Related Fieldaccredited Life Coach 21Follow The R
The Scenario: Hiring Committee for Waking Up, Inc.
Congratulations! As a member of the Waking Up, Inc. staff, you
have been asked to serve on a hiring committee. Based on your understanding of
Waking Up, Inc. and the skills needed to be a successful Life Coach, you must
create a list of 10 interview questions for the hiring committee to ask
potential employees.
The committee would like a variety of questions: open (2
questions), closed (2 questions), primary (2 questions), secondary (2
questions), and hypothetical (2 questions). Review the job description and
requirements below to assist you with question preparation. Be sure to include
a brief introduction paragraph that provides the rationale for your selected
questions. Also, be sure to indicate which “type” of question you are
expressing.
Position for Hire Description
Waking Up, Inc. is recruiting a full-time, well-educated
certified Life Coach with a proven record of engaging people to create
sustainable change for the better. As a Life Coach for the Waking Up, Inc. Life
Coach team, your priority will be to administer first- class client care to
develop a program for growth, to identify problem areas, and to provide support
and encouragement. Life Coaches are not required to live on the Waking Up, Inc.
premises but must be local. Night shifts occur on a rotating basis with
occasional on-call hours.
Job Requirements
Bachelor’s Degree in social work, psychology, business,
communication, or related field
Accredited Life Coach Certification
At least 5 years of experience in the field
Excellent communication skills
Ability to formulate effective treatment plans for clients with
minimal time and immediate results
Provide case management according to the policies and procedures
of Waking Up, Inc.
Team player, participate in overall Waking Up program
development and planning as requested with participation in weekly team
meetings
Ability to work independently and accept critique through annual
review process
Enthusiasm and passion for personal development of clients as
well as self
Desired qualifications include additional certifications or
degrees in health and nutrition or similar regarding issues of substance
addiction, eating disorders, etc.
Definitions are below:
Open questions
are
those that allow the responder to do so in a variety of ways. Asking someone to
describe a situation and how they felt is an example of an open question.
Closed questions are just the opposite; they only allow the responder to do so
in a minimal way. Often, closed questions can be yes or no questions.
Closed
questions:
A
question that gives the interviewee minimal choice in terms of response format
Primary questions
are
those that introduce a new topic or area to explore. The secondary questions
are those that allow the participants to gain deeper understanding of the
response from a primary question. In an interview setting, you may ask quite a
few secondary questions to help build understanding.
Hypothetical questions
are
those that ask you to tell about how you would handle a situation, or describe
your response to a situation. These questions can be a bit unnerving for some,
but they can provide a great deal of knowledge to the interviewer.
Assignment:
create a list of 10 interview questions for
the hiring committee to ask potential employees.
The committee would like a variety of
questions: open (2 questions), closed (2 questions), primary (2 questions),
secondary (2 questions), and hypothetical (2 questions).
(After
each question you listed, you will want to identify the type of each question.]
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All the work has to be 100 percent original.
Any guides/existing papers you find on internet will definitely not be
accepted
Any kind of plagiarism will definitely not be accepted.
Please read all requirement very very carefully and make sure it follows
the instruction very well.