Divided conversations [electronic resource] : identities, leadership, and change in public higher education / Kristin G. Esterberg and John Wooding.
2013
LB2341 .E76 2013eb
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Title
Divided conversations [electronic resource] : identities, leadership, and change in public higher education / Kristin G. Esterberg and John Wooding.
Author
ISBN
9780826519009 electronic book
9780826518989 hardcover
9780826518996 paperback
9780826518989 hardcover
9780826518996 paperback
Publication Details
Nashville, Tenn. : Vanderbilt University Press, 2013.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xxiv, 179 p.)
Call Number
LB2341 .E76 2013eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
378.1/11
Summary
"Through their interviews with faculty and administrators (from department chairs and deans to provosts and presidents) from a sample of eight public universities in the Northeast and their own experiences in both worlds, the authors provide a unique window into the life experiences and identities of those who struggle to make universities work. The book examines the culture of academic institutions and attempts to understand why change in public higher education is so difficult to accomplish. Many faculty believe that one of their own who becomes an administrator has gone over to "the dark side." One provost recalled going for a beer with a faculty colleague and hearing the colleague complain about the latest memo "from the administration." He had to remind his friend of many years that he was the author of the offending document. Now he was "the administration." He realized that former colleagues now appeared in his office wearing suits and ties and referring to him by his title rather than his first name. The disciplines serve as the tribes into which individual scholars are organized; the discipline is where a faculty member finds his community and identity. Administrators, on the other hand, identify with each other in trying to get the tribes to work together. Though most administrators came from the faculty ranks, their career paths take a different shape, especially in terms of mobility to another institution. It's not surprising that the two groups talk past each other. A chapter is devoted to chairs of departments, who occupy an interesting middle ground. To their faculty, they can come across as a nurturing parent or a petty bureaucrat. The authors recommend training for chairs and administrative internships offered by the American Council on Education and other organizations. The men and women on the campuses of the public universities described in the book make clear the challenges that universities face in terms of budgets, legislative politics, collective bargaining, rankings, and control of academic programs. If public institutions are truly to serve a public purpose, faculty and administrators must find ways to engage each other in shared conversation and management and find ways of engaging the university with the community"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Table of Contents
Divided conversations and pathways of connection
Learning the language: faculty beliefs, values, and identities
On becoming an administrator
Disciplines, departments, and chairs
Cultivating the communal and administering the campus
Purpose, power, and innovation: some pathways to change.
Learning the language: faculty beliefs, values, and identities
On becoming an administrator
Disciplines, departments, and chairs
Cultivating the communal and administering the campus
Purpose, power, and innovation: some pathways to change.