The Strategic Management of Higher Education Institutions
eBook - ePub

The Strategic Management of Higher Education Institutions

  1. 173 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Strategic Management of Higher Education Institutions

About this book

If you are a professional interested in reorganizing or restructuring your higher education or postsecondary institutions, youll need this book. Inside, the author smartly examines the needs of learners in the 21st century, the rise of for-profit highereducation institutions, and the technological innovations impacting postsecondary education. Kazeroony provides examples of administrative processes and how to satisfy regulatory agencies standards to take advantage of a particular marketing niche for attracting students. He addresses the changing environment of higher education, the administrative structure, challenges, and the requirements for successful execution of start-up operations or changing strategies for existing institutions, as well as provides a summary of findings and additional recommendations.

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Yes, you can access The Strategic Management of Higher Education Institutions by Hamid Kazeroony in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Management. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Chapter 1
Strategies to Better Serve Students and Grow Institutions
Hamid H. Kazeroony
The new generations of learners, technological innovations, budgetary constraints, and economic factors have given rise to the need for reevaluating new strategies in Higher Education Institutions (HEI). In addition, quality of learning and responsiveness to economic needs—such as providing competencies that can help graduates be gainfully employed, help economies grow, and help learners to fund their education—are among the ongoing issues that HEI should carefully examine in formulating an appropriate strategy in dealing with the rising challenges.
Higher learning institutions and postsecondary establishments have been impacted by the changing nature of information availability, the pressure for funding their programs, the rising cost of administering student services, the changing nature of regulations, and societal transformation.
Europe and the United States have taken different paths in addressing the same problem—how to change higher education institutions to serve everyone’s needs. Europe has already mapped its course to the year 2020 to improve literacy among all age groups, from preschool to middle age.1 In the United States, while some foundations are determined to push a practical agenda in making sure that anyone with a certificate has the necessary competencies to do the job once hired by a company,2 the U.S. administration continues its agenda, talking about competitiveness,3 but the funds allocated by Congress and the realities of states’ politics, the need for capital improvement, the changing cultural paradigm from traditional to digital age, and the reinvented approaches to education seem to be a more pressing challenge that one should address at the institutional level on each college and university campus. Despite different approaches and different political dynamics on both sides of the Atlantic, the need for changing individual institutions to serve students as customers and consumers of knowledge remains the same.
In the 21st century, higher educational institutions must simplify their bureaucracy and improve their capabilities to serve more learners, contain costs, and build a bridge to economic well-being.4 Lumina Foundation has been vigorously advocating for expanding the opportunities through changes in higher education to address the current U.S. educational ranking in the 10th position among the industrial nations and increasing the number of college graduates by 50% by 2025 to make the United States more competitive.5 Cisco6 has presented 12 social, environmental, and technological factors requiring higher education to change in order to remain relevant in addressing business practices. Higher educational institutions also must respond to lack of preparedness by students entering their systems from high schools.7 Kazeroony8 suggested that learners, educators, and the institutions will face fundamental changes in responding to environmental factors such as social and technological factors. As a part of the Recovery Act of 2009, the U.S. administration has envisioned that all Americans will complete at least one year of higher education by 2020.9 The National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education argued that to provide the necessary skills to make graduates more competitive in a global economy via higher education institutions, political and financial resources must be realigned.10
Guy Neave11 suggested that higher education institutions are in a transition where accreditation, academic freedom, and globalization are three dimensions that are subject to change. Rosemary Deem12 articulated reorientation of higher learning institutions is a necessity to address global concerns from policymaking and economic perspectives. The Partnership for 21st Century Skills has advocated a fundamental shift in higher education institutions to address the basic skills for learners.13
The emergence of nontraditional universities and changing learners’ demographics has led to new opportunities and has served as a wakening call to traditional universities to change.14 Finally, there is an emergence of adult learners as a distinct student demographic (who are independent, have major life commitments, and have full-time commitments outside learning), as explained by the Council on Adult and Experiential Learning.15
Knowledge Acquisition
Michael Gibbons,16 in a paper prepared for UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization) and World Bank, explained that the nature and demographic of the 21st century learners have changed from the learning perspective and the form of knowledge required. In the current environment, learners have access to electronic metadata but are lacking the ability to make sense of a particular subject or the ability to transform information into usable knowledge depending on their learning style.17 Various information channels also present legal, business, and ethical considerations in obtaining, relaying, and disseminating information.18
There is a concentrated international effort in addressing and standardizing quality of teaching and learning.19 Encouraging faculty to learn new instructional methodologies, technologies, and instructional design can assist institutions to address the changes in knowledge acquisition.20 Knowledge comprises a set of skills and competencies that can be locally and globally used to respond to new workplace needs and environmental changes. Kazeroony21 recommended reevaluating and changing the curriculum, the role of faculty, and the delivery method to address changes in knowledge acquisition.
The Learners
The 21st century learners tend to be multitaskers who convey ideas with sounds and images rather than writing.22 Learners’ attributes, such as (1) know-how, (2) self-concept, (3) experience, (4) readiness, (5) learning orientation, and (6) motivation, affect the way learning can take place.23 Adult learners have different needs in addition to the attributes discussed. The American Association of State Colleges and Universities has identified lack of remedial services, institutional support, and adequate financial aid as challenges faced by adult learners who are constantly juggling family, work, and learning in higher education institutions.24 The learners today will not wait for a professor to provide an answer but rather go to Google for the answer.25 Through destruction of national barriers, global learners who see the big pictures and relationships are frustrated with explaining themselves constantly.26
Higher learning institutions cannot afford to ignore the changing nature of learners. There are a number of factors in play. Currently, there are 32 states that have online and distance programs at elementary and secondary schools, and 70% of all school districts have some form of distance and online program to complement their regular programs.27 This reality points to the fact that the students entering higher learning institutions have different expectations from the learning delivery models. Additionally, the number of older learners entering higher learning institutions is beginning to grow faster than the younger learners. From 2006 to 2007, National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) projects saw a rise of 10% in enrollments of people under 25 and a rise of 19% in enrollments of people 25 and over.28 Also, NCES findings indicate that the number of female learners entering graduate programs has outpaced their male counterparts two to one from 1984 to 2007.29 However, as NCES findings demonstrate, only 57% of all students who enrolled in bachelor’s programs in Title IV institutions between 2001 and 2004 as full-time students graduated,30 which yields another insight into the nature of learners’ commitment to completion and possible issues that they face.
Chapters Roadmap
The following chapters explain the current circumstances and suggest strategies and their associated tactical tools for successful, growth-oriented, and self-funding operations in postsecondary institutions.
Chapter 2, ā€œThe Changing Environment of Higher Educationā€ (Olga Kovbasyuk and Glyn Rimmington), through examination of the past and existing HEI approach to education, offers a new paradigm for formulating new strategies in addressing the cultural and environmental challenges, which is the first step in any coherent organizational strategy before any other fundamental changes can take place.
Chapter 3, ā€œOrganizational Culture in Higher Educationā€ (Rana Zeine, Michael Hamlet, Patrick Blessinger, and Cheryl Boglarsky), using Human Synergistics International (HSI) Organizational Culture Inventory (OCI) Survey tools, provides a window to the HEI cultural setting and offers concrete recommendations that can be used by human resource professionals and HEI executives in modifying their future strategies to arrive at a desired outcome.
Chapter 4, ā€œChange Process in Existing Institutionsā€ (David P. Bugay), explains the cultural and political rationale for HEI entrenchment in the current system and offers strategic tools for changing HEI to serve its students or customers.
Chapter 5, ā€œThe Changing Learnersā€ (Michael J. Sukowski), discusses how HEI learners have changed and what HEI should do strategically to serve the new learners.
Chapter 6, ā€œSupporting Learners’ Activitiesā€ (Robert Thorn), discusses how HEI can develop learners’ supportive strategies through understanding their attributes and responding to them.
Chapter 7, ā€œOnline, Hybrid, and Face-to-Face Higher Educationā€ (Dakin Burdick), explores the pedagogical approaches, teaching modalities, and infrastructure requirements for formulating a cohesive strategy in accommodating the needs of learners in all three modalities as learners’ demographics change and as expanded access to higher education becomes more urgent in a tight fiscal environment.
Chapter 8, ā€œPublishers’ Technologies and Their Impact on Higher Educationā€ (Virginia Jones), draws on the emergence of a new generation of learners in the Internet age to address the changing needs of HEI strategies to accommodate new learning and publishing technologies and to address how to make learning more robust.
Chapter 9, ā€œAdministrative and Academic Structures: For-Profit and Not-for-Profitā€ (Andrew Carpenter and Craig N. Bach), reviews and draws on the differences between highly skilled business professionals with limited academic expertise in for-profit and highly successful academics without managerial experiences in nonprofit in the United States in running their respective institutions to offer a convergent perspective in developing effective strategies to run both forms of HEI.
Chapter 10, ā€œFunding: Stude...

Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright Page
  3. Abstract
  4. Contents
  5. Chapter 1
  6. Chapter 2
  7. Chapter 3
  8. Chapter 4
  9. Chapter 5
  10. Chapter 6
  11. Chapter 7
  12. Chapter 8
  13. Chapter 9
  14. Chapter 10
  15. Chapter 11
  16. Chapter 12
  17. Chapter 13
  18. Notes
  19. References
  20. Announcing the Business Expert Press Digital Library