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Published
July 26, 2013

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Transforming in an Age of Disruptive Change

A look at what the future looked like in 1995, and what happened in higher education as we moved through seventeen years to 2013? Then, a look ahead . . . Remember: Just because we are changing a great deal does not mean we are transforming.
Abstract: “A look at what the future looked like in 1995, and what happened in higher education as we moved through seventeen years to 2013? Then, a look ahead . . . Remember: Just because we are changing a great deal does not mean we are transforming.”

Another SCUP title, Transforming Higher Education—A Vision for Learning in the 21st Century, was once a higher education bestseller. In this monograph, co-author and SCUP Distinguished Service Award recipient Donald M. Norris and his team review what the Academy was doing and thinking in 1995, and what has happened since. They take stock of the present and look back at it from the perspective of 2020. Pragmatically, they suggest dual paths forward. Which will your institution take? Path A, reposition the core? Path B, leap into the future? Or perhaps, as the authors suggest, both?

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2013

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The Challenge to Deep Change

A Brief Cultural History of Higher Education

Given the extraordinary demands on higher education to adopt strategies that deliver better results with fewer resources and the common resistance of our institutions to strategic change, leaders and planners would do well to actively engage in processes of cultural change.

From Volume 41 Number 2 | January–March 2013

Abstract: Management author and professor Peter Drucker is often quoted as saying that “culture eats strategy for lunch.” Given the extraordinary demands on higher education to adopt strategies that deliver better results with fewer resources and the common resistance of our institutions to strategic change, leaders and planners would do well to actively engage in processes of cultural change. This requires three things: a genuine understanding of the origins of institutional culture as expressed in the “deep architecture” of our colleges and universities; a systematic approach to initiating “courageous conversations” throughout the institution, leveraged by evidence that creates both hope and despair; and a willingness to reengineer the deep architecture around a new set of design principles, displacing the old culture with a new, intentional, emerging culture built on new working theories.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2013

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Transforming in an Age of Disruptive Change

Part 1: Back to the Future, Zooming to the Present

From 1995 to 2013, it remains true that—'Just because we are changing a great deal does not mean that we are transforming.'

From Volume 41 Number 2 | January–March 2013

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2013

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Transforming in an Age of Disruptive Change

Part 2: Getting Started, Getting it Done

Get started reinventing strategies, business models, and emerging practices. Examine a two-track model for moving ahead, and think about planning from the future backwards.

From Volume 41 Number 2 | January–March 2013

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 2011

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Action Research to Support the Sustainability of Strategic Planning

Action research examines real-life events to understand and shape future organization action.

From Volume 39 Number 4 | July–September 2011

Abstract: University strategic planning is typically well structured with attention to both process and outcomes. However, plans are frequently not implemented in an equally process-driven manner. As a result, the product of planning efforts may not lead to the anticipated change or may even remain “on the shelf.” This article describes how Philadelphia University is using “action research” during strategic plan implementation in order to optimize campus commitment, facilitate organizational learning, and support the sustainability of change.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2011

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Taking the Long View

Ten Recommendations about Time, Money, Technology, and Learning

Read this before you spend that money or make that academic program change!

From Volume 39 Number 2 | January–March 2011

Abstract: Ten recommendations outline a strategy for departments to make gradual, visible, and rewarding improvements in the learning outcomes of their degree programs. Time is a crucial factor. Change occurs slowly in universities, so the strategy needs to be persistent and cumulative.Among the levers for improvement: familiar technology used by students and faculty to save time on core disciplinary tasks, curricular change, and group work; peer support among faculty; short, accessible increments of faculty development; extensive use of assessment and evaluation to help make glacially slow change visible and subject to conscious control; and careful development of coalitions inside and outside the academy.

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