The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators
In instances where many universities offer off-campus programs in a single locale, a supplier network exists. These supplier networks, or higher education centers (HECs) are beneficial to students and regions where the programs are delivered (Baus, 2007; Peterson, 2007). Few empirical studies have f...
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Virginia Tech
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-266512020-09-26T05:31:14Z The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators Flora, Bethany Hope Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Hirt, Joan B. Burge, Penny L. Dooley, John E. Niles, Jerome A. supplier network competition collaboration educational consortium higher education center higher education administration In instances where many universities offer off-campus programs in a single locale, a supplier network exists. These supplier networks, or higher education centers (HECs) are beneficial to students and regions where the programs are delivered (Baus, 2007; Peterson, 2007). Few empirical studies have focused on consortium educational environments, such as HECs and most studies of off-campus education have taken an outsider-looking-in approach. One window into the world of HECs is to examine the professional lives of administrators who work in the HEC environment. Professional life can be explored by eliciting data about work, relationships and rewards (Hirt, 2006; Hirt et al., 2006; Hirt et al., 2004).The purpose of this case study was to examine the professional lives of administrators who work at a HEC. Data collection included engaging the participants in four exercises where they created social artifacts. Diagrams, graphs, concept maps and drawings are complementary additions to the traditional interview and encourage contributions from interviewees that might not otherwise be obtained (Crilly, Blackwell, & Clarkson, 2006; Enger, 1998). Data from the social artifacts were used to customize the semi-structured interview protocol. Findings indicate that those who work at HECs define their work, in large part, by those who benefit from that work: students, communities, and member institutions. The organizational dynamics that drive the work of HEC administrators are competition, collaboration and balance. HEC professionals view their primary role as being the face of their institution or the Center in the local community. They describe their work as a culminating experience that is both rewarding and challenging. At the core of this work are the relationships that HEC professionals establish and sustain with others. These relationships are defined by resource coordination, advocacy, and appreciation. Findings suggest that institutions would benefit from engaging in greater reciprocity with HEC professionals to include expertise reciprocity, relationship reciprocity, and resource reciprocity. In general, professional life at HECs is rich, varied, challenging, but rewarding. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:08:59Z 2014-03-14T20:08:59Z 2008-03-24 2008-04-05 2009-04-30 2008-04-30 Dissertation etd-04052008-192447 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26651 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04052008-192447/ FloraFinalETD.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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supplier network competition collaboration educational consortium higher education center higher education administration Flora, Bethany Hope The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators |
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In instances where many universities offer off-campus programs in a single locale, a supplier network exists. These supplier networks, or higher education centers (HECs) are beneficial to students and regions where the programs are delivered (Baus, 2007; Peterson, 2007). Few empirical studies have focused on consortium educational environments, such as HECs and most studies of off-campus education have taken an outsider-looking-in approach.
One window into the world of HECs is to examine the professional lives of administrators who work in the HEC environment. Professional life can be explored by eliciting data about work, relationships and rewards (Hirt, 2006; Hirt et al., 2006; Hirt et al., 2004).The purpose of this case study was to examine the professional lives of administrators who work at a HEC.
Data collection included engaging the participants in four exercises where they created social artifacts. Diagrams, graphs, concept maps and drawings are complementary additions to the traditional interview and encourage contributions from interviewees that might not otherwise be obtained (Crilly, Blackwell, & Clarkson, 2006; Enger, 1998). Data from the social artifacts were used to customize the semi-structured interview protocol.
Findings indicate that those who work at HECs define their work, in large part, by those who benefit from that work: students, communities, and member institutions. The organizational dynamics that drive the work of HEC administrators are competition, collaboration and balance. HEC professionals view their primary role as being the face of their institution or the Center in the local community. They describe their work as a culminating experience that is both rewarding and challenging. At the core of this work are the relationships that HEC professionals establish and sustain with others. These relationships are defined by resource coordination, advocacy, and appreciation. Findings suggest that institutions would benefit from engaging in greater reciprocity with HEC professionals to include expertise reciprocity, relationship reciprocity, and resource reciprocity. In general, professional life at HECs is rich, varied, challenging, but rewarding. === Ph. D. |
author2 |
Educational Leadership and Policy Studies |
author_facet |
Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Flora, Bethany Hope |
author |
Flora, Bethany Hope |
author_sort |
Flora, Bethany Hope |
title |
The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators |
title_short |
The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators |
title_full |
The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators |
title_fullStr |
The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Professional Lives of Higher Education Center Administrators |
title_sort |
professional lives of higher education center administrators |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26651 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04052008-192447/ |
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AT florabethanyhope theprofessionallivesofhighereducationcenteradministrators AT florabethanyhope professionallivesofhighereducationcenteradministrators |
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