1. Community College Leadership
101: The Basics
Charlene L. Stewart, MSW
Jocelyn Gainers
Honson Luma
Herman Pryor, Jr
2. Introduction
• Personal Growth Areas
• Developing Professional Career Goals
• Challenging Students to Examine Conflicting
Approaches about Leadership
• Challenges Facing Future Community College
Leadership
3. Personal Growth Areas
“Of all the things that can have an effect on your
future, I believe personal growth is the
greatest. We can talk about sales
growth, profit growth, asset growth, but all of
this probably will not happen without
personal growth.”– Jim Rohn
4. Personal Growth Areas
• AACC’s Competencies for Community College
Leaders
• Teresa Ann Foxworthy Definition of Personal
Growth
• Carl Jung- Individuation
5. Developing a Personal Growth Plan
Assess Plan Action Evaluate
Self Setting Goals Experiences Progress
7. Professional Career Goals
“You cannot achieve your particular goal without
taking the first tiny step, towards its achievement
an eventual success. Whether the goal setting and
planning that you have done concerns your
personal or your career life, you can only
accomplish it when you sit down and get down to
work seriously”.
http://waystoachievegoals.com
8. Discover What Your Career Goals, Job
goals and Purpose in life Is...
What is Your Life Purpose and your personal
mission statement in your life? Why are you
here? What do you want your life to be like?
What is your passion and driving force in your
life?
http://www.timethoughts.com/goalsetting/career-goals.htm
9. What are your employee career goals
and objectives?
What are your talents, interests, hobbies and
passions? You should first start by making a list
of all your talents, skills, strengths and abilities.
10. What are your driving values in life?
• Understanding your driving values in your life
can help you to make the best career goal
choices, based on-what is right for you.
11. Develop Your Strategic Career Plan
• A strategic career plan is a document that
combines your mission statement with a time-
line to achieve short-term and long-term
goals. Which includes:
• Your purpose statement
• Your vision for the next 3-5 years
• Your values
• Your guiding principles
12. Questions you should ask your self
before planning your career goals….
• Make more money?
• Move up in a organization or own your own
business?
• Have more responsibility or power?
• Retire early so you can do what you really
want to do full time?
16. Symbolic Acts of Leadership
• Act of communicating
• Behavior practices
• Participants’ understanding and expectation of
Leadership
• Organizational Constraints
17. Role of Culture in Performance
• Culture Defined
• Communicating Identities
– Internally and Externally
• Lack of Understanding Role of
Organizational Culture
– Decision Making Process Obscure
– Cost Increases
– Resources Difficult to Allocate
– Conflict Unresolved
19. References
• Brown, C. (2010). Organizations and governance in higher
education. ASHE Reader Series, Boston, MA: Pearson.
• Tierney, W. G. (Ed.). (2004). Competing conceptions of
academic
governance: Negotiating the perfect storm. Baltimore, MD:
John Hopkins University Press.
21. Major issues facing community
colleges
• Funding
• Access
• Completion
• Innovation
• (American Association of Community
Colleges, 2011)
22. Funding
• Facts!
• Tuition was raised in all post secondary sectors in
most states last year.
• Most colleges will be flat funded for FY 2012-
2013.
• Pell Grant increases will not cover state cuts of
student aid (Katsinas & Friedel, 2010).
• Q: Will the Pell Grant increase to $5,550 improve
access for low income students?
23. Access
• Facts!
• Tidal wave of students
• Military veterans enrollment is rising
• Public universities have not capped
enrollment but they have “pushed” students
to accessible community colleges (Katsinas &
Friedel, 2010).
• Q: Can distance learning increase access
despite budget woes?
24. Completion
• Increasing graduation rates is unlikely with
budget cuts.
• Community colleges are eliminating sections and
classes.
• Completion gaps for students of color have
improved but more needs to be done. (American
Association of Community Colleges, 2011)
• Q: What are some innovative ways to address the
completion gaps for students of color?
25. Innovation
• Community colleges delivering four year
degrees
• Data collection systems
• Partnerships with local businesses and non-
public partners (Katsinas & Friedel, 2010).
• Q: What innovation might you suggest to
address the challenges of community
colleges?
26. References
• American Association of Community Colleges.
(2011, August). Retrieved from Report on
the 21st century initiative listening tour:
www.aacc.nche.edu
• Katsinas, S. G., & Friedel, J. N. (2010). Uncertain
Recovery: Access and funding issues in public
higher education. University of Alabama,
Education Policy Center.
Notas do Editor
We will Interactive Dialog and discourse to develop insight on personal growth areasWe will have an open discussion to expand the knowledge base of Cohort 26 on developing professional career goals. We will have some conversation centered around community college leadership , trustee, legislators and other community college practitioners who have challenged student to examine conflicting approaches about leadership in community colleges.Lastly, we will discuss challenges for future community college leadership.
To assess where you are and where you want to be one should ask themselves:What is my mission, vision, and value in life?What do I want to improve, develop, grow or make happen?Where do I see my self in 3-5-7 years?What are my Strengths, Weaknesses, threats and opportunities?You may also want to discuss these questions with a mentor, etc.Setting GoalsSMART SPECIFIC MEASURABLE ACHIEVABLE REALISTICTIMEBOUND
According to AACC’S Competencies for Community College Leaders, The development and availability of well prepared leaders is vital to the continued success of community colleges and their students. Leaders must be aware of their personal growth and develop a plan to chart their progress. According to AACC (2011), A plan as such is intended to be used as a guideline and a living document which can change over time in order to meet the needs of people and the institution. If a plan is developed and prepared well, the individual will have a much better chance to accomplish their plan.Teresa Ann Foxworthy has over 20 years of experience as an Executive and Executive coach. She defined Personal Growth as a way of opening peoples perspectives to see more options and possibilities for success & joy in their personal and professional lives (www.selfgrowth.com).Carl Jung identified a process of growth as individuation- which is the essential to the conscious realization of one’s true self (www.personalitypage.com).
Or Personal Development Plan (PDP). Developing a plan as mentioned before will prepare future leaders to have a productive journey. In order to develop such plan we must focus on four main steps:Why do you think these four words are valuable in the personal growth process?Assess- In order for an individual to invest in their future, one must determine where they are and where they want to go. One can start by asking the following questions:What are my values and priorities?What do I want to improve, develop, grow, or make happen?What strengths do I have to build on?What weaknesses (challenges) do I need to improve?What obstacles must I overcome?What resources do I have to help me grow?SWOT!!!Plan- Set clear goals and plan for ways to growSpecific Measurable Attainable Relevant Timely Use Public Speaking ExampleAction- Take action to grow- Develop learning experiencesWhat will you do to learn and develop self exposure and experience---Practice?Evaluate- where you are in comparison to where you were..PGP/PDP is a Living document, one can make adjustments when needed.Celebrate your achievements!!!
What level do you want to reach in your career, or what do you want to achieve?
Concepts:-Discusses how one thinks about a symbol in regards to the atmosphere and potential conflicts -Explores how symbolism enhances and help define leadershipNature:-Organizational theorists (Dandridge, Mitroff, and Joyce 1980; Peter and Waterman 1982; Petigrew 1979; Tice and Beyer 1984) all view symbols as either objects or objects that serve as vehicles for conveying some type of meaning or a message.-Tierney (1989) contributes that symbols are more than… - objectivized meaning and that they are much more than vehicles that may convey or carry a message, but more like temples or tabernacles which houses and holds the very root of institutional beliefs. Natural Existence:-Symbols exist within an organization whether or not the organization’s members are aware of these natural symbols. -For an organization to blatantly void its natural symbols for example (acts, events, language, dress, structural roles, ceremonies, or even spatial positions) means that the organization has denounced the breath of human activity i.e. it becomes absent of causal meanings and almost lifeless -becomes determinant of how people are drawn or not drawn to certain organizations -foreshadows a leader’s reign, or tells a story of how leaders have or have not been effectively diversified in highlighting and promoting its symbols
Tierney (2004) explained is his article that culture in organizations has emerged as somewhat a cure for institutions of higher educationNew Management ApproachAids to explain the events both positive and negative that occurs within organizations with or without explanation or proper rhyme or reasonPurposed to diagnose culture in colleges and universities so that distinct problems can become overcome Aids in solving specific administrative problems
Acts:-In interpreting symbols in leadership, typically the audience that receives a message must additionally interpret what the message means. Forexample: You may asked to stay after class by your professor and as you’re asked, your professors says it in a tone that sounds as if you’ve done something terribly wrong. The professor possibly could be congratulating you on a job well done on your work, or simply checking up on you to see how you’re doing in the class. Other classmates witness the request by the professor begin to assume that there is a problem or issues. Some will even go as far as thinking that even they may be called out as well. Behavior:-Act could be viewed as respect for other associates by leadership-May be viewed as that leader’s specific style -Leaders who always remain in their offices and never converse informally with subordinates sends messages that are symbolized and subordinates may interpret those messages and representing the culture of the organization and what its values represent.-Informal styles of management can symbolize a number of messages to different people via interpretations… FriendshipAccessibility IntrusivenessAnd sometimes even Harassment Understanding and Expectations:-Participants’ must have conscious and unconscious forms of understanding meaning that they must be in tune or knowledgeable of what the symbols are and their meanings, also they must internalize their views of certain symbols simply because they may be a part of their leader’s style of management or even the order of business and conduct for the organization-Be aware that symbols change due to historical ruptures-Responses to the environment effect the outcomes of certain interpretations symbols possess-Understand that individual influence is powerful
Tierney (2004) defined the culture of an organization as one that is grounded in the shared assumptions of individuals participating in the organization. Clifford Geertz an anthropologist mentioned in this section defined the term traditional culture. According to Geertz, traditional culture denotes a historically transmitted pattern of meanings embodied in symbols:A system of inherited conceptions expressed in symbolic form of which people communicate, perpetuate, and develop their knowledge about attitude towards life. Geertz also defines culture by stating that man is an animal suspended in webs of significance he himself has spun. Culture is seen as those webs within an organizational setting (seen as the interconnectivity of organizations)Common Goal towards understanding the role of culture: Minimize the occurrence and consequences of cultural conflict and help foster the development of shared goals.Questions to consider:What holds this place together?Is it the missions, values, bureaucratic procedures, or strong personalities? How is an organization ran and what does it expect from its leaders
Six Categories Regarding Leadership, Specifically Presidential Leadership:(A study was conducted within 32 colleges participating in the Institutional Leadership Project (ILP))-Metaphorical, Physical, Communicative, Structural, Personfication, and Ideational. -These categories are not mutually exclusive-A symbol may fall within more than one category or reinforce another symbolic category. -These are just six mentioned, and these six do not necessarily cover all organizational symbols.Metaphorical Symbols:-In organizational leadership, metaphors are a figure of speech. -It gives participants a way of seeing and acting in the organizational universe and allows the organization’s team members to see itself as a team reacting differently then the organization that is led by a general who commands troops. Physical Symbols:-Refers to objects that are meant to mean something other than what they really are. -They are the most common symbols.-May not signify what their leader intends.Ex. President giving statement about getting PCs for the institutions not to truly enhance the learning experience at the institution by actually giving faculty PCs, but to set forth a philosophy that makes a statement about the act of changing the teaching experience at the institution. Communicative Symbols:-Entails not only symbolic acts of oral disclosure but also written communicative acts and nonverbal activities that convey particular meanings from a president to a constituency. Structural Symbols:-Refers to institutional structures and processes that signify more than who reports to whom. -Most often differentiates new presidents from old-Highlights new presidents, those in office three years or less often feel the need to alter the organizational structure to signify changePersonification Symbols:-Refers to a leader’s intent to represent a message with an individual or group.-For example, on a national level we often find political appointees who symbolize an elected leader’s commitment to a particular constituency. Ideational Symbols:-Are ideas as symbols and refer to images leaders convey about the mission and purpose of the institution.-Presidents generate ideas that serve as symbolic ideologies about their institutions. -Ideational symbols are often the most difficult symbols for constituents to interpret if the symbol is divorced from tangible contexts.
It was raised for community colleges in 44 states five times the rate of inflationTuition increases will be well above 10%Strategies to help budget gaps are: across the board cuts, deferring maintenance, targeted program cuts, cut/reduce out of state travel, furloughs and layoffs
All time record graduation classes from high school and record growth of older students returning for retrainingThis tidal wave will occur whether or not institutions are funded to serve themMost schools will see a 10% or more enrollment inclineCalifornia has capped community college enrollments
As a result the time to program completion for many is extended instead of shortenedAnswer: career coaches in high schools, certified life coaches, packaging financial aid for 4 years for all students
This is not allowed in most states and is not likely to pass soonNew data systems are being developed to track student success in most states