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Silvernail, Kirk D.; Graso, Maja; Salvador, Rommel O.; Miller, Jane K. – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2021
The present research considers the possibility that guidelines emphasizing academic freedom and faculty self-governance (i.e., those articulated by AAUP and UNESCO) might compete against national norms in shaping faculty fairness perceptions of institutional policies. We investigate the extent to which expectations of academic freedom and faculty…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Governance, Academic Freedom, Teacher Attitudes
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Chan, Germaine – International Education Studies, 2021
Universities must secure stakeholder support to ensure the successful implementation of most initiatives. However, given the shared governance structures and collegial cultures of many universities, what strategies do university leaders enact to obtain stakeholder support? Although several stakeholder management and organizational response models…
Descriptors: Universities, Governance, Stakeholders, Administrative Organization
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Field, Laurie – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2015
Against a backdrop of new public management (NPM) thinking and managerialism generally applied to universities in a range of countries, this study examines one of its manifestations--performance management for academics. Drawing on in-depth interviews with 40 academics at an Australian university, this article identifies six stances regularly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, College Administration, Governance
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Flaniken, Forrest; Cintr?n, Rosa – Contemporary Issues in Education Research, 2011
People are the lifeblood of colleges and universities. If there are no students, faculty, administrators, and staff, there cannot be a college or university. People are their primary resource, and the development of these people is their raison d'ĂȘtre. Due to the paramount importance of the people who are in higher education, it is essential to…
Descriptors: Church Related Colleges, Christianity, Teacher Evaluation, Faculty Evaluation
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Leisyte, Liudvika; Enders, Jurgen; de Boer, Harry – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2009
The expectations and demands with respect to teaching and research have been changing for universities due to changes in their institutional environments. Born out of changing national research policies and modern governance arrangements, efficiency, effectiveness and output-oriented cultures have become increasingly important. In this article we…
Descriptors: Medieval History, Governance, Biotechnology, Foreign Countries
Rasanen, Keijo – Journal of Research Practice, 2008
The managerial form of university governance has changed the conditions of academic work in many countries. While some academics consider this a welcome development, others experience it as a threat to their autonomy and to the meaningfulness of their work. This essay suggests a stance in response to the current conditions that should serve…
Descriptors: Governance, Educational Change, College Faculty, Foreign Countries
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Kater, Sue; Levin, John S. – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2004
This study examined shared governance in public, unionized community colleges and creates a national inventory of areas in which faculty participate in governance according to the language of collective-bargaining agreements. The findings suggest that community college faculty are engaged in shared governance in both the traditional academic areas…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Governance, Faculty Evaluation, Community Colleges
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McLean, S. Vianne; Callarman, Thomas E. – Innovative Higher Education, 1999
Describes the development and implementation of the Arizona post-tenure review policy, with particular emphasis on the Arizona State University experience. This policy had to balance the different expectations of the Arizona Board of Regents, the faculty, and university administration. Outlines communication strategies used in negotiations with…
Descriptors: Administrators, College Faculty, Cooperation, Faculty Evaluation
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Langsam, Deborah M.; Dubois, Philip L. – Innovative Higher Education, 1996
In 1993, the University of North Carolina at Charlotte's governing board mandated peer evaluation for nontenured faculty. Participants in the American Association for Higher Education's peer review project feared the mandate would taint efforts to introduce faculty to collegial approaches to peer review. However, negative fallout from the mandate…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Faculty, College Instruction, Collegiality
Gerdy, John R. – Trusteeship, 1995
The role of the college athletic coach has changed substantially in recent decades, with the ideal of the coach as an educator obsolescent. Institutions must work with the National Collegiate Athletic Association and coaches' associations for reform, addressing three major issues: need for a better hiring process, provision of meaningful…
Descriptors: Athletic Coaches, Change Strategies, College Administration, College Athletics
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Bing, Robert; Dye, Linda – Academe, 1992
The case of a dispute over the college faculty promotion process is examined in the context of a model of the organization of campus governance. The model describes three levels of power relationships with increasing amounts of shared responsibility between faculty and administration. A commitment to partnership is advocated. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Case Studies, College Administration, College Faculty
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Reynolds, Charles F. III; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1995
Central governance of undergraduate medical school curriculum is compared with traditional departmental approaches, based on experiences at the University of Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania). It is argued that centralized governance has more advantages but greater cost. A major challenge of this approach is in resolution of faculty conflict between…
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Centralization, Change Strategies, College Faculty
Magrath, C. Peter – Trusteeship, 1997
In higher education's new environment, colleges and universities must re-examine their tenure codes and practices and consider various forms of post-tenure review. Elimination of tenure does not necessarily end academic freedom. However, any new employment policies must emerge through a process of genuine discussion and negotiation among faculty…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Administrative Policy, Board Administrator Relationship, Change Strategies
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Griner, Paul F.; Blumenthal, David – Academic Medicine, 1998
Case studies of 10 medical schools identified innovative mechanisms of faculty governance and management to enlist faculty in meeting demands of a competitive marketplace, including appointment letters explicitly specifying roles and responsibilities; annual, objective, performance reviews; salary tied to performance; lengthened pretenure period;…
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Administration, Contracts, Employment Patterns