Title: Turnaround: Leading Stressed Colleges and Universities to Excellence
1TurnaroundLeading Stressed Collegesand
Universitiesto Excellence
- A Presentation in Partial Fulfillment
- of a Sabbatical
- For Spring Semester, 2006, 2007
- Jim Martin, Professor of English
2Five Characteristics of Colleges and Universities
Making Progress Toward a Turnaround
31. Rethink Institutional Mission
- Do not overlook the responsibility to reconsider
the college or universities original vision
42. Restore Financial Stability
- Turnarounds begin with mission and finance not
admissions and marketing
53. Complete Key Infrastructural Improvements
- Infrastructure is where decline can be seen and
felt most easily deferred maintenance must be
addressed to survive
64. Avoid Accreditation Probation
- Even the sudden or unforeseen departure of the
president places second in conveying
institutional weakness to an announcement the
college or the university has been placed on
accreditation probation
75. Achieve a New Level of Campus Engagement
- Begin with three key constituencies Students,
faculty, and trustees - And ask each to assume new levels of
responsibility for the effectiveness of their own
community --- and prepare for higher percentages
of personnel to leave the community
8TEN LESSONS LEARNEDFROM TURNAROUND LEADERS
- (The following lessons are drawn from interviews
and conversationswith approximately 200
presidents, chief academic officers, board
chairs, and faculty senate and committee chairs
over the course of the 4-5 year project.)
91. Be a realist
- Ask for community support and involvement but
assume that the greatest workload for a
turnaround will be carried by the president,
i.e., dont take yes for an answer.
102. Define health carefully
- Spend time initially defining what constitutes
institutional health and secure community
agreement on this before committing key resources
for change.
113. Manage the managers more closely
- Weakened colleges and universities often do not
have the resources to hire and then to retain
skilled financial managers.
124. Design a new set of institutional indicators,
i.e., dashboard
- The dashboard is typically a set of easy to
grasp, fact-driven, data points. However, many
higher education leaders want to move away from
older, static measures to newer kinds of
benchmarks of success, or failure.
135. Prepare for a campaign at high speed
- Work more quickly, and over a longer period of
time, to achieve institutional change, i.e., 10
years instead of 2 or 3 years.
146. Talk Faster to Trustees
- Use technological advances to include board
members in campus conversations more quickly and
to a greater degree.
157. Know the difference between late and too late
- Excellent plans for positive change will survive
right up to the day the college closes its doors.
Waiting too long to initiate, much less
accomplish, major changes was one of the two or
three most common characteristics of colleges
that closed.
168. Hire the right consultant
- Presidents often believe these two things The
institution cannot afford to hire an outside
consultant to fix its worst problems, and the
institution does not presently have the staff or
resources to fix its worst problems.
179. Leverage partnerships
- New technologies have enhanced personal
networking across campuses, and on a broader
scale, institutional partnerships and strategic
alliances can also be enhanced among two, three,
or more colleges and universities initially in
areas such as resources for faculty professional
development, shared grant applications, and
joint-residence halls.
1810. Refocus on students
- Students can contribute fresh perspectives to
persistent or structural problems, and their
voices should be incorporated into major
decisions associated with a turnaround.