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Community College Leadership Competencies: How do Rural Leaders Measure Up? Pamela L. Eddy, Ph.D., CMU Eron Drake, Davenport University
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The Rural Context 60% of Community Colleges are rural 72% located in North Central and Southern accrediting regions Small (less 2500 students) 22% Medium (2500-5000 students) 54% Large (over 5000 students) 24% Residential Living 21% of rural colleges have resident halls Distance Education 52% Internet 24% Broadband
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Students 34% all CC students attend rural colleges 49% attend large rural 44% attend medium rural 7% attend small rural Demographics 74% White (54% suburban/45% urban) 41% Full-time (32% suburban/31% urban)
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Faculty Recruiting faculty Shortages in specialized fields Lack of culture Difficulty in recruiting diverse faculty Retaining faculty Early and mid-career turnover Familiarity with rural areas Faculty Development Led by individuals/committees Focus on teaching Support Institutional Missions
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Leaders Pending retirements (45% of all CC presidents are 61 or older) Truth in Advertising Grow Your Own Programs MidSouth Partnership for Rural Community Colleges Focus on real problems Leadership Development
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AACC Competencies for Community College Leaders Organizational Strategy Resource Management Communication Collaboration Community College Advocacy Professionalism
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Research Questions 1.How do current rural community college leaders enact the competencies outlined by the AACC? 2.Does leading a rural college make a difference as to what competencies are most critical?
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Methods Phenomenology—understanding leading in a rural locale One Mid-Western state President/Vice President Academics 21 Interviews—13 community colleges 10 presidents 11 vice-presidents
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Findings Key competencies Collaboration Resource Management Professionalism EMERGING THEMES Leader of the Pack Something out of Nothing Going to the Fair
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Leader of the Pack Called upon for community convener Player in partnerships/economic development Assumed roles of advocacy and good communication lines
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Something out of Nothing Resource constraints more pronounced Key ties to economic development Community College viewed as a key asset
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Going to the Fair Insider versus outsider status Fishbowl status Representing the college at all times
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Discussion Generic Nature of AACC Competencies Implications of context Rating of importance Rural Roots Leader Schema Communication patterns Impact Tight coupling See impacts quicker Deep roots
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Implications Rural college leaders are the college Hiring decisions Training Role of the rural colleges as a “stepping-stone” for larger presidencies Development of shared meaning Defining AACC Competencies Framing change
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Conclusion Commitment to partnerships heightened Need for leadership development Frontier mentality Multiple meaning interpretations of AACC Context driven—changes of outfits
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Thank you
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