Chapter 11 – Innovator
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external demands or evidence based theory (Raelin, 1995) may be delayed or
abandoned in response to the needs of individual staff members. Consequently, the
program may stop to evolve and eventually ‘die’, because students and industry will see
it as irrelevant. Coakley and Randall (2006) note that this is not adequate given the
higher education sector's increasing need for transparency and accountability. To this
effect, they espouse the application of Heifetz’s model of adaptive leadership (Heifetz,
1994; Heifetz & Linsky, 2002), to promote and guide change in the increasingly complex
university environment.
Adaptive leadership change model
Heifetz’s adaptive leadership model requires all parties with an interest in a change
process to become part of the leadership experience. This would certainly be the case
in a program or course review process. By having all parties involved, everyone is
responsible for considering external and internal requirements for change and for
becoming part of the organisational change process.
Most Academic Coordinators have the ability to manage the administrative issues
associated with program delivery, such as enrolment procedures and board of examiner
processes. However, adaptive problems and issues are much harder to resolve,
because they can have a significant impact on a variety of individuals and processes.
Coakley and Randall (2006) describe Heifetz’s adaptive leadership model:
- Identify the challenge: Is it one that requires a technical or adaptive solution? For
example, if it is a technical issue such as an enrolment form problem, this can usually
be managed by the Academic Coordinator and the enrolment office. If it is an
adaptive issue such as moving to a new course credit structure and requiring
alterations in content and assessment across the program, then clearly more parties
are going to have to become involved in the process. - Unbundle issues: Key issues must be identified and communicated to the
stakeholders. In the case of the new credit structure, participants need to
understand why the change is needed, how it will affect course delivery, and how it
will impact on their teaching and assessment. Teachers who want to improve the
quality of their teaching must be aware of their students' situations, and be prepared
to change their teaching accordingly. Adopting such an approach to teaching in a
program requires more than focused short-term projects. - Framing the issues and focusing attention: Academic Coordinators must clearly
articulate the key issues and develop a process to address them that remains
focused on the needs of the primary stakeholders of the program. It is in this stage
where any training and skill development issues will be identified and strategies
developed to address them. For example, if moving to online delivery, there may be
training needs in how to use the technology. Program renewal is a futures-oriented
process of examining and renewing curriculum content and processes. - Secure ownership: Deep and long-term change will only occur if stakeholders take
ownership of the issue and develop solutions. Hence, Academic Coordinators need
to develop strategies (with the help of the HOS) that get staff, students, and possibly
industry people interested and involved in the change management initiative. - Maintain stakeholders’ conflict and manage stress: Improving students’
experiences of learning will require detailed reflective and interactive work by groups