provided prompt. Student provides ample evidence they read the article. |
40 to >36.0 ptsExcellent AnnotationsStudents selected high quality articles related to the bibliography prompt and provided ample evidence in the annotation the article was thoroughly read. 36 to >0 ptsGood to FairArticles were not peer reviewed academic articles or only a portion of the articles were not peer-reviewed academic research articles. Writing was not clear or did not provide evidence that article or articles were thoroughly reviewed in the annotation. |
40 pts |
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This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeSection Two Two peer review articles are annotated properly and connected to the provided prompt. Student provides ample evidence they read the article. |
40 to >36.0 ptsExcellent AnnotationsStudents selected high quality articles related to the bibliography prompt and provided ample evidence in the annotation the article was thoroughly read. 36 to >0 ptsGood to FairArticles were not peer reviewed academic articles or only a portion of the articles were not peer-reviewed academic research articles. Writing was not clear or did not provide evidence that article or articles were thoroughly reviewed in the annotation. |
40 pts |
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This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeSection Three Two peer review articles are annotated properly and connected to the provided prompt. Student provides ample evidence they read the article. |
40 to >36.0 ptsExcellent AnnotationsStudents selected high quality articles related to the bibliography prompt and provided ample evidence in the annotation the article was thoroughly read. 36 to >0 ptsGood to FairArticles were not peer reviewed academic articles or only a portion of the articles were not peer-reviewed academic research articles. Writing was not clear or did not provide evidence that article or articles were thoroughly reviewed in the annotation. |
40 pts |
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This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeSection Four Two peer review articles are annotated properly and connected to the provided prompt. Student provides ample evidence they read the article. |
40 to >36.0 ptsExcellent AnnotationsStudents selected high quality articles related to the bibliography prompt and provided ample evidence in the annotation the article was thoroughly read. 36 to >0 ptsGood to FairArticles were not peer reviewed academic articles or only a portion of the articles were not peer-reviewed academic research articles. Writing was not clear or did not provide evidence that article or articles were thoroughly reviewed in the annotation. |
40 pts |
Total Points: 200
LifelongLearningfinal.docx
Lifelong Learning and Career Development (You wrote this for me)
Lifelong learning is far more than just an occupational imperative or a bandwagon concept; it is indeed a lifestyle for human beings going through a rapidly changing and challenging worldly atmosphere. Lifelong learning becomes intentional nurture of curiosity, adaptability, and a growth mindset outside of any formal system of education through the entire lifespan of a person. It is the process through which an individual takes in new knowledge, skills, or attitudes while discarding those currently viewed as standard knowledge or allowing for life-changing experiences. Development-closely intertwined with-and somewhat narrower than also lifelong learning-this term may imply a more focused and strategic working through one's professional skills, relationships, and contributions over time. These two fit together: one is the fuel that powers meaningful career development that gives meaning to all our learning endeavors.
To realize this integration in actual working life-full integration will require set strategies coupled with much spontaneity for adaptation and change. My approach to each role is to view it as a workshop where I may attempt new methods, get feedback, and develop my knowledge of good practice. This includes looking actively for assignments that would test my limits, pursuing mentorship opportunities to challenge my assumptions, and maintaining a curious attitude toward emerging trends and technologies that may change my trade. Instead of a rigidly linear job trajectory with its ascendancy up pre-ordained rungs, I am in harmony with Noe's (2020) idea that modern career development tends to become self-directed and value-endowed, allowing lateral moves, skill diversification, and even full-on career pivots if and when they fit into the new-found interests and marketplace needs.
Cultivating the mindset of lifelong learning becomes essential because older models of an education front-load, followed decades down the line by stable employment, have ceased to be true for the workplace. Ever-increasing pace of technological changes, new economic structures, and changing organizational landscapes now demand professionals who are ready and able to adapt themselves continuously with ways of ever reinventing their niche. According to Noe (2020), increasingly valuable for organizations are employees with the learning ability to transfer knowledge across contexts rather than those with static knowledge limited to narrow areas. Strong lifelong learning culture acts as an anchor and a compass-furnishing stability through shared growth practices and providing direction when uncertainties or transitions arise.
Through my professional experience, the lifetime learning impact on career development arises in many dimensions. The foremost is the change from frustrations in challenges and setbacks to avenues for further growth and development in secondary skills. When strange technologies or methodologies come through the door, my continuous learning experience casts me as belonging to the confident category instead of the fearful; I already have the learning mindset needed to tackle any new learning areas. This mentality opens doors for responsibilities and projects that might have seemed outside my capacity were it not for my willing acknowledgment of unfamiliarity and ability to grow with the new task.
Further supplementary lifelong information thus increases my value as a collaborator and team member, broadens my perspective, and enables me to bring insights from many other fields of knowledge. I like cross-functional projects better and get more out of them when I can trace a common thread between two seemingly different fields or use one of the frameworks I learned to solve a problem in one domain in a completely different market. This kind of intellectual dexterity is particularly valuable today, in an ever more interdisciplinary workspace, wherein the most creative ideas are born at the convergence of two or more fields.
Professional Biography beyond Roles
I am on the downside of my career, hoping to retire from the military in the next few years and start a new career. While it is my hope to find my dream job, I do wish to use my leadership skills learned from the military and transition to a much calmer job. since my current is a 360 difference from a regular civilian job. My underlying mission and job skills, centers on creating environments where human potential can thrive through the strategic intersection of learning, growth, and meaningful connection. I am passionate about transformation, moving people, teams, and organizations from where they are to where they want to be, through the careful design of experiences that foster curiosity, build capability, and nurture resilience. This passion opens out into the creation of learning experiences which distill complex concepts into accessible ones and into witnessing that split-second realization touch someone's eyes after which confidence starts filling their being.
My core competencies include systems thinking, empathy, communication, and adaptive problem-solving. I have an artistic sense for seeing patterns and making connections that others want to overlook; from these insights, I assert my genius by giving down-to-earth solutions that can be translated and executed in multiple contexts. I have a natural ability to listen very well with the ear while also asking strategic and penetrating questions that guide the clients in coming to their potential rather than imposing solutions that would close down their views. My analytical mind locks in with a genuine concern for human development, allowing me to develop rigorous and compassionate interventions.
I excel at navigating ambiguity and bringing order out of chaos. Ill-defined problems and competing priorities often present themselves; at these times, I am quick to scan, identify key persons and constraints, and then develop frameworks that bring clarity and momentum to initiatives that seem to be stalled. My communication set allows me to overcome barriers and help diverse bodies reconcile and reach consensus in cases where divergent views are initially taken; in their status of opposition. Purpose, passion, and skill synergistically work with adaptability beyond specific disciplines or industry fields. True problem-solving, good intuition, satisfaction from cognizing other human beings' growth and implementing ideas for the same-each concept applies equally to my work in designing learning curricula, organizational change processes, mentoring young professionals, project leadership on cross-functional teams, and this combination allows me to glide through new contexts delivering consistent value areas of growth, learning, and positive transformation.
What I most enjoy about my work is development on the good side-outcome; the stretch opportunities afforded by confident individuals, better collaborative efforts by teams, and organizations more innovative and agile to change. The multiplied impact beyond the self-a source of inspiration-will forever fuel my learning flame, and this inspiration will lead to meaning beyond any one role or title.
References
Noe, R. A. (2020). Employee training and development (8th ed.). McGraw-Hill.
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