The book explores how to build an approach to academic leadership based on your own personal values, convictions, and principles. Rather than trying to assert that only certain values (or even virtues) are essential for good leadership, the approach taken is to begin with who you really are, “your true self,” and then to build a leadership framework consistent with that identity that makes your institution or program stronger. We explore why hypocrisy is damaging to any form of leadership, but particularly so in higher education where values of scholarship and research are based on the confidence we have in others’ integrity. As a result, authenticity, even more than such commonly promoted “traits of leaders” as vision, courage, and compassion, becomes the core of effective leadership in the academy today. Through hypothetical case studies and thought experiments, the book challenges administrators to identify a small set of core values that truly define who they are as academic leaders and then to use those values as the basis for a philosophy of leadership that guides them through the turbulent changes occurring in higher education today.
JEFFREY L. BULLER is the director of Leadership and Professional Development at Florida Atlantic University and a senior partner in ATLAS Leadership Training. He holds a doctorate from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is the author of fifteen books on academic leadership and numerous articles, including nearly two hundred on higher education administration.
DedicationIntroductionPart I: Core ValuesChapter 1. Virtues, Values, and AuthenticityChapter 2. Identifying Your Core ValuesPart II: The CrucibleChapter 3. The Core of Your BeingChapter 4. Dilemmas, Quandaries, and PredicamentsPart III: The Paradox of AuthenticityChapter 5. What’s So Good about Being Bad?Chapter 6. Charting a Course Based on ValuesAbout the AuthorOther Books by Jeffrey L. BullerMore about ATLAS
This work provides a set of tools and resources for identifying and testing one’s authentic values and for applying them to solve ethical dilemmas in academia. With such characters as Dean Vader, Provost Monty Burns, and President Grit inhabiting Buller’s fictional academe, it is difficult not to find this work entertaining as well as useful.
Walter H. Gmelch, Jeffrey L. Buller, Walter H. (University of San Francisco) Gmelch, Jeffrey L. (Florida Atlantic University) Buller, Walter H Gmelch, Jeffrey L Buller