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Departmental leadership of teaching

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Title: Departmental leadership of teaching


1
  • Departmental leadership of teaching
  • in research-intensive environments
  • Graham Gibbs

2
Background context
  • Growing phenomenon of institutional strategies to
    develop teaching
  • Less progress in UK in implementing learning and
    teaching strategies in research-intensive
    universities
  • Moved to Oxford (2004)
  • National Teaching Fellowship project (2004-7)
    network of research-intensive universities to
    discuss teaching
  • Oxford, Princeton, MIT, Stanford, Cornell, Lund,
    Helsinki, Oslo, Utrecht, Leuven, Sydney,
    Edinburgh, Copenhagen, NUS, Queens
  • Case study visits identified some centrally
    driven strategic teaching development (Utrecht,
    Sydney, Leuven), but mostly not strategic or
    centralised
  • Institution-wide initiatives usually derived from
    depts. (Stanford)
  • Even where institutional initiatives, depts. vary
    in implementation (Sydney)
  • In UK NSS scores similar for institutions but
    varied for subjects within institutions

3
Background research study
  • Departmental leadership of teaching in
    research-intensive environments
  • Leadership Foundation/Higher Education Academy
  • Two departments per university identified through
    outstanding teaching PIs
  • Case study visits documentation, interviews with
    head, academics, students, to identify role of
    leadership in teaching excellence
  • Discussion with network in Utrecht, June 2006

4
Background theory
  • McNay (1995) University cultures
  • Collegium-Bureaucracy-Corporation-Enterprise
  • Ramsden (1998)
  • emphasis on transformational leadership
  • Prosser and Trigwell (1997)
  • experience of department contexts associated with
    student focussed approaches to teaching
  • Bryman (2006)
  • leadership for research productivity sometimes
    opposite of leadership for teaching excellence
  • sceptical about transformational leadership in
    research-intensive cultures
  • McBeath et al (2004)
  • distributed leadership (related to organisational
    culture)

5
Background theory
  • McNay (1995) University cultures
  • Collegium-Bureaucracy-Corporation-Enterprise
  • Ramsden (1998)
  • emphasis on transformational leadership
  • Prosser and Trigwell (1997)
  • experience of department contexts associated with
    student focussed approaches to teaching
  • Bryman (2006)
  • leadership for research productivity sometimes
    opposite of leadership for teaching excellence
  • sceptical about transformational leadership in
    research-intensive cultures
  • McBeath et al (2004)
  • distributed leadership (related to organisational
    culture)

6
Background theory
  • McNay (1995) University cultures
  • Collegium-Bureaucracy-Corporation-Enterprise
  • Ramsden (1998)
  • conceptions of leadership of teaching
  • Prosser and Trigwell (1997)
  • experience of department contexts associated with
    student focussed approaches to teaching
  • Bryman (2006)
  • leadership for research productivity sometimes
    opposite of leadership for teaching excellence
  • sceptical about transformational leadership in
    research-intensive cultures
  • McBeath et al (2004)
  • distributed leadership (related to organisational
    culture)

7
Conceptions of leadership of teaching
  • A A focus on the bureaucratic structure and
    organisation of the department, imposed by the
    head
  • B A focus on the role, responsibility and
    practice of the head, who imposes a model of
    good practice in teaching upon the teachers in
    the department
  • C A focus of the nature and content of subjects
    and disciplines, which is discussed with the
    teachers in the department
  • D A focus on the roles, responsibilities and
    practices of the teachers in the department,
    which are discussed and/or negotiated with the
    teachers
  • E A focus on teaching that emphasises students
    experience of studying, which is discussed
    and/or negotiated with teachers
  • F A focus on teaching emphasising the students
    experience of studying in a continually changing
    and developing curriculum. How to change and
    improve is the subject of systematic discussion
    and consultation and the head systematically
    establishes means to enable teachers to develop

8
Conceptions of leadership of teaching
  • conceptions of leadership are closely related to
    the extent to which teachers take a
    student-focussed approach to teaching
  • which is closely related to the extent to which
    students take a deep approach to learning
  • which is closely related to the quality of
    learning outcomes.
  • (Ramsden, Trigwell, Prosser, Martin)
  • meta-analyses of all educational interventions of
    all types have confirmed that it is a focus on
    changing how students learn which has the
    greatest impact, not a focus on changing
    teachers, and certainly not a focus on structural
    or organisational matters
    (Hattie)
  • academics describe having more, and more
    significant, discussions about teaching in
    departments where there is perceived to be
    leadership support for such discussions
  • (Roxa Martensson)

9
Background theory
  • McNay (1995) University cultures
  • Collegium-Bureaucracy-Corporation-Enterprise
  • Ramsden (1998)
  • emphasis on transformational leadership
  • Prosser and Trigwell (1997)
  • experience of department contexts associated with
    student focussed approaches to teaching
  • Bryman (2006)
  • leadership for research productivity sometimes
    opposite of leadership for teaching excellence
  • sceptical about transformational leadership in
    research-intensive cultures
  • McBeath et al (2004)
  • distributed leadership (related to organisational
    culture)

10
Background theory
  • McNay (1995) University cultures
  • Collegium-Bureaucracy-Corporation-Enterprise
  • Ramsden (1998)
  • emphasis on transformational leadership
  • Prosser and Trigwell (1997)
  • experience of department contexts associated with
    student focussed approaches to teaching
  • Bryman (2006)
  • leadership for research productivity sometimes
    opposite of leadership for teaching excellence
  • sceptical about transformational leadership in
    research-intensive cultures
  • McBeath et al (2004)
  • distributed leadership (related to organisational
    culture)

11
Forms of dispersed leadership
  • Formal distribution via hierarchical structures
    devolving responsibilities to staff to specific
    roles, identifiable in an organisational diagram
  • Pragmatic distribution via ad hoc devolution of
    tasks to meet demands as they emerge
  • Strategic distribution via planned appointment
    of individuals to contribute to specific
    initiatives
  • Incremental distribution involving giving
    progressively more responsibility to identified
    individuals as they demonstrate their growing
    competence
  • Opportunistic distribution where individuals
    willingly take the initiative to extend their
    roles
  • Cultural distribution where leadership is
    assumed rather than given and shared in a
    flexible way enabled by the local culture.

12
Leadership strategies and tactics associated with
excellent teaching
  • Establishing personal credibility
  • 2 Identifying problems and turning them into
    opportunities
  • 3 Articulating a rationale for change
  • 4 Devolving leadership
  • 5 Building a community of practice
  • Marketing the department as a (teaching) success
  • Managing innovation
  • Involving students

13
Patterns in leadership of teaching
  • Department size appears to have little effect
    emergent change and planned change as likely
    in small and large departments
  • Discipline has a large effect change more
    emergent than planned in Humanities and
    Social Science no examples of emergent change in
    Science. Entrepreneurial organisational culture
    much more evident in professional subjects.

14
Disciplinary activity systems
  • Where subject matter is hierarchically
    structured, teachers need to agree what courses
    consist of in order to ensure students
    prerequisite knowledge for later courses
  • Where research is conducted collaboratively there
    is a culture of doing things together and talking
    about it.
  • Where significant resources are required to
    undertake research, and it requires much
    organisation and a hierarchy of staff, everyone
    is used to funding, planning, organising and
    supervising others
  • Where a subject is as much about discourse as
    subject expertise, it may not matter much what
    colleagues teach and agreement between teachers
    is less necessary
  • Where research is conducted individually and
    privately, largely without resources, there is
    little experience of funding and organising (and
    the organisational structure is hierarchically
    flat) of co-operating to get things done, or of
    managing others to work to a pattern.

15
Patterns in leadership of teaching
  • Department size appears to have little effect
    emergent change and planned change as likely
    in small and large departments
  • Discipline has a large effect change more
    emergent than planned in Humanities and
    Social Science no examples of emergent change in
    Science. Entrepreneurial organisational culture
    much more evident in Professional subjects.
  • Experiencing a significant problem or challenge
    is virtually essential for planned change. Every
    example of emergent change was associated with no
    experience of a problem. Entrepreneurial culture
    was common where there was a problem a collegial
    culture where there was no problem.
  • Cultures either collegial or (collegial
    entrepreneurial). Very little bureaucracy some
    corporatism

16
University cultures
  • Collegial culture
  • freedom to pursue university and personal goals
    unaffected by external control. Decision-making
    is consensual, management style permissive.
    Students are seen as apprentice academics.
  • Bureaucratic culture
  • regulation, rules, and consistency with standards
    related to institutional quality assurance
    procedures. Evaluation is based on the audit of
    procedures. Decision making is rule-based.
    Students are seen as statistics.
  • Corporate culture
  • management style is commanding and charismatic.
    Decision-making is political and tactical.
    Evaluation is based on performance indicators and
    benchmarking. Student are seen as units of
    resource.
  • Entrepreneurial culture
  • management style involves devolved and dispersed
    leadership. Decision-making is flexible and
    emphasises professional expertise. Evaluation is
    based on achievement. Students are seen as
    partners.

17
Patterns in leadership of teaching
  • Department size had little effect emergent
    change and planned change as likely in small
    and large departments
  • The discipline had a large effect change more
    emergent than planned in Humanities and
    Social Science no examples of emergent change in
    Science. Entrepreneurial organisational culture
    much more evident in Professional subjects.
  • Experiencing a significant problem or challenge
    is virtually essential for planned change. Every
    example of emergent change was associated with no
    experience of a problem. Entrepreneurial culture
    was common where there was a problem a collegial
    culture where there was no problem.
  • Cultures either collegial or (collegial
    entrepreneurial). Very little bureaucracy or
    corporatism
  • Conceptions of leadership of teaching much more
    sophisticated than reported in previous studies
    (85 focus on student experience and discussion
    compared with lt10).

18
Conceptions of leadership of teaching
  • A A focus on the bureaucratic structure and
    organisation of the department, imposed by the
    head
  • B A focus on the role, responsibility and
    practice of the head, who imposes a model of good
    practice in teaching upon the teachers in the
    department
  • C A focus of the nature and content of subjects
    and disciplines, which is discussed with the
    teachers in the department
  • D A focus on the roles, responsibilities and
    practices of the teachers in the department,
    which are discussed and/or negotiated with the
    teachers
  • E A focus on teaching that emphasises students
    experience of studying, which is discussed and/or
    negotiated with teachers
  • F A focus on teaching emphasising the students
    experience of studying in a continually changing
    and developing curriculum. How to change and
    improve is the subject of systematic discussion
    and consultation and the head systematically
    establishes means to enable teachers to develop

19
Leadership of teaching?
  • Leadership of innovation and change in the
    department and its degree programmes, from state
    A to state B
  • Leadership of individual teachers and their
    teaching on individual courses (and then support
    of emergent change where this is successful)
  • Maintenance of a (functioning) collegial culture,
    with emphasis on quality rather than on change

20
Case studies
  • Read one of case studies A, B, C or D
  • Discuss in groups of three or four where the
    others have read different cases
  • What does leadership of teaching consist of in
    these departments?
  • What relevance do these cases have for leadership
    of teaching in your context?
  • 45 minutes silent reading followed by small group
    discussion
  • ..followed by open discussion in the whole group
    no reporting by sub-groups

21
Task
  • In groups of 3 or 4, discuss the characteristics
    of your own leadership and the extent to which
    the elements of successful leadership of teaching
    are evident in your own department.
  • and what changes you might be interested in
    bringing about to lead teaching differently
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