Change Leadership in the Centre of Higher Education
Baff Kuka
First Aid Safety Training, Australia
Keywords: Change leadership, The center of higher education, Internet-based learning.
Abstract: The paper discusses about the change of Centers of Higher Education (COHE) toward the issues of internet-
based learning. The problem evokes when education in Australia face the change in technology when many
students come to Australia from around the world. COHE has difficulties in identifying who their consumers
which may effect on their strategy in developing the business. This paper explores some important
consideration toward the change in COHE.
1 INTRODUCTION
The change affects us all ranging from our personal
life choices. Like all businesses, Centres of Higher
Education (COHE) are not immune to such forces.
Here, I will bring to your attention examples of the
forces that can impact on change within the higher
education sector.
During my tenure as a nonexecutive director on
the board of studies of the Graduate College of
Management of the Southern Cross University, I was
on two panels that revamped the Masters in Business
Administration Degree (M.B.A) program and the
College of Industry and Professional Education
(C.I.P.E.).
We identified that the main recipient (Customer)
of our courses was the industry that the student was
studying to seek employment within.
COHE have the same pressures that all businesses
have. The main issue is installing a culture that not
only accepts change but one that also encourages
change. Ensuring that their staff is all agents of
change is singular that the main threat to the COH’s
business viability in the now global education
environment.
Internet-based learning, an ever-shrinking world,
cross-border economic alliances such as Free Trade
Agreements all contribute to the transportability of
receiving a quality education all contribute to these
challenges.
International students contribute to education
being Australia’s second highest export industry. It is
both a highly competitive and a lucrative industry.
In Australia, shrinking government financial aid
and increasing on and off shore competition has
resulted in greater costs for COHE forcing them to
change and save on costs. The competition for
research grants is also an ever increasing burden on
management to increase their fluidity and acceptance
of change.
2 FACTORS AFFECTING CHANGE
The composition of the Board is of critical mass to all
businesses, including centers of COHE. McKenzie
(2007) Points to select directors include;
1. Integrity;
2. Standing within the academic community;
3. Educational background;
4. Research evidence abilities;
5. Gender balance;
6. Practical (life skills) skilling within the
academia and business community.
Industrial relations should be kept to a level that sees
remuneration that encourages (Kent, 2011):
1. Financial security by way of an attractive salary
and working conditions of all employees so that
skilled staff is attracted and retained from the
wider workforce. Centers of higher education still
have to compete for skilled staff who can pass on
their knowledge and skills to students.
2. Maintaining good industrial relations is an
investment in the organization stability; how it is
viewed within the relatively small academic
community. A stable organization will attract
Kuka, B.
Change Leadership in the Centre of Higher Education.
DOI: 10.5220/0008682802150217
In Improving Educational Quality Toward International Standard (ICED-QA 2018), pages 215-217
ISBN: 978-989-758-392-6
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
215
private funding more easily as opposed to an
unstable one;
3. Happy people are more productive;
4. Having a board member belonging to students and
staff makes sound business sense;
Industry standing is another critical mass for COHE;
1. A Centre Of Higher Education’s standing within
the academic and business communities will
attract quality students; philanthropists and
government monies.
2. Leading academics and research fellows will also
be attracted to an institution with higher standings.
Look at the way the ivy league and sandstone
universities attract their academic fame.
3. By having close links to leading businesses, the
centre of higher education will access leading
research as opposed to data that is out of date and
therefore worthless;
4. Close industry ties leads to increasing currency of
course material;
5. Current learning material leads to attracting better
academics resulting in better-educated students
and having those students being up taken into
quality employment prospects.
Like many businesses, COHE’s may have
difficulty in identifying who their Customers are.
Businesses will often make one fundamental flaw
they confuse their revenue stream with their end user
or Customer. Students may be the revenue stream
the industry they learn to join s the actual Customer.
Customers (industry) satisfaction is the key to the
student’s transition to employment, which in turn
raises student application, then raises profits and the
business expands.
Low industry satisfaction in graduates’
performance results in low student transition towards
employment thus stagnating the education center’s
attraction for new quality students and academics;
this is turn reflects on them having a lower name,
results and a low standing industry standing.
Staff satisfaction is closely aligned to industrial
relations they both deal with humans at work. Staff
satisfaction has many facets;
1. The way they are treated, with equity, fair
access to promotional courses, promotions and
who are free of harassment;
2. Staff are the most important assets that any
business has;
3. Staff should reflect industry currency having
networked with industry gatekeepers and
researchers.
Like all businesses, COHE requires significant
leadership to develop strategies to achieve a set of
objectives. Without the setting of strategies to achieve
long-term goals, any organization will find it difficult
to remain in business. Investment in technology is a
must-have strategic investment. All education
providers are investing technology for their offices in
their day to day activities, but also in their training
components.
A balance of on line, face to face, as well as
residential types of student interface, seems to be the
ideal format. Having all your course as an on line
component deletes from the student/academic
interface. Students who ask questions are not able to
read the lecturer's body language, interact with their
fellow students and generally get a feel for the
tutorial.
Clinically based courses require some significant
hands-on patient-based component. The change
process is a three-stage event;
Firstly, recognize the organization is currently frozen
in its ways, and that will require it to change;
1. Communicate the requirement for change by
selecting one of the four effectors to your
teams through consultation and change by
edict;
2. Set an agenda that identifies and signals the
need and the benefits of change;
3. Involve the organization in the change process
so that ownership is spread across the
organization;
Secondly, implement your changes the fluidity
section; Thirdly, re-freeze your organization with the
new changes have been made.
3 CONCLUSION
Implementation of a Change Leadership initiative can
be complicated and challenging but also a necessary
action. If the need for change is not recognised, sold,
signalled and implemented, then the organisation will
suffer the consequences and go by the way of the
organisations listed above. Succession planning is a
critical tool for a COHE. It should form part of its
long term change management policy and goals.
Mentoring of those identified as rising quickly is an
important factor. Succession planning allows the
organisation to plan and organise its target intake of
certain focus groups such youths, females,
geographically located and those in economic
distress.
ICED-QA 2018 - International Conference On Education Development And Quality Assurance
216
REFERENCES
Kent, T., Crotts, J.C., “Four Factors of Change”. 2011.
MCB UP Limited Published by MCB UP Ltd.
McKenzie, C. 2007. “Boards, Incentives, and Corporate
Social Responsibility: The Case For a Change of
Emphasis. Wiley Online Library.
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