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Administrative and Academic Careers

Administrative and Academic Careers. ATEM State Conference 7 May 2004 Maddy McMaster University of Melbourne. Careers. A Career is “… the sequence of individually perceived work-related experiences and attitudes that occur over the span of a person’s work life.”

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Administrative and Academic Careers

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  1. Administrative and Academic Careers ATEM State Conference 7 May 2004 Maddy McMaster University of Melbourne

  2. Careers A Career is “… the sequence of individually perceived work-related experiences and attitudes that occur over the span of a person’s work life.” D.T. Hall (1987) Career Development in Organizations SF: Jossey-Bass p 1

  3. Why Does it Matter? • University as a ‘diarchy’: parallel hierarchies • Different assumptions about work in academic and administrative moieties • These also mean different assumptions about careers and career paths

  4. Academic & Administrative Career Differences • Administrative roles are differentiated vertically: classic hierarchical structure • Academic work is differentiated horizontally: by disciplinary specialisation rather than type of task

  5. Different Drivers • Administrative work focuses on collective outcomes and interdependence of roles • Academic work focuses on individual outcomes and ‘loosely knit social frameworks’

  6. Sources of Authority • For administrative staff, relates to work role • For academic staff, relates to intellectual achievement and academic credibility

  7. Academic Promotion • Judged by peers on scholarly success and experience • Promotion recognises that the staff member is working at a higher level

  8. Academic Promotion • Stay in same department with few differences in allocated responsibilities • Allegiance to discipline stronger than allegiance to a particular university • Consistency in criteria between universities

  9. Administrative Promotion • Individuals move from one position to another • Classification is based on work value • Positions are classified, not individuals

  10. Administrative Promotion • Appointment to higher level position on potential to perform in the future • Career may be in one university, but rarely same department

  11. Deans and Faculty Managers • Study of partnerships between academic and administrative managers • Deans and faculty managers in seven universities in three states • Different pathways to a senior management role

  12. Career Paths of Deans • All had a substantial academic career: lecturer-senior lecturer-associate professor and - for most - professor • All but one had either a minimum of two years experience as head of department OR academic board/senate leadership role

  13. Career Paths of Deans • Many had associate dean experience • One had started in a public service analyst role; one had been a CSIRO research scientist; two had substantial business experience • All had been promoted within the single faculty (except where there had been a restructure)

  14. Learning to be a Dean “I was head of department and associate dean while the previous dean was in office. We worked so closely together that it was an easy transition to dean. I had worked with him for five years repairing relationships in the faculty, infiltrating committees and learning to promote and defend the discipline … I had the academic credibility, and I just did what I had seen him doing” Dean, Science/Technology, Technological University

  15. Orientation of Deans • Academic leaders with administrative responsibilities • Senior administrators

  16. Future Roles for Deans • Deputy Vice-Chancellor • Return to teaching and research role (only if professors) • Retire • One “might go into business with my husband”

  17. Career Paths of Faculty Managers • Average of three positions in three different departments before current role • Typical shifts between roles and departments • May have moved in and out of higher education and between universities in the same city

  18. Examples of Career Paths • Student admin casual job - continuing position - PA to senior academic -postgraduate co-ordinator in an academic department - department manager - faculty manager • Accounts payable officer - HR officer - finance & resources role in a faculty - faculty manager

  19. Three Groups of Administrative Staff • Niche Finders Long term, enter by chance, enjoy environment • Subject Specialists Highly qualified, limited opportunities outside higher education • New Professionals Tertiary qualified, ambitious, may move

  20. Learning to be a Faculty Manager “I think every (faculty manager) has to have both an area of expertise - academic administration in my case - plus a breadth of knowledge about how universities work. I’ve worked in … eight different areas, in faculties and in central, and I’ve taught. I’ve done quite a lot of professional development and I had a wonderful person who was my mentor in central admin a few years back.”

  21. Learning to be a Faculty Manager “So I know a lot about how universities work, all the different strands, both administrative and academic. I think that’s why we have an easier time than deans - because it’s what we’ve grown up doing and because we can specialise in areas that interest us.” Faculty Manager, Science/Technology, Go8 University

  22. Future Roles for Faculty Managers “There’s nowhere to go within the university after faculty manager. Some faculty managers never move from the job once they get there.” Faculty Manager, Business, New University

  23. Ideas about Career Development • Structural Theories: Match individual traits with tasks • Socioeconomic Theory: Path of least resistance Culture, family background, social & economic conditions beyond an individual’s control

  24. Ideas about Career Development • Developmental Theories: Vocational self-concept • Social Learning Theory: Career decisions based on what we have learned and imitating behaviour of others

  25. Ideas about Career Development • Decision-Making Theories: Critical decision-making points in our lives • Cognitive Theories: Cognitive structures determine how individuals process information Self-efficacy based on past performance

  26. Multiple Intelligences • Howard Gardner (1983/1993) Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences • IQ useful but not adequate to explain intelligence • Eight intelligences: we use all to a varying degree

  27. Verbal/Linguistic Intelligence • Ability to use words and language • Skills include: listening, speaking, teaching, using humour, convincing someone of their point of view • Career interests: Writer, teacher, lawyer, historian

  28. Logical/Mathematical Intelligence • Ability to use reason, logic, numbers • Skills include: problem solving, categorising information, handling long chains of reason, questioning and wondering, performing complex mathematical calculations • Career interests: Scientist, engineer, researcher, accountant, mathematician, doctor

  29. Visual/Spatial Intelligence • Ability to perceive the world visually, creating accurate mental pictures • Skills: reading, writing, sense of direction, creating visual metaphors and analogies, designing and interpreting • Career interests: Inventor, architect, artist, pilot

  30. Bodily/Kinesthetic Intelligence • Ability to control body movements and handle objects skilfully • Skills: Keyboarding, dance, sports, physical co-ordination, acting, crafts • Career interests: Data entry, artisans, physical education teachers, actors

  31. Musical/Rhythmic Intelligence • Ability to produce and appreciate music • Skills: Singing, recognising tonal patterns, composing music • Career interests: Musician, composer, music therapist

  32. Interpersonal Intelligence • Ability to relate to and understand others • Seeing things from other perspectives, co-operating with groups, sensing people’s motivation, building trust, conflict resolution, communicating • Career interests: Counsellor, marketing, business, student services

  33. Intrapersonal Intelligence • Ability to self-reflect and be aware of one’s inner state of being • Skills: Recognising own strengths and weaknesses, reflecting and analysing themselves, reasoning with themselves • Career Interests: Researcher, consultant, philosopher

  34. Naturalist/Environmental Intelligence • Ability to understand, classify and explain nature • Skills: Understanding and explaining natural phenomena and the natural environment • Career interests: Chef, botanist, gardener, anthropologist

  35. MIDAS Questionnaire • http://www.jobsetc.ca/toolbox/quizzes/mi_quiz.do;jsessionid=A7E09F8900668F990A412477D5DE2D2A.jvm6?lang=e

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