Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out"

abstract: This study examined instructional and attitudinal changes influencing faculty members in a proprietary college after the parent company divorced itself from day-to-day leadership decisions during a "teach-out." A teach-out is the process of school closure, when the college stops...

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Other Authors: Gordon, Danielle (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.24977
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-249772018-06-22T03:05:00Z Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out" abstract: This study examined instructional and attitudinal changes influencing faculty members in a proprietary college after the parent company divorced itself from day-to-day leadership decisions during a "teach-out." A teach-out is the process of school closure, when the college stops enrolling new students, but teaches out currently enrolled students. It explores the strongest influences on faculty members during the teach-out process; how faculty members negotiate their work and how the changes appeared to impact students. Study findings revealed that the strongest influences were fellow faculty members. Several rose as leaders and essentially became educator activists starting a movement focused on what they believed to be an essential component of education and what had been missing previously, namely, creativity. They were supported in this endeavor by local leadership who served as "uplinks" and silently gave power to the movement. Students and the organization became beneficiaries of the renewed engagement of their instructors, which led to increased retention and placement rates. This study sought to understand the marked shift in the organizational culture and climate that governed faculty work life through the framework of organizational discourse as well as from a social justice context of freedom from oppression. Through the use of phenomenology and qualitative methods, including autoethnography, this study found that the structure of the teach-out effectively created a space for transformational leaders to emerge and become educator activists. This initial study provides a promising model for faculty engagement that appears to have positive outcomes for individual faculty members, students and the organization. Dissertation/Thesis Gordon, Danielle (Author) Swadener, Beth B (Advisor) Gee, James P (Committee member) Sandlin, Jennifer (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Higher education administration activism for-profit higher education leadership teach-out eng 85 pages Ph.D. Justice Studies 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.24977 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Higher education administration
activism
for-profit
higher education
leadership
teach-out
spellingShingle Higher education administration
activism
for-profit
higher education
leadership
teach-out
Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out"
description abstract: This study examined instructional and attitudinal changes influencing faculty members in a proprietary college after the parent company divorced itself from day-to-day leadership decisions during a "teach-out." A teach-out is the process of school closure, when the college stops enrolling new students, but teaches out currently enrolled students. It explores the strongest influences on faculty members during the teach-out process; how faculty members negotiate their work and how the changes appeared to impact students. Study findings revealed that the strongest influences were fellow faculty members. Several rose as leaders and essentially became educator activists starting a movement focused on what they believed to be an essential component of education and what had been missing previously, namely, creativity. They were supported in this endeavor by local leadership who served as "uplinks" and silently gave power to the movement. Students and the organization became beneficiaries of the renewed engagement of their instructors, which led to increased retention and placement rates. This study sought to understand the marked shift in the organizational culture and climate that governed faculty work life through the framework of organizational discourse as well as from a social justice context of freedom from oppression. Through the use of phenomenology and qualitative methods, including autoethnography, this study found that the structure of the teach-out effectively created a space for transformational leaders to emerge and become educator activists. This initial study provides a promising model for faculty engagement that appears to have positive outcomes for individual faculty members, students and the organization. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Justice Studies 2014
author2 Gordon, Danielle (Author)
author_facet Gordon, Danielle (Author)
title Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out"
title_short Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out"
title_full Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out"
title_fullStr Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out"
title_full_unstemmed Creative Disruption: The Emergence of Transformational Leaders and Educator Activists During a "Teach-out"
title_sort creative disruption: the emergence of transformational leaders and educator activists during a "teach-out"
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.24977
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