Synopses & Reviews
Praise for Rethinking Faculty Work"This book is a must-read for college and university leaders from presidents to faculty. It offers solutions to resolve the major challenges faced in recruiting, retaining, reviewing, and respecting the best faculty and in transforming the culture of the workplace."
—Claire A. Van Ummersen, vice president, Center for Effective Leadership, American Council on Education and former president, Cleveland State University
"Gappa, Austin, and Trice define the front lines of change in the academic profession—a far more diverse and contingent workforce than ever before. Their imaginative call for new norms and practices to assure that academic careers continue to offer the best and brightest satisfying and fulfilling professional lives is original and refreshing."
—David Leslie, chancellor professor of education, College of William & Mary
"Critical reading for all concerned about the future of the university. Rethinking Faculty Work takes a hard look at the fast-changing university culture and provides a road map on how to prepare for the future."
—Mary Ann Mason, dean of the graduate division, University of California, Berkeley
"Gappa, Austin, and Trice provide faculty and institutional leaders with an exciting new way to think about how the academic workplace can meet the needs of a new academic workforce. They identify essential components of the faculty experience, which, if addressed by colleges and universities, would make higher education a more satisfying, stable, and productive place to work for all faculty members."
—Betsy E. Brown, associate vice president for academic affairs and executive director, UNC Leadership Institute, Office of the President, University of North Carolina
Review
"an exceptionally lucid analysis of the gap that has opened up between academic careers in the golden age and the reality of faculty appointments today." (Change, Sept/Oct)
Synopsis
Written for educators, administrators, policy makers, and anyone else concerned with the future of higher education, Rethinking Faculty Work shows how changes in higher education are transforming the careers of faculty and provides a model that makes it possible for all faculty to be in a position to do their best. This important resource offers a vision of academic workplaces that will attract superb faculty committed to fulfilling the missions of the universities and colleges where they work.
Synopsis
Profound challenges in higher educationfiscal constraints, escalating competition, demands for greater accountability, growing enrollments, increasingly diverse faculty appointments, and the continuous expansion of new technologiesare transforming the careers of faculty.
Written for educators, administrators, policy makers, and anyone else concerned with the future of higher education, Rethinking Faculty Work shows how changes in higher education are transforming the careers of faculty and provides a model that makes it possible for all faculty to be in a position to do their best. This important resource offers a vision of academic workplaces that will attract superb faculty committed to fulfilling the missions of the universities and colleges where they work.
Rethinking Faculty Work highlights an overall framework and five key elements that are essential to the work experience of all faculty membersequity, academic freedom, flexibility, professional growth, and collegiality. Throughout the book, the authors include recommendations for how colleges and universities can use the framework to rethink their academic workplaces. Illustrative examples show how to strengthen the five essential elements in ways that are appropriate to a particular institution's culture and needs and that ensure dynamic, supportive, and productive institutional environments for everyone.
Rethinking Faculty Work presents strategic approaches to support facultywho are indeed the heart of the universities and colleges where they workand the intellectual capital that ensures their excellence.
About the Author
Judith M. Gappa is professor of higher education administration at Purdue University where she served previously as vice president for human relations.
Ann E. Austin is the Mildred B. Erickson Distinguished Professor of Higher, Adult, and Lifelong Education at Michigan State University.
Andrea G. Trice is an independent consultant to colleges and universities and a former faculty member and administrator.
Table of Contents
Preface.
About the Authors.
PART ONE: HIGHER EDUCATION’ S CHANGING CONTEXT.
1. The Changing Context for Faculty Work and Workplaces.
2. Trends in the National Workplace.
3. Faculty Appointments and Faculty Members: Diversification, Growth, and Diversity.
4. The Academic Profession Today: Diverse Appointments to Meet Diverse Needs.
5. Attracting and Retaining Excellent Faculty.
PART TWO: THE FRAMEWORK.
6. The Framework of Essential Elements.
7. Respect: The Foundation for the Essential Elements.
8. Shared Responsibility and Joint Leadership.
PART THREE: THE ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS.
9. Equity in Academic Appointments.
10. Academic Freedom.
11. Ensuring Flexibility in Academic Appointments.
12. Professional Growth.
13. Collegiality.
14. Why Rethink Faculty Work and Workplaces? A Call to Action.
References.
Name Index.
Subject Index.