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Faculty recruitment is a major expense for colleges and
universities, and schools devote a considerable amount of their
resources to the hiring process. But many of these institutions
fail to devote the same attention to retaining college professors.
We've learned through many studies that it's far less expensive to
retain a student you have than to recruit a new one. Why is this
lesson not also applied to the college faculty? This book addresses
why higher education currently has a faculty retention problem and
then explores the strategies needed to address that problem. But
now all faculty members are alike. Minority faculty members have
their own retention challenges, as do highly competitive
researchers, part-time and temporary faculty members who excel at
teaching, and other ley groups. The best ways to retain the junior
faculty are not necessarily the best ways to retain mid-career and
senior faculty. By examining best practices currently in place in
higher education, and then combining those insights with research
conducted in the corporate world, the book encourages colleges and
universities to develop a culture of retention that applies to
students and faculty members alike.
Faculty recruitment is a major expense for colleges and
universities, and schools devote a considerable amount of their
resources to the hiring process. But many of these institutions
fail to devote the same attention to retaining college professors.
We've learned through many studies that it's far less expensive to
retain a student you have than to recruit a new one. Why is this
lesson not also applied to the college faculty? This book addresses
why higher education currently has a faculty retention problem and
then explores the strategies needed to address that problem. But
now all faculty members are alike. Minority faculty members have
their own retention challenges, as do highly competitive
researchers, part-time and temporary faculty members who excel at
teaching, and other ley groups. The best ways to retain the junior
faculty are not necessarily the best ways to retain mid-career and
senior faculty. By examining best practices currently in place in
higher education, and then combining those insights with research
conducted in the corporate world, the book encourages colleges and
universities to develop a culture of retention that applies to
students and faculty members alike.
Manycolleges and universities are struggling to strike a balance
between protecting free speech as a way of supporting their goal of
academic freedom and promoting civility as a way of creating an
environment where students can learn and faculty members can teach
and conduct research. There have been numerous recent incidents of
audiences shouting down speakers, burning books, and demanding that
specific students be expelled or faculty members be terminated. In
this highly fractious environment, schools are wondering "What
works?" when seeking to attain the twin goals of permitting
unrestricted speech but insisting on rules of decorum for debate
and the exchange of perspectives. This book explores what schools
have actually attempted, in some cases successfully and in some
cases not successfully, to address these issues. It concludes that
there are three primary strategies that tend to be effective:
treating challenges to free speech and campus civility as
"teachable moments"; exploring hypothetical scenarios with
students, faculty members, and administrators before there is a
serious incident; and approaching free speech and campus civility
across the curriculum. The book also surveys United States case law
on the topics of free speech, academic freedom, the right to
protest, and similar subjects so as to provide faculty members and
administrators with a concise resource filled with practical and
accurate information.
Manycolleges and universities are struggling to strike a balance
between protecting free speech as a way of supporting their goal of
academic freedom and promoting civility as a way of creating an
environment where students can learn and faculty members can teach
and conduct research. There have been numerous recent incidents of
audiences shouting down speakers, burning books, and demanding that
specific students be expelled or faculty members be terminated. In
this highly fractious environment, schools are wondering "What
works?" when seeking to attain the twin goals of permitting
unrestricted speech but insisting on rules of decorum for debate
and the exchange of perspectives. This book explores what schools
have actually attempted, in some cases successfully and in some
cases not successfully, to address these issues. It concludes that
there are three primary strategies that tend to be effective:
treating challenges to free speech and campus civility as
"teachable moments"; exploring hypothetical scenarios with
students, faculty members, and administrators before there is a
serious incident; and approaching free speech and campus civility
across the curriculum. The book also surveys United States case law
on the topics of free speech, academic freedom, the right to
protest, and similar subjects so as to provide faculty members and
administrators with a concise resource filled with practical and
accurate information.
The book provides a concise guide to how academic leaders can
manage their time more efficiently and thus better cope with the
stresses of their position. Rather than focusing on theory or the
"causes" of time and stress pressures for college administrators
today, the book focused on field-tested approaches for achieving
more of one's priorities and for dealing with the pressures of
academic leadership positions. (Academic leaders already know why
they're running short of time and feeling stressed; they don't want
more analysis and theory, but rather insights into how they can
make things better.) The book is designed for use by individual
academic leaders, administrative teams in a retreat, leadership
workshops or training programs, and courses in higher education
leadership.
The book provides a concise guide to how academic leaders can
manage their time more efficiently and thus better cope with the
stresses of their position. Rather than focusing on theory or the
"causes" of time and stress pressures for college administrators
today, the book focused on field-tested approaches for achieving
more of one's priorities and for dealing with the pressures of
academic leadership positions. (Academic leaders already know why
they're running short of time and feeling stressed; they don't want
more analysis and theory, but rather insights into how they can
make things better.) The book is designed for use by individual
academic leaders, administrative teams in a retreat, leadership
workshops or training programs, and courses in higher education
leadership.
The book explores how to build an approach to academic leadership
based on your own personal values, convictions, and principles.
Rather than trying to assert that only certain values (or even
virtues) are essential for good leadership, the approach taken is
to begin with who you really are, "your true self," and then to
build a leadership framework consistent with that identity that
makes your institution or program stronger. We explore why
hypocrisy is damaging to any form of leadership, but particularly
so in higher education where values of scholarship and research are
based on the confidence we have in others' integrity. As a result,
authenticity, even more than such commonly promoted "traits of
leaders" as vision, courage, and compassion, becomes the core of
effective leadership in the academy today. Through hypothetical
case studies and thought experiments, the book challenges
administrators to identify a small set of core values that truly
define who they are as academic leaders and then to use those
values as the basis for a philosophy of leadership that guides them
through the turbulent changes occurring in higher education today.
The book explores how to build an approach to academic leadership
based on your own personal values, convictions, and principles.
Rather than trying to assert that only certain values (or even
virtues) are essential for good leadership, the approach taken is
to begin with who you really are, "your true self," and then to
build a leadership framework consistent with that identity that
makes your institution or program stronger. We explore why
hypocrisy is damaging to any form of leadership, but particularly
so in higher education where values of scholarship and research are
based on the confidence we have in others' integrity. As a result,
authenticity, even more than such commonly promoted "traits of
leaders" as vision, courage, and compassion, becomes the core of
effective leadership in the academy today. Through hypothetical
case studies and thought experiments, the book challenges
administrators to identify a small set of core values that truly
define who they are as academic leaders and then to use those
values as the basis for a philosophy of leadership that guides them
through the turbulent changes occurring in higher education today.
Hire The Right Faculty Member Every Time is a concise guide for
hiring authorities at colleges and universities. The book provides
insight into the state of faculty hiring at colleges and
universities today, advice on the best way to design positions,
recommendations on how to conduct an interview, guidelines on how
to make a decision about whom to hire, perspectives on what to
remember when closing the deal, and hints about providing the right
kind of orientation and onboarding services to new hires.
Hire The Right Faculty Member Every Time is a concise guide for
hiring authorities at colleges and universities. The book provides
insight into the state of faculty hiring at colleges and
universities today, advice on the best way to design positions,
recommendations on how to conduct an interview, guidelines on how
to make a decision about whom to hire, perspectives on what to
remember when closing the deal, and hints about providing the right
kind of orientation and onboarding services to new hires.
An African proverb says, "If you want to travel fast, travel alone.
If you want to travel far, travel together." World-Class
Fundraising Isn't a Solo Sport is about how to travel far in the
world of academic development. It provides practical, field-tested
strategies for building strong academic development teams. Using
realistic case studies and innovative tools designed specifically
for use in higher education, the book serves as an operations
manual for how faculty members, academic administrators, or
development officers can best work together to achieve their
fundraising goals.
An African proverb says, "If you want to travel fast, travel alone.
If you want to travel far, travel together." World-Class
Fundraising Isn't a Solo Sport is about how to travel far in the
world of academic development. It provides practical, field-tested
strategies for building strong academic development teams. Using
realistic case studies and innovative tools designed specifically
for use in higher education, the book serves as an operations
manual for how faculty members, academic administrators, or
development officers can best work together to achieve their
fundraising goals.
What do faculty members, academic administrators, or development
officers need to know if they want to be successful fundraisers in
higher education? Colleges and universities are such complex
institutions that it is difficult for those who work in development
to understand how the academic side of the institution operates and
difficult for college professors and administrators to understand
the technicalities and legal requirements that affect the
development side of the institution. Going for the Gold demystifies
these worlds for anyone interested in higher education fundraising
and provides practical, field-tested tools that everyone involved
in academic development will want in his or her toolkit.
What do faculty members, academic administrators, or development
officers need to know if they want to be successful fundraisers in
higher education? Colleges and universities are such complex
institutions that it is difficult for those who work in development
to understand how the academic side of the institution operates and
difficult for college professors and administrators to understand
the technicalities and legal requirements that affect the
development side of the institution. Going for the Gold demystifies
these worlds for anyone interested in higher education fundraising
and provides practical, field-tested tools that everyone involved
in academic development will want in his or her toolkit.
A Toolkit for College Professors is designed to give new and
established faculty members the skills they need in order to do
their jobs more effectively. Combining case studies, scenarios,
practical advice, and problem-solving activities, this book offers
college professors a valuable resource for excelling in the
classroom, lab, studio, library, and beyond. From teaching
effectively to promoting student success, facilitating collegiality
with their peers, conducting research, applying for tenure and
promotion, and many other areas relevant to academic life today, A
Toolkit for College Professors helps faculty members achieve their
goals and avoid common pitfalls along the way.
A Toolkit for College Professors is designed to give new and
established faculty members the skills they need in order to do
their jobs more effectively. Combining case studies, scenarios,
practical advice, and problem-solving activities, this book offers
college professors a valuable resource for excelling in the
classroom, lab, studio, library, and beyond. From teaching
effectively to promoting student success, facilitating collegiality
with their peers, conducting research, applying for tenure and
promotion, and many other areas relevant to academic life today, A
Toolkit for College Professors helps faculty members achieve their
goals and avoid common pitfalls along the way.
A Toolkit for Department Chairs is designed to give academic
administrators the skills they need in order to do their jobs more
effectively. Combining case studies, scenarios, practical advice,
and problem solving activities, the book offers chairs a valuable
resource for negotiating the real-life challenges they face as
academic leaders. Many of the case studies and scenarios included
in this book have been field tested by the co-authors in over
thirty years of administrative training workshops. Current and
aspiring department chairs will discover many new tools that they
can include in their administrative toolkits from this practical,
accessible book. A Toolkit for Department Chairs works well as a
personal resource as well as a training manual for leadership
programs and textbook for pre- and in-service education for
department chairs. Some additional key features of this book
include: *Practicality in that it offers specific strategies to
address the many challenges faced by department chairs.
*Adaptability for use as an individual study guide, textbook for
leadership programs, or discussion guide for groups of academic
administrators. *Utility in that it fills a demonstrated need in
the field of higher education since 96-97% of current department
chairs have received no formal training in their administrative
responsibilities. *Easy of use through short, sometimes humorous
scenarios and case studies that cause readers to reflect on their
own administrative approaches.
A Toolkit for Department Chairs is designed to give academic
administrators the skills they need in order to do their jobs more
effectively. Combining case studies, scenarios, practical advice,
and problem solving activities, the book offers chairs a valuable
resource for negotiating the real-life challenges they face as
academic leaders. Many of the case studies and scenarios included
in this book have been field tested by the co-authors in over
thirty years of administrative training workshops. Current and
aspiring department chairs will discover many new tools that they
can include in their administrative toolkits from this practical,
accessible book. A Toolkit for Department Chairs works well as a
personal resource as well as a training manual for leadership
programs and textbook for pre- and in-service education for
department chairs. Some additional key features of this book
include: *Practicality in that it offers specific strategies to
address the many challenges faced by department chairs.
*Adaptability for use as an individual study guide, textbook for
leadership programs, or discussion guide for groups of academic
administrators. *Utility in that it fills a demonstrated need in
the field of higher education since 96-97% of current department
chairs have received no formal training in their administrative
responsibilities. *Easy of use through short, sometimes humorous
scenarios and case studies that cause readers to reflect on their
own administrative approaches.
Accrediting agencies and legislatures have become increasingly
insistent that governing boards and upper administrators undergo
regular evaluation at colleges and universities. Institutions of
higher education have a long history of evaluating faculty members
and are familiar with best practices for doing so. Offices of human
resources include employees with experience in how staff members
should be evaluated because these processes are well developed in
the corporate world. But how does a college or university
effectively evaluate its governing board, and who performs that
process? How are administrators, particularly the chief executive
officer and vice presidents, evaluated fairly and effectively?
Since a majority of institutions are now required to perform these
evaluations, they're seeking advice and examples of best practices,
but there aren't resources available to provide these insights. The
proposed book will address that critical need. The target audience
is college faculty and administrators, particularly those who need
to develop or improve a system for evaluating governing boards or
administrators because of accreditation requirements or legislative
mandate.
Accrediting agencies and legislatures have become increasingly
insistent that governing boards and upper administrators undergo
regular evaluation at colleges and universities. Institutions of
higher education have a long history of evaluating faculty members
and are familiar with best practices for doing so. Offices of human
resources include employees with experience in how staff members
should be evaluated because these processes are well developed in
the corporate world. But how does a college or university
effectively evaluate its governing board, and who performs that
process? How are administrators, particularly the chief executive
officer and vice presidents, evaluated fairly and effectively?
Since a majority of institutions are now required to perform these
evaluations, they're seeking advice and examples of best practices,
but there aren't resources available to provide these insights. The
proposed book will address that critical need. The target audience
is college faculty and administrators, particularly those who need
to develop or improve a system for evaluating governing boards or
administrators because of accreditation requirements or legislative
mandate.
This book applies the concept of mindfulness to the challenges
faced by academic leaders such as department chairs, deans,
provosts, presidents or chancellors, and faculty leaders. In
addition to instructing academic leaders how to become more
mindful, the book also provides clear and practical explanations
about what mindful leadership means in the setting of higher
education. Unlike other books on mindfulness, this work does not
assume that the only pathway to becoming more mindful is
meditation. Although meditation is discussed as a technique, the
book also presents numerous others strategies for becoming a more
mindful leader without a meditation practice. The book is designed
for use by individual academic leaders, administrative teams in a
retreat, leadership workshops or training programs, and courses in
higher education leadership.
This book examines some of the most important challenges facing
administrators and other professionals in PreK-12 schools today:
safety and security, hiring and evaluating members of the faculty
and staff, dealing with students’ academic and behavioral
challenges, assessing student performance, responding to disengaged
or overly engaged parents, and handling external pressures from the
community. It also explores ideas for how to design the types of
school our students will need in the future and cope with the
realities of trying to develop these schools in a difficult
educational environment. Preferring practical advice over
unsupported hypotheses and adopting clear, instructive language
rather than educational jargon, the authors draw upon their own
experience as well as some of the best research currently being
conducted in the field of educational leadership. The book is
suitable for self-study, workshops, education courses, and in-serve
programs. The target audience is current and prospective PreK-12
administrators, teachers, student teachers, and staff.
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