The University for the 21st Century - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 17
About This Presentation
Title:

The University for the 21st Century

Description:

'Most of the time, institutional leaders are thinking about what to do, rather than ... that support our mission and goals; encourage common sense (Nordstrom's ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:29
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 18
Provided by: win28
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The University for the 21st Century


1
The University for the 21st Century
2
The Change Process The Challenge
  • Most of the time, institutional leaders are
    thinking about what to do, rather than how to do
    it.
  • At the end of the day, the personal, political
    and cultural aspects of change-the process-will
    make or break a change initiative. Change III,
    p. v
  • Hence the need for approaching change as a
    Scholarly Act, guided by rigorous standards of
    proof.

3
Change as a Scholarly Act
  • clear goals firmly grounded in knowledge about
    our disciplines, our students, their experience
    and the context in which we operate (adequate
    preparation).
  • built upon a solid body of evidence gathered and
    interpreted in a disciplined and principled way
    (appropriate methods) and shown to be
    significantly related to the challenges at hand
    (significant results).

4
Change as a Scholarly Act
  • The case must be presented effectively (effective
    presentation) and be studied reflectively
    (reflective critique), with a clear and
    compelling sense of responsibility for the
    effects of the ideas and proposed actions on the
    community that will be affected, both inside and
    outside the University (ethical and social
    responsibility).After Glassick et al 1997

5
The Paradox of Change
  • To change a culture, leaders must gain an
    outsiders perspective on their culture and then
    help the institution operate paradoxically-that
    is, change its culture in ways that are congruent
    with its culture. Change III p. 21
  • This means making changes that are supported by
    a clear warrant.

6
What is a Warrant?
  • A warrant involves a complex interweaving of
    evidence, explanation and clearly articulated
    values (House Howe, 1999).

7
What is a Warrant?
  • It starts with a claim (that a particular
    condition exists, that something has value, that
    a particular action should be taken), builds
    evidence to test and support the claim,
    establishes a warrant (a statement justifying the
    evidence that serves as a basis for a particular
    claim) and carefully spells out any
    qualifications for the claim (the specific
    circumstances under which a claim may be true and
    the likelihood that it is true.)

8
A Framework for ChangeMichael Heifetz, Leading
Change, Overcoming Chaos.
  • Stage One Choosing the Target.
  • Stage Two Setting Goals
  • Stage Three Initiating Action
  • Stage Four Making Connections
  • Stage Five Rebalancing to Accommodate the Change
  • Stage Six Consolidating the Learning
  • Stage Seven Moving to the Next Cycle.

9
Implementing Change the Ramaley Version
  • Building a compelling case
  • Creating clarity of purpose
  • Working at a significant scale and in a scholarly
    mode
  • Developing a conducive campus environment
  • Creating the capacity to continue the process
    over time and to learn from the experience

10
Creating Clarity of purpose
  • What are our core values and what is our mission?
  • What lessons can we draw from our own history and
    tradition?
  • What new core competencies will we need?
  • What core competencies must we retain and
    enhance?

11
Creating Clarity of purpose
  • What organizational values and principles will
    guide our decision-making?
  • What new educational models must we build?
  • What new alliances must we form?
  • What promising programs must we nurture?

12
Creating Clarity of purpose
  • Who may oppose our plans and what can we do to
    win them over, or, if necessary, what can we do
    to keep their influence from derailing our plans?
  • What new learners must we serve?
  • How will we generate the resources to invest in
    new competencies? If we cannot expect any new
    funding, what assets can we redirect to fund this
    work?

13
More Difficult Questions
  • Who are our students today? Who are they likely
    to be in 5-10 years?
  • How do we interact with our students today? How
    will we interact with them tomorrow?
  • What other choices do our students have today?
    What choices will they have in the future?

14
The Questions Continue
  • What makes our institution distinctive and a
    first choice today? What will make us distinctive
    and competitive tomorrow?
  • What can we do to stand out from the crowd?
  • How do we use our intellectual resources today?
    What will society expect from us tomorrow?

15
Creating the Capacity to Sustain Change The
CHANGE Principles
  • Allow a field of vision to drive change rather
    than management directives do this by developing
    clear principles and tests for deciding which
    options to pursue.
  • Involve everyone, including the doubters and
    nay-sayers, in the design, implementation, and
    evaluation of the effects of changeThis is the
    power of a culture of evidence.

16
Creating the Capacity to Sustain Change The
CHANGE Principles
  • Design policies and infrastructure that support
    our mission and goals encourage common sense
    (Nordstroms instructions to employees posted on
    a bulletin board in the mid 1990s Dont chew
    gum and always do the best you can.)

17
Creating the Capacity to Sustain Change The
CHANGE Principles
  • Encourage experimentation make sure that any
    institutional planning is really a learning
    process provide a safe environment for taking on
    risk.
  • Encourage informal networks and a sense of
    community trust people to be intelligent, to
    care about the organization and to do their best.
    Your trust will almost always be rewarded.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com