Lee G. Bolman

Reframing Academic Leadership


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found in almost any organization – goals, structures, administrative hierarchies, coordinating mechanisms, cultures, employees, vendors, and powerful stakeholders, to name a few. Leaders in higher education should learn from advances in other sectors whenever they can. Not every managerial wheel needs to be reinvented.

      The “production process” in higher education is far more intricate and complicated than that in any industrial enterprise… . Students vary enormously in academic aptitude, in interests, in intellectual dispositions, in social and cultural characteristics, in education and vocational objectives, and in many other ways. Furthermore, the disciplines and professions with which institutions of higher education are concerned require diverse methods of investigation, intellectual structures, means of relating methods of inquiry and ideas to personal and social values, and processes of relating knowledge to human experience. Learning, consequently, is a subtle process, the nature of which may vary from student to student, from institution to institution, from discipline to discipline, from one scholar or teacher to another, and from one level of student development to another (Berdahl & McConnell, 1999, p. 71).

      In the wake of the 2008 financial meltdown, budgets in many institutions were decimated by precipitous drops in endowments or state funding at a time when student demand for courses and services kept growing – and many institutions still have not fully rebounded from the fall. In recent decades, continuing decline in state support has steadily shifted more of the financial burden onto students, making college increasingly unaffordable for many poor and middle‐income families. The pandemic of 2020 created another dramatic blow to budgets – increasing costs while cutting revenues from students, fee‐generating services and events, and public funding.

      Academic leaders are always under tremendous pressure to initiate change (Fullan, & Scott, 2009; Mintz, 2019; Selingo, 2013) and to embrace an entrepreneurial mindset in order to keep pace with rapidly evolving conditions – and they need to find a path that avoids either of two unproductive extremes. Those who move too slowly will lose touch with their markets and fall behind speedier competitors; but those who move too precipitously will sow confusion, breed discontent, and undercut their institution's traditional purpose, contributions, quality, and strengths (Newman, Couturier, & Scurry, 2004). Even when circumstances like an unprecedented pandemic force academic leaders to move quicker than they should, the results were not pretty. The fast move to 100 percent online education with campus closings from the arrival of Covid‐19 in Spring, 2020, was necessary, but still left faculty, staff, students, and families confused, angry, or unprepared for what they faced. Institutions too quick to announce the full reopening of their campuses in Fall 2020 generated predictable faculty conflict and student pushback by failing to bring key constituents along with their plans. And those who needed to reverse or modify their reopening decisions close to the start of term only added to the chaos.

      This governance conundrum gives rise to distinctive assets and liabilities. The same arrangements that foster individual creativity, initiative, and flexibility also buttress institutional inertia. The same safeguards and freedoms protect both the highly productive and the unfit. The same provisions that give faculty substantial control of their own affairs and contributions can lead to departments or schools in which personal and intellectual conflicts lead educated professionals to behave much like squabbling children or bullying mobs (Twale & DeLuca, 2008). Colleges and universities are centers of discovery, learning, and hope. They are also complex organizational beasts – and the work of academic leaders in taming and directing them only becomes harder as the demands increase while public support erodes (London, 2002).

      But such preparation is rare in the context of academic norms and higher education career paths (Debowski & Blake, 2004; Flaherty, 2016; Fullan & Scott, 2009). Research on department chairs, for example, confirms that most assume their role with no prior administrative experience or training (Flaherty, 2016; Gmelch & Buller, 2015; Gmelch & Miskin, 1993, 2004). The same dearth of preparation is true across administrative ranks (Debowski & Blake, 2004). A study of 2,000 academic leaders in the United States surveyed between 1990 and 2000 found that only 3 percent had received any type of leadership training or preparation (Gmelch, 2002). Additional research in the United States and abroad aligns with these findings (e.g., Aziz et al., 2005; Debowski & Blake, 2004). Morris & Laipple (2015) found that most academic leaders became less enthusiastic and interested in the work once they were in the role, and about half reported that the pressures of the job interfered with their sense of well‐being and quality of life. On the plus side, the authors found that those who had taken courses in management, human resources, leadership, and psychology felt better prepared. With the work of colleges and universities so difficult yet vital to the lives of individuals, communities, industries, and nations, findings like these are cause for concern. They were also a driving force behind the development of this book.