By Kaylyn Koberna

When I was younger my father often quoted Yogi Berra during “teachable moments.” This might seem less than helpful on several levels; oddly, however, the more experience I gain in the public health sector, the more the paradox-prone Yankees star makes sense. Consider the following example:

“In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.”

My co-fellow Esnatt Gondwe and I have been Partnership Officers with Malawi’s Reproductive Health Directorate (RHD) – the branch of the Ministry of Health responsible for maternal, neonatal, and child health – for almost a year now.

In theory, our work centers on managing relationships between the RHD and its various partners. In practice, our main responsibility is navigating the challenges that arise when the aid community attempts to translate its ideals of collaboration and country-driven development into reality.

Learning to bridge this theory/practice divide is an essential piece of every fellow’s Global Health Corps experience. As someone aspiring to a career in the public sector, however, it feels especially relevant.

If civil servants are to represent their fellow citizens with integrity, they need to keep the gap between the ideals of public service and the realities of compromise, limited budgets, and politics as narrow as possible. During my fellowship with the RHD, I’ve seen civil servants approach this challenge in a number of ways. The leaders who were most successful, however, had several things in common.

Taken separately, none of these three characteristics is particularly sexy. Even taken together, they still don’t constitute some kind of breakthrough algorithm for success. But that’s actually the point: there is no secret formula, no hail-Mary moment where fortunes are reversed and it all comes together.

Instead, progress in the public sector is driven by the interplay of important, but minor actions like cc’ing your partner organization on that difficult email, or arriving at that meeting on time, or letting Bob take credit for that draft budget. That isn’t sexy (to be fair, very few things about the civil service are sexy) – but it is something I can work at, every single day. And the results, when you get them, are worth it.

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