Attributes of an Effective Community College President

Community colleges face challenges with the high rate of retirement of community college presidents and the need to replace them with qualified leaders. Although leadership research has identified a number of desirable attributes of community college presidents, there is little research on the attri...

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Main Author: Person, Ophelia Clark
Language:English
Published: ScholarWorks 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/532
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spelling ndltd-waldenu.edu-oai-scholarworks.waldenu.edu-dissertations-15312019-10-30T01:20:05Z Attributes of an Effective Community College President Person, Ophelia Clark Community colleges face challenges with the high rate of retirement of community college presidents and the need to replace them with qualified leaders. Although leadership research has identified a number of desirable attributes of community college presidents, there is little research on the attributes sought by both faculty leaders and board members in an effective community college presidential applicant. This exploratory qualitative study sought to fill that gap. Its additional purpose was to examine how these two groups make a decision when differences occur. Attribute theory served as the conceptual framework that guided the study. Seven faculty leaders and 3 board members responded to questionnaires and participated in interviews on the attributes they deemed most important. Data were analyzed by using open and axial coding. Findings revealed that faculty and board members agreed on these key attributes of a community college president: communication skills, decision-making skills, honesty, problem solving skills, and vision. However, faculty discussed them from the perspective of what happens inside the institution, while board members discussed them from the perspective of what happens outside the institution. Applicants and committee members need to be aware of the importance of serving internal and external constituents. Both faculty and board members indicated using a democratic, collegial method to come to agreement when differences occurred. Social change implications include enhanced satisfaction and retention of community college presidents and thus better stability and performance of their institutions. 2015-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/532 Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies English ScholarWorks Community College President Community College Leadership Education
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Community College President
Community College Leadership
Education
spellingShingle Community College President
Community College Leadership
Education
Person, Ophelia Clark
Attributes of an Effective Community College President
description Community colleges face challenges with the high rate of retirement of community college presidents and the need to replace them with qualified leaders. Although leadership research has identified a number of desirable attributes of community college presidents, there is little research on the attributes sought by both faculty leaders and board members in an effective community college presidential applicant. This exploratory qualitative study sought to fill that gap. Its additional purpose was to examine how these two groups make a decision when differences occur. Attribute theory served as the conceptual framework that guided the study. Seven faculty leaders and 3 board members responded to questionnaires and participated in interviews on the attributes they deemed most important. Data were analyzed by using open and axial coding. Findings revealed that faculty and board members agreed on these key attributes of a community college president: communication skills, decision-making skills, honesty, problem solving skills, and vision. However, faculty discussed them from the perspective of what happens inside the institution, while board members discussed them from the perspective of what happens outside the institution. Applicants and committee members need to be aware of the importance of serving internal and external constituents. Both faculty and board members indicated using a democratic, collegial method to come to agreement when differences occurred. Social change implications include enhanced satisfaction and retention of community college presidents and thus better stability and performance of their institutions.
author Person, Ophelia Clark
author_facet Person, Ophelia Clark
author_sort Person, Ophelia Clark
title Attributes of an Effective Community College President
title_short Attributes of an Effective Community College President
title_full Attributes of an Effective Community College President
title_fullStr Attributes of an Effective Community College President
title_full_unstemmed Attributes of an Effective Community College President
title_sort attributes of an effective community college president
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2015
url https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/532
work_keys_str_mv AT personopheliaclark attributesofaneffectivecommunitycollegepresident
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