Leadership Orientations of Executives in Business and Industry and Administrators in Higher Education


Book Description

The overall purpose of this study was to explore frame usage across several dimensions, using Bolman & Deal's Leadership Orientations Survey (LOS). More specifically, the study addressed the following: (1) whether statistically significant differences exist in mean scores between two groups--senior level executives from Fortune 500 companies in business and industry and senior level administrators from four year-public colleges and universities--when they are compared simultaneously on the four leadership orientations (frames); (2) whether there was a statistically significant difference in frequencies between age and use of the four leadership orientations (frames); (3) whether there was a statistically significant difference in years of work experience as an executive or administrator and use of the four leadership orientations (frames); (4) whether executives and administrators use single, paired or multiple frames; and (5) if there is a dominant leadership orientation used by executives and administrators. Leadership orientations were measured by using Bolman and Deal's (1990) LOS. The hypotheses in the study were tested by using a one-way MANOVA and chi-square tests of independence; research questions #4 and #5 were answered by using descriptive statistics. The results of the one-way MANOVA indicated there were no statistically significant differences in mean scores between the two groups, when compared simultaneously on the four leadership orientations (frames). Further, the chi-square test of independence showed statistically significant differences in frequencies between age and use of the Political frame; however, no statistically significant differences were found between age and use of the Human Resources, Structural and Symbolic frames. In addition, there were no statistically significant differences in frequencies between years of work experience as an executive or administrator and use of the four leadership orientations. The results demonstrated that fewer than 1/2 of the subjects in the study used multiple (three or four) leadership orientations (frames) and that the dominant (most used) leadership orientation was the Human Resources frame. The following conclusions were derived: leadership "at the top" seems highly similar, despite contrasting work environments; the leadership orientations of executives and administrators in the study were restricted to traditional managerial frames (Human Resources and Structural) and less inclusive of Political and Symbolic frames required for leading organizations in increasingly competitive and diverse environment. Recommendations for education and leadership practice and future research include providing opportunities for aspiring leaders to learn and practice multiple leadership orientations; additional analysis of the LOS's psychometric properties; and greater analysis of the factors reported for the LOS.







Servant Leadership for Higher Education


Book Description

SERVANT LEADERSHIP FOR HIGHER EDUCATION "Given the myriad of complex problems facing higher education, it is difficult to imagine that an administrator at any level of the institution could be effective without engaging in servant leadership. Higher education is a service industry and, consequently, this text is a must read for practicing administrators who are committed to effective leadership." MARY LOU HIGGERSON, Ph.D., vice president for Academic Affairs and dean of the college, Baldwin-Wallace College "Finally a thoughtful book on servant leadership with direct application to higher education. Includes many strategies for developing servant leadership in self, others, and organizations." DR. GARY L. FILAN, executive director, Chair Academy "With Servant Leadership for Higher Education Dan Wheeler brings the gauzy platitudes sometimes associated with servant leadership down to earth in a set of field-tested principles. I finished the book fantasizing about how much better off our colleges and universities would be if our leaders behaved like this!" JON WERGIN, professor of educational studies, Ph.D. in Leadership & Change Program, Antioch University "This is a must read for anyone thinking about becoming an academic leader. In the academy, it is not about command and control it's about serving your colleagues. Dan Wheeler's book 'nails it' as nothing is more critical to leaders than success in serving their colleagues." WALTER GMELCH, dean and professor, School of Education, University of San Francisco




Handbook of Research on Administration, Policy, and Leadership in Higher Education


Book Description

The creation of a sustainable and accessible higher education systems is a pivotal goal in modern society. Adopting strategic frameworks and innovative techniques allows institutions to achieve this objective. The Handbook of Research on Administration, Policy, and Leadership in Higher Education is an authoritative reference source for the latest scholarly research on contemporary management issues in educational institutions and presents best practices to improve policies and retain effective governance. Addressing the current state of higher education at an international level, this book is ideally designed for academicians, educational administrators, researchers, and professionals.







Executive Development and Organizational Learning for Global Business


Book Description

An essential reference book for you and your global organization, Executive Development and Organizational Learning for Global Business will guide you through the challenge of producing effective executives and masterminding learning organizations. In this cutting-edge overview, you'll share in the success stories of some of the most tried-and-true, top-selling authors in the world such as Peter Senge and Rosabeth Moss Kanter. Considered a “must-have” handbook for development managers, Executive Development and Organizational Learning for Global Business gives you a unique perspective on the major challenges you'll face when setting up your executive education program. Anyone creating a comprehensive game plan for a large global organization will want to be familiar with the informative practices in this book. In its concise and straightforward chapters, you'll read about: cross-cultural challenges of executive development tools and techniques for developing international executives experiential issues and action learning in global organizations anticipatory learning for global concerns Today, more than ever, piloting your global organization through a world of changing management systems and executive development programs can be overwhelming. But the unique perspectives you'll find in this time-saving collection will start you off right. So, whether you're a human resource development practitioner, a human resource executive, or an academic in human resource development, you'll profit from the bevy of intellectual insight and real-world experience that some of the world's most successful authorities have organized for you in the pages of Executive Development and Organizational Learning for Global Business.







Higher Education


Book Description




Exploring Leadership Styles and Faculty Satisfaction in Higher Education


Book Description

This book is a must read for administration and human resources staff of colleges and universities who may be having difficulty with retaining highly qualified teaching instructors, academic professors, and adjunct faculty staff. The retention of faculty and staff of educational institutions has been of vital concern over the last decade, especially since the economic turmoil of 2008 and the aftermath of the great recession. The increase of online degrees has increased the competitiveness of finding, and keeping, qualified and valuable teaching staff. Retention of valuable teaching instructors ñ including adjunct, part-time, associate, and assistant professors is crucial in the survival and growth of academic institutions, as well as maintenance of accreditation credentialing and standards. This book focuses on a correlational research study, based on a faculty population in an institution of higher learning in Florida, that examined the relationship between perceived academic administrator leadership styles and the satisfaction of faculty members and transformational, transactional, and passive/avoidant leadership styles of academic administrators, with a dependent variable of job satisfaction for full-time faculty members. Based on a 95% significance level, the researcher identified a significant relationship between the three leadership styles and the academic instructor's job satisfaction, thus an inferred correlational relationship to staff retention. Using this model, academic leaders are encouraged to refine their leadership styles on the basis of faculty members' indicated preferences to increase and improve academic instructor's retention, as well as their satisfaction in working for the school. Three key recommendations for action were developed. First, senior academic administrators should identify current transformational leaders in their organizations and perhaps use them as mentors to assist in the training and mentorship of current and future leaders. Second, academic administrators should recognize that leadership traits can be learned, and therefore, provide professional development and training opportunities in the areas of transformational leadership for present and future academic leaders. Finally, those who seek leadership positions in academia should become aware of the attributes of an effective higher education administrator, and work to develop an intrinsic understanding of and cultivate a skill-set of transformational leadership characteristics. Key Search Terms In Book: academic leaders, achievement-oriented leadership, active leadership, affective commitment, autocratic leadership, avoidant leadership, behavioral idealized influence, charismatic leadership, citizenship behaviors, communication styles, contingent reward leadership, developmental leadership, distributive justice, dualistic leadership, effective leadership, empowerment frameworks, exemplary leaders, exploitative innovation, faculty leadership, gender discrimination, hierarchical structure, idealized influence, institutional leadership, job satisfaction, laissez-faire leadership, leadership behaviors, leadership models, leadership theory, management by exception, mentors / protégés, organizational climate / organizational culture, participative leadership, passive/avoidant leadership, professional development, pseudo-transformational leaders, psychological empowerment, realistic leadership, reward and incentive system, scope of influence, shared governance model, structural empowerment, supportive leadership, top-down management style, total quality management (TQM), transactional leadership, transformational leadership




Leadership and Management: Case Studies in Training in Higher Education in Africa


Book Description

There has been a resurgence of interest in training programmes for higher education leaders and management (HELM) at African universities in recent times. Although there have been a few cases of evaluation studies of such programmes in Africa, a more systematic review of the lessons learnt through these programmes has not been done. This book aims to document and reflect on the learnings from intervention programmes at three African higher education councils. It is clear that university leaders face many leadership and management challenges. This is the starting point of the book.