Title: The Many Roles of the Chief Instructional Officer
1The Many Roles of the Chief Instructional Officer
- Presented by Pam Deegan
- Monterey, October 31, 2007
2Agenda
- Your roles with
- With the faculty
- With your instructional team
- With your president
- With the Board of Trustees
3Your role with the facultyIn general terms -
transformational leadership
- Collegial
- Trust
- Honesty
- Honor process
- Transparency
- No side deals
- facilitate
- Respect
- Empower others
- Humor
- Honor and celebrate achievements
4Specifics relative to role with constituent groups
- Your role is dependent upon your 101
5Education Code 70902 (b)(7)
- The Governing Board shall ensure the right
of academic senates to assume primary
responsibility for making recommendation in the
areas of curriculum and academic standards.
6Title 5 53203 - Powers
(A) Governing Board shall adopt policies
delegating authority and responsibility to its
Academic Senate. (B) Policies in (A) shall be
adopted through collegial consultation with the
Academic Senate. (C) Guarantees the Academic
Senate the right to meet with or appear before
the board.
7Title 5 53200 - Definitions
(B) Academic Senate means an organization whose
primary function is to make recommendations with
respect to academic and professional
matters. (C) Academic and Professional matters
means the following policy development and
implementation matters
8The Ten . . .
- Section 53200 (c)
- Curriculum, including establishing prerequisites
- Degree Certificate Requirements
- Grading Policies
- Educational Program Development
- Standards Polices regarding Student Preparation
and Success - College governance structures, as related to
faculty roles -
continued . . .
9Ten (continued)
- Section 53200 (c)
- Faculty roles and involvement in accreditation
process - Policies for faculty professional development
activities - Processes for program review
- Processes for institutional planning and budget
development
10plus One
- Section 53200 (c)
- Other academic and professional matters as
mutually agreed upon.
11Collegial Consultation
- Section 53200 (d)
- District Governing Board is required to consult
collegially with the Academic Senate and develop
policies on academic and professional matters
through either or both - 1. Rely primarily upon the advice and judgment of
the Academic Senate - 2. Reach mutual agreement with the Academic
Senate by written resolution, regulation, or
policy
12Do you know your 10 1??
13Collegial Consultation - Definitions
- Section 53200 (d)
- (D) Requires procedures for responding to
Academic Senate recommendations that include - When rely primarily, the recommendation of the
Academic Senate will normally be accepted, and
only in exceptional circumstances and for
compelling reasons will they not be accepted.
14- 2. When mutual agreement and an agreement has not
been reached - Existing policy remains in effect except in cases
of legal liability or fiscal hardship - Board may act - after a good faith effort - only
for compelling legal, fiscal, or organizational
reasons.
15Compelling Reasons
- These terms mean that in instances where a
recommendation is not accepted the reasons for
the boards decision must be in writing and based
on a clear and substantive rationale which puts
the explanation for the decision in an accurate,
appropriate, and relevant context. - --Participating Effectively in District and
College Governance - (a publication of Academic Senate for California
Community Colleges)
16Title 5 53203 More Powers
- (E) Academic Senate may assume responsibilities
and perform functions as may be delegated by the
Governing Board - (F) Appointment of faculty members to college
committees shall be made by the Academic Senate -
requires consultation with CEO or designee
17So, what is your role??
- Depends upon which items are primarily rely and
which are mutually agree
18Primarily Rely
- More passive role
- Make headway due to respect role
- Advise
- Keep things legal
- Remind of process
- Examples
19Mutually Agree and the CIO role
- More active role
- CIO may co-chair
- CIO represents the President
- Still maintain collegiality
- Examples
20Role with Instructional Team
- You are your team
- Transformational traits
- Need to provide adequate structure, internal
processes, and predictability - Team needs to know they can try new things and be
able to fail without admonishment - Never lose your cool or use humiliation or sarcasm
21Role with the President
- Inform the president of what is going on so she
can make informed decisions. - Thoroughly discuss issues at Presidents Cabinet
- Okay to disagree, but when decision is made, get
with the program - Dont dis the president when in committee
- Be ethical, if you cant agree with majority of
decisions, question your role at the college
22Role with Board of Trustees
- YOU report to the President!
- What is your college policy?
- President needs to know of requests and
conversations - Many presidents do not want contact with Board
unless through the Presidents office
23Questions?