Title: Getting Higher Education to take Quality Improvement Seriously
1Getting Higher Education to take Quality
Improvement Seriously
- Stephen D. Spangehl
- Director, Academic Quality Improvement Program
(AQIP) - The Higher Learning Commission of the North
Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA) - Chicago, Illinois
2What challenges does higher education face?
3Why quality ought to fit higher education
- Universities and colleges are filled with smart
people. - Data collection, analysis, experimentation, and
testing are processes natural to academicians. - Deming, Shewhart, and many other quality gurus
came from or worked in academe. - Accreditation, academia's traditional quality
assurance-improvement process, inspired the
Malcolm Baldrige National Quality program.
4Why higher education needs quality
- Once a luxury, higher education beyond high
school has now become a necessity. - Competition for students among higher education
providers has become intense. - Survival closings, mergers, takeovers.
- Recognizable credentials are essential (Bologna
process). - Technology and distance delivery have changed
access and convenience considerations.
5Why higher education finds quality difficult
- With its roots in the medieval church, higher
education resists seeing itself as a business. - Accounting and fiscal management are still major
challenges. - Higher Education is often unclear about who it is
serving. - Higher education is sometimes uncertain of what
its primary product is.
6Who are the customers?
- The business connotations of the word customer
offends educators, so we substitute stakeholder. - Colleges are not clear about who they serve, whom
they should view as stakeholders, and how to
choose among or balance competing or conflicting
stakeholder needs. - Processes for understanding stakeholder needs are
often primitive. We know whats good for them
is a common approach.
7"Customer" Confusion
- Confusion among needs, wants, requirements, etc.
Give them what they want is not a mantra
popular among educators. - The problem is most acute among universities,
where each component college has its own set of
stakeholders. - Community colleges and many special purpose
institutions (health, law, etc.) have a very
clear sense of stakeholders and their vocational
needs.
8Whats the product?
- education
- an "experience"
- growing up
- friends and marriage
- learning
- degrees
- credits
- creation of knowledge
9800 Years of Tradition
10- Collegial, deliberative "shared" governance and
decision-making traditions - Latin terminology college, colleague,
collegial, dean, provost, chancellor, registrar,
bursar, tenure, etc. - Innovation, authority, tradition, scholarship vs.
innovation and invention - Theoretical vs. applied/practical/pragmatic focus
- Book production technologies and the process of
teaching the text, lecture, notes, etc.
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13Static Cling from Zachary Shore's Blunder Why
Smart People Make Bad Decisions (New York
Bloomsbury, 2008)
- Changing strong, deeply held paradigms is
difficult, maybe impossible without a crisis - "Stick with what works. Don't change horses in
midstream." - "Past performance is no guarantee of future
performance"
14The "Big Box" Higher Education Institutions
15A Dynamic Landscape
- Newer proprietary universities unashamedly see
themselves as businesses. - They have shed many traditional constraints
(shared governance, tenure, faculty loads, etc.)
to minimize expense and maximize ROI. - To traditional academics, they act recklessly,
are opportunistic (or entrepreneurial), and
heartlessly driven by the "bottom line."
16Processes Results Improvement
172 Fundamental Quality Questions
- Are we doing the right things?
- Are we doing things right?
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19http//www.AQIP.org
Stephen D. Spangehl (800) 621-7440 ext.
106 sds_at_hlcommission.org