Top Banner
Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University
16

Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Cecily Owens
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up?

Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU

Eron Drake, Davenport University

Page 2: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

The Rural Context

• 60% of Community Colleges are rural• 72% located in North Central and Southern accrediting regions• Small (less 2500 students) 22%• Medium (2500-5000 students) 54%• Large (over 5000 students) 24%

• Residential Living• 21% of rural colleges have

resident halls

• Distance Education• 52% Internet• 24% Broadband

Page 3: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Students

• 34% all CC students attend rural colleges• 49% attend large rural • 44% attend medium rural• 7% attend small rural

• Demographics• 74% White

(54% suburban/45% urban)• 41% Full-time

(32% suburban/31% urban)

Page 4: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Faculty

• Recruiting faculty• Shortages in specialized fields• Lack of culture• Difficulty in recruiting diverse faculty

• Retaining faculty• Early and mid-career turnover• Familiarity with rural areas

• Faculty Development• Led by individuals/committees• Focus on teaching• Support Institutional Missions

Page 5: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Leaders

• Pending retirements (45% of all CC presidents are 61 or older)

• Truth in Advertising

• Grow Your Own Programs• MidSouth Partnership for Rural

Community Colleges• Focus on real problems

• Leadership Development

Page 6: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

AACC Competencies for Community College Leaders

• Organizational Strategy

• Resource Management

• Communication

• Collaboration

• Community College Advocacy

• Professionalism

Page 7: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Research Questions

1. How do current rural community college leaders enact the competencies outlined by the AACC?

2. Does leading a rural college make a difference as to what competencies are most critical?

Page 8: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Methods

Phenomenology—understanding leading in a rural locale

One Mid-Western state

President/Vice President Academics

21 Interviews—13 community colleges

10 presidents

11 vice-presidents

Page 9: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Findings

• Key competencies• Collaboration• Resource Management• Professionalism

EMERGING THEMES• Leader of the Pack• Something out of Nothing• Going to the Fair

Page 10: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Leader of the Pack

• Called upon for community convener

• Player in partnerships/economic development

• Assumed roles of advocacy and good communication lines

Page 11: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Something out of Nothing

• Resource constraints more pronounced

• Key ties to economic development

• Community College viewed as a key asset

Page 12: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Going to the Fair

• Insider versus outsider status

• Fishbowl status

• Representing the college at all times

Page 13: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Discussion

• Generic Nature of AACC Competencies• Implications of context• Rating of importance

• Rural Roots• Leader Schema• Communication patterns

• Impact• Tight coupling• See impacts quicker• Deep roots

Page 14: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Implications

• Rural college leaders are the college• Hiring decisions• Training

• Role of the rural colleges as a “stepping-stone” for larger presidencies

• Development of shared meaning• Defining AACC Competencies • Framing change

Page 15: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Conclusion

• Commitment to partnerships heightened

• Need for leadership development

• Frontier mentality

• Multiple meaning interpretations of AACC

• Context driven—changes of outfits

Page 16: Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University.

Thank you