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Developing Library Leaders: a management responsibility

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Title: Developing Library Leaders: a management responsibility


1
Developing Library Leaders a management
responsibility
PLA Conference 2002 Carden Park, Chester
  • Sheila Corrall
  • Director of Academic Services
  • University of Southampton
  • President
  • CILIP

2
PLA Conference 2002Carden Park, Chester
  • Developing Library Leaders
  • a management responsibility
  • A profession in crisis?
  • Leadership vs management
  • Development pathways
  • The role of managers
  • Making it happen

3
The leadership crisis
  • The general consensus was that there was a lack
    of leaders in the public library profession, and
    no identified way in which a new generation of
    leaders might be fostered.
  • Bob Usherwood et al.
  • Recruit, retain and lead
  • the public library workforce study.
  • Resource, 2001.

4
A cross-sectoral issue
  • Research in the higher education sector found
  • a lack of suitably skilled and experienced
    candidates for heads of service posts
  • gaps in key generic management skills
  • strategic management and leadership
  • ability to manage change
  • an understanding of customer focus and service
    orientation
  • Pete Dalton Clare Nankivell. HIMSS
  • final research report and recommendations. 2002

5
A cross-domain concern
  • Leadership development is
  • a priority for action in the isNTO Workforce
    Development Plan
  • one of ten key objectives in the Resource Annual
    Workplan
  • a concern for the whole cultural sector
  • NMDC Leadership Working Party
  • CDF Cultural Leadership Initiative
  • to prepare a larger pool of potential leaders
  • to improve the performance of existing leaders

6
Leadership or Management?
  • There is a difference between leadership and
    management. Leadership is of the spirit,
    compounded of personality and vision its
    practice is an art. Management is of the mind, a
    matter of accurate calculation . . . its practice
    is a science. Managers are necessary leaders are
    essential.
  • Field Marshal Lord Slim (quoted in
  • John van Maurik. Writers on leadership, 2001)

7
Management v Leadership
  • The Manager
  • administers
  • is a copy
  • focuses on systems and structure
  • relies on controls
  • has a short-range view
  • asks how and when
  • imitates
  • accepts the status quo
  • does things right
  • The Leader
  • motivates
  • is an original
  • focuses on people
  • inspires trust
  • has a long-range perspective
  • asks what and why
  • originates
  • challenges
  • does the right thing

Warren Bennis. On becoming a leader. 1989
8
An alternative view
  • Distinctions between management and leadership
    are often unhelpful. Increasingly, a managers
    role can be described in terms of his/her impact
    on others, so much of management is executed
    through leadership.
  • Chris Lake, Director of Roffey Parks
  • Developing Leadership Potential Programme (quoted
    in Developing People, Winter 2001/2)

9
Management \ Leadership
Managing
Leading
  • Strategic thinking
  • Planning
  • Visioning
  • Coaching
  • Setting goals
  • Aligning
  • Inspiring
  • Developing others
  • Monitoring
  • Innovating
  • Controlling
  • Networking
  • Doing the right things
  • Acting as a role model
  • Improving
  • Effectiveness
  • Doing things right
  • Opening doors
  • Creating a climate
  • Efficiency
  • Building alliances
  • Budgeting
  • Removing blocks

Roffey Park Management Institute
Developing
People, Winter 2001/2
10
Management / Leadership
Managing
Leading
  • Strategic thinking
  • Planning
  • Visioning
  • Coaching
  • Setting goals
  • Aligning
  • Inspiring
  • Developing others
  • Monitoring
  • Innovating
  • Controlling
  • Networking
  • Doing the right things
  • Acting as a role model
  • Improving
  • Effectiveness
  • Doing things right
  • Opening doors
  • Creating a climate
  • Efficiency
  • Building alliances
  • Budgeting
  • Removing blocks

Roffey Park Management Institute
Developing
People, Winter 2001/2
11
Management and Leadership
  • Management and leadership are not mutually
    exclusive they can and should be complementary
    and overlapping
  • Management does not work well in todays volatile
    and unpredictable environment without leadership
    to accompany it
  • Both management and leadership are needed at
    every level of an organisation so we must develop
    capacity accordingly!

12
Leadership theories
  • Trait theory leadership depends on the
    possession of extraordinary qualities
  • Behavioural theories leadership is about
    adopting the right sort of behaviour
  • Contingency theory leadership depends on
    matching the style to the situation
  • Transformational theory leadership is about
    being an effective agent of change
  • NB Theories are not mutually exclusive

13
Development questions
  • Q Nature vs nurture are people born to lead or
    can they develop required attributes?
  • A People can examine, learn and practise
    leadership behaviours, but they must also have
    the will to lead and a need to achieve
  • Q Generic vs specific are standard courses
    suitable or is a tailored programme needed?
  • A Cross-sectoral perspectives add value, but
    programmes need to be culturally sensitive and
    incorporate context-specific elements

14
Recommended approaches
  • PLWS
  • Co-operation among library educators and
    practitioners
  • National traineeships with reserved posts
  • Fast track schemes
  • Leadership dev progs
  • Staff college
  • Compulsory CPD
  • HIMSS
  • Raising awareness of job roles and career paths
  • Management dev progs
  • Succession planning
  • Opportunities for developmental work
  • Mentoring and peer group support networks
  • Web-based skills toolkit

15
Practitioner feedback
  • Practitioners would like to be able to afford
    to go on development courses to develop the
    entire senior staff of their organisation to
    take time out for study and reflection to
    develop professional and support networks to
    have access to coaching and informal learning to
    be able to go on secondment and to be mentored.
  • John Holden. Cultural Leadership Initiative
    progress report, June 2002.

16
Clore Duffield proposals
  • A new cross-sectoral leadership development
    course for the whole of the cultural sector
  • A cross-sectoral mentoring scheme
  • Research fellowships a sabbatical period to
    complete a dissertation at a university
  • Secondments to relevant organisations
  • Bursaries and other support for organisations
  • A professional coaching scheme
  • An annual summer school
  • John Holden. Cultural Leadership Initiative
    progress report, 2002.

17
Overseas examples
  • Balancing theoretical and experiential learning
  • for new, mid-grade and senior professionals
  • Snowbird Leadership Institute (US)
  • Northern Exposure to Leadership (Canada)
  • Aurora Leadership Institute (Australia)
  • NLM / AAHSL Leadership Fellows Program
  • ACRL / Harvard Leadership Institute
  • Frye Leadership Institute
  • (CLIR / EDUCAUSE / Emory University)

18
Programme components
  • NLM/AAHSL Program
  • One-day orientation
  • Half-day institute
  • Mentoring relationship
  • Two-week placement
  • Three online courses
  • Three-day final event
  • Heavy subsidisation of fellow mentor costs
  • CLIR Frye Institute
  • Two-week residential
  • Year-long practicum
  • Short seminar
  • Scholarships (c50)
  • ethnic, racial and gender diversity
  • liberal arts and small colleges

19
Process requirements
  • Emerging consensus about the need for both
    theoretical and experiential learning with
    generic and context-specific elements
  • Short courses, residential programmes / summer
    schools, structured frameworks
  • Role models, mentor relationships, coaching
  • Challenging assignments, cross-functional
    projects, broadening experiences, sabbaticals
  • Professional networks, peer support and
    benchmarking, communities-of-practice

20
Barriers to development
  • Barriers to training and development included a
    lack of time, lack of management support and lack
    of suitable opportunities
  • HIMSS final research report. 2002
  • The indications are that the public library
    sector may not only have to identify and
    cultivate its future leaders, but may also need
    to modify the organisational culture in which
    they operate
  • PLWS executive summary. 2001

21
Critical enablers
  • Growing awareness of other fundamental issues
    requiring attention, eg
  • aspiration raising
  • cultural change
  • management behaviour
  • Developing library leaders should begin with
    the local library the head librarian must create
    a work environment that recognizes potential
    leaders and provides the resources for their
    leadership development.
  • Donald E Riggs. The crisis and opportunities in
    library leadership. Journal of Library
    Administration, 2001.

22
Management responsibility
  • Line Managers need to understand the value of
    learning on the job and accept responsibility for
    developing themselves and others, eg
  • appraising performance and potential
  • identifying and monitoring development needs
  • finding and facilitating learning opportunities
  • giving clear and timely feedback on performance
  • demonstrating leadership and learning behaviours
  • looking for deputising / delegation opportunities
  • encouraging people to share experiences

23
Managerial behaviour
  • Examples of behaviours facilitating learning
  • a democratic/participative decision making style
  • the ability to listen
  • the ability to give explicit direct feedback
  • the ability to engage in processes of
    questioning, reflecting and planning what to do
    next
  • the ability to be a good role model to show how
    to learn by personal demonstration
  • the ability to recognise learning opportunities
    within the prime managerial activity
  • Alan Mumford, How managers can develop managers.
    1993

24
Conclusion
  • We all need to take responsibility for developing
    future library leaders, by
  • allocating time and money to development
  • ensuring that managers understand their roles
  • identifying and acting on development needs
  • contributing to sectoral leadership initiatives
  • forming partnerships with educators and others
  • encouraging people to raise their aspirations
  • promoting a diverse and inclusive profession
  • creating real learning organisations

25
A Learning Workforce
  • Definition of the Learning Organisation
  • Creating an environment
  • where the behaviours and practices
  • involved in continuous development
  • are actively encouraged
  • Peter Honey and Alan Mumford, 1991.

26
Sheila Corrall, CILIP PresidentEmail
S.M.Corrall_at_soton.ac.uk
Chartered Institute of Library and Information
Professionals 7 Ridgmount Street, London WC1E
7AE Telephone 020 7255 0500 Fax 020 7255
0501 Textphone 020 7255 0505 Email info_at_cilip
.org.uk Website www.cilip.org.uk
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