ISBN-13: 9781620369395 / Angielski / Miękka / 2020 / 228 str.
ISBN-13: 9781620369395 / Angielski / Miękka / 2020 / 228 str.
This book provides guidance on how to create committees that are conducive to fair, equitable, and engaging participative decision-making experiences to yield the best results and to promote enthusiasm for participation in committees, whether as chairs or committee members.
From the Foreword:
"As a former dean and department chair, now professor, I highly recommend Understanding University Committees to my colleagues. After 45 years in higher education (35 years in academic administration), I assumed I effectively practiced the craft of meetings and committee work. Now I realize this is not the case!
Reading David Farris’s book gave me new insights and platforms for practice. It is the first book to examine committees as a unique phenomenon. He researched and illuminated the morass of meetings professors live by, and enlightens us with new perspectives on what is frequently unnoticed and often left in the dark for us to discover on our own. Astutely, the author also wisely consulted the business literature on teams and group dynamics to embellish his search for effective conditions for committees.
Now, more than ever, universities need this fresh perspective, as the role of faculty and campus government has changed dramatically over time."
Walt Gmelch, Dean Emeritus and Professor of Leadership Studies
University of San Francisco
"Farris paints an apt picture of campus committees through their more ideal state based on carefully executed roles, clear expectations, well-crafted planning, able leadership and organizational support to their more dysfunctional state based on politics, power, incivility, deviant and discriminatory behaviors. At their best, they provide sound governance, institutional social learning, and an incubator for future leaders. And like many social processes, they are better able to meet this promise when carefully designed–as outlined through the research in this book- and when they encounter some 'luck'."
Adrianna Kezar, PhD, Wilbur Kieffer Endowed Professor and Dean's Professor of Leadership
USC, Director of the Pullias Center (pullias.usc.edu) and Director Delphi Project
“Understanding University Committees is a highly useful combination of practical examples and relevant theory on the functions of committees and how they can be most effective. The book is certainly timely, given the new challenges to university governance, and will reward administrators and sometimes-reluctant faculty alike.”
Peter N. Stearns, Provost Emeritus and University Professor
George Mason University
“Committees are central to the life and governance of a university. While we may at times dread them, they are quintessential in our culture of shared-governance, critical in the social dynamic of an institution, and effective mechanisms of leadership development and professional advancement. Having worked with David Farris for seven years at George Mason University, and having witnessed his many contributions through numerous committees, I can’t think of a better person to illustrate how committees can serve institutions and its members more effectively.”
Ángel Cabrera, President
Georgia Institute of Technology
"Dr. Farris has made a significant contribution to understanding the critical importance as well as the sometimes mysterious role of committees in shared governance in higher education leadership and management. As high level as committees of the governing board to the daily mundane operational and academic committees, these bodies are the communication neural synapses that allow for shared governance and accountability within the complex governance and administrative structures that are the foundation of colleges and universities today. I commend David for his research and understandable and relatable work and recommend this book to anyone who aspires to maximize their effectiveness in higher education leadership and management."
Lawrence D. Czarda, Ph.D.
Greensboro College
Foreword—Walt Gmelch Acknowledgements Introduction 1. What is a Committee? 2. The Ideal State 3. Committee Foundations 4. Committee Composition 5. Committee Planning and Management 6. Committee Leadership 7. Committee Member Characteristics 8. Committee Group Dynamics 9. Committee Life Cycle 10. Closing Thoughts Appendix. Virtual Committees References Author and Contributors Index
David Farris is the Executive Director for Safety and Emergency Management at George Mason University. In addition to developing the university’s emergency management program, David helped design and implement environmental protection, laboratory safety, occupational safety, and fire safety programs while working for the university’s department of Safety, Emergency, and Enterprise Risk Management. David has extensive experience collaborating with administrators and faculty on a variety of projects and has served on numerous committees to address topics to include but not limited to minors on campus, space utilization and schedule, international student and faculty travel, threat assessment, emergency operations, and governance for state and national associations. David completed his Ph.D. with a concentration in Higher Education Administration from George Mason University’s College of Humanities and Social Sciences in 2016 and is an affiliate faculty member with George Mason University’s Higher Education Program. His research interests include organizational citizenship behavior, university committees, and small group research. David also holds an MBA from George Mason University’s School of Business and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Biology from Texas A&M University. For more information about David’s research and work, please visit https://universityadmin.com.
Walter H. Gmelch is the Dean of the School of Education at the University of San Francisco. Formerly he served as Dean of the College of Education at Iowa State University and Interim Dean of the College of Education, Professor, and Chair of the Educational Leadership and Counseling Psychology Department at Washington State University. Currently, Walt Gmelch also serves as Director of the National Center for the Study of Academic Leadership.As educator, management consultant, university administrator, and former business executive, Gmelch has conducted research and written extensively on the topics of leadership, team development, conflict, and stress and time management. He has published numerous articles, books, and scholarly papers in national and international journals. Gmelch is author or co-author of eleven books. Today, he is one of the leading researchers in the study of academic leaders in higher education, serving as editor of two journals and on the editorial board of a half dozen other journals including The Department Chair, Innovative Higher Education, Academic Leadership, and the Center for Academic Leadership Newsletter. He has directed two national studies of 1,600 university department chairs in the United States, one study of 1,580 Australian department heads, another investigation of 1,000 community college chairs, and recently has completed an international study of 2,000 academic deans in Australia and America.Gmelch has received numerous honors including a Kellogg National Fellowship, the University Council for Educational Administration Distinguished Professor Award, the Faculty Excellence Award for Research, and the Education Press Award of America. In addition, he served in the Danforth Leadership Program; has been an advisor to the Salzburg Seminar on Higher Education; and has been an Australian Research Fellow.
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