|
|
Liberal Education, Winter 2003
The Women's Leadership Program: A Case Study
Cynthia Berryman-Fink, Brenda J. LeMaster,
and Kristi A. Nelson |
The glass ceiling is firmly intact in academe at the start
of the twenty-first century. Because the academy perceives
itself as an institution that emphasizes objectivity, fairness,
and merit as the basis for evaluation, discrimination may
be particularly hard to recognize in academic institutions.
The many facets of the academic culture make it difficult
to address gender equity in academic leadership. Decentralized
decision-making, with academic hiring, promotion, tenure,
and workload decisions occurring at the department level,
further impede the ability of university administrators to
affect equity issues. Finally, current times of increasing
financial constraint can make gender equity seem like an unaffordable
luxury. Kearney (2000), sums up the current state of gender
equity in the academy:
Universities have the dubious privilege of likely remaining
the most male-dominated establishments in the world in relation
to career advancement. This lack of concordance between
universities and other major social institutions is a serious
matter for reflection and redress.
Data
An examination of data on women's status as academic administrators
coupled with an understanding of the typical academic culture
shows the enormous challenge in creating gender equity in
college and university leadership. In academe women's presence
is scarce at decanal levels and higher. Women hold 27 percent
of all deanships, with their leadership of professional colleges
being especially unlikely. Only 8 percent of all law school
deanships and 3 percent of medical school deanships are held
by women (Glazer-Raymo 1999).
Women are 15 percent of chief academic officers in the academy,
but 70 percent of these positions held by women are in colleges
with fewer than 1,000 students. Women chief academic officers
are rarely found in research and doctoral universities (Glazer-Raymo
1999). Women comprise 19.3 percent of all presidents of colleges
and universities in this country, yet 70 percent of these
women presidents head schools with 3,000 or fewer students,
religious or women's colleges, or two-year institutions. Only
2 percent of all women presidents head major research universities
(Wenniger and Conroy 2001).
Not only are women concentrated at lower administrative
levels in colleges and universities, but they are disproportionately
represented at the lower academic ranks as well. Women hold
18.7 percent of full professorships and 55.6 percent of lecturer
positions in this country (Firestone 1999). The situation
is even more bleak for minority women who occupy less than
5 percent of all faculty positions and 7 percent of all administrative
positions (Rai & Critzer 2000).
Additional gender disparity exists in the area of university
governance. Women spend more time in service to their universities
than men, but they still form a minority voice on important
decision-making committees and are less likely than their
male counterparts to chair decision-making or policy-formulating
committees (Morley 1999; Twale and Shannon 1996).
Given these data, it is not surprising to find lower levels
of satisfaction among female than male academics. Eighty-four
percent of senior level male faculty compared to 57 percent
of senior faculty women report perceptions of fair treatment
on campus (Altbach and Finkelstein 1997). As a consequence
of women's underrepresentation in senior academic and administrative
positions, the Carnegie Foundation has highlighted the lack
of opportunities for women to change educational policy (Morley
1999). Since only senior-level administrators make and change
policy, the absence of women at these levels makes equity
in policy making a rare consideration.
The Women's Leadership Program: A Case Study
The University of Cincinnati, a public, Research I, multicampus
university has embarked on the Women's Leadership Program
(WLP), a four-year initiative that attempts to provide redress
for the limitations of the glass ceiling on our campus. This
case study presents the origins, purpose, structure, activities,
budget, outcomes, challenges, and future directions of the
Women's Leadership Project at the University of Cincinnati.
Program Origin. The idea for the WLP developed
from an on-campus conference session that explored the reasons
for and impact of the relatively few women in central administration
at our university. In 1999, women comprised just 18.7 percent
of the deanships and 0 percent of the vice-presidents and
provosts at the University of Cincinnati. Indeed, when associate
deans, associate vice-presidents, and vice-provosts were counted,
women still comprised just 23 percent of all such administrative
positions. A group of twelve women became a self-appointed
steering committee to try to improve these statistics.
Program Purpose. The primary objective of the WLP
was to increase the number of high-level women administrators
at the University of Cincinnati. In order to do this, we developed
a program that would provide key leadership experience coupled
with structured learning in higher education administration
to a small number of the most highly placed academic and administrative
women on our campus. By providing women with the opportunity
to practice leadership skills in temporary administrative
assignments while receiving learning and networking support,
we posited that a larger pool of qualified, experienced women
leaders would be available to assume administrative positions
on an interim or permanent basis as well as to staff key decision-making
and governance committees on campus. By providing a forum
for women to demonstrate their leadership competence, this
program made the issue of gender equity in leadership visible
and subject to discourse at the highest levels of the institution.
Program Structure. The WLP Steering Committee consisted
of twelve women who were formal leaders or informal opinion
leaders from across the campus. The group included two deans,
two vice-provosts, an associate vice-president, a former vice-provost,
a former director of the university honors program, a retired
controller, the chair of the women's faculty association,
the chair of the university's commission on the status of
women, and other visible and vocal women on campus. We solicited
project endorsement from the major women's organizations on
campus, including the Association of Women Faculty, the Association
of Women Administrators, and the Commission on the Status
of UC Women. By initially including virtually all the key
women and organizations on campus, this ad-hoc, grass-roots
group was able to present a unified proposal to top-level
administrators for their support and funding.
Program Activities. The WLP included two basic types
of activities: leadership workshops and administrative internships.
Initially, we developed a fourteen-hour series of workshops
to acquaint participants with issues of higher education in
general, to provide information on our specific institutional
environment, and to enhance women's professional development
and career planning skills.
Workshops covered such topics as decision making, leadership
styles, university finance and budgeting, university mission,
enrollment management, entrepreneurship, assessment, technology,
and career development. Women who had completed the workshop
series were then eligible to apply for temporary administrative
internships on campus so they could try out an administrative
role without jeopardizing their current university position.
Their home departments received funding to replace them during
the period of the internship.
Program Budget. For start-up monies,
the Steering Committee approached two vice presidents and
two provosts and received a total of $34,000 to fund a one-year
pilot project. By approaching four different offices for funding,
the contribution from any one office could be minimal and
we could leverage the first contribution to lobby for subsequent
contributions.
Program Outcomes. During the pilot year, fifty-seven
women applied to participate and twenty-four were admitted.
To be eligible, academic women must have held a rank of associate
professor with tenure, must have had three years experience
at UC, and some prior administrative experience. Administrative
women must have held the minimum title of director, a mid-level
grade or higher, a master's degree, and three years experience
at the university. These criteria were purposely stringent
so that we could attract women with the greatest potential
for obtaining central administrative positions. In the first
year, nine women completed internships in such administrative
areas as the provost offices, research and advanced studies,
human resources, student services, and college offices. The
interns themselves, often with the support of steering committee
members, negotiated the specific internship objectives and
assignments with the administrator in charge of the office
in which they wished to intern.
The pilot project received substantial visibility because
some forty key administrators, the majority of whom were male,
conducted the workshops, and we made sure that the university
newspaper gave regular coverage to the project. Indeed, the
president of the university, who had not been scheduled as
a workshop presenter, indicated that he would like to deliver
the final workshop of the series.
The steering committee used various forms of assessment
to measure pilot project outcomes. All workshop participants
completed a rating instrument. This form of evaluation revealed
that 100 percent of respondents were either very satisfied
or satisfied with the workshop series. We completed face-to-face
interviews with interns who reported strong satisfaction with
the program. We received such comments as:
- "This was an incredible opportunity. I hope that many
more UC women are able to experience the internship."
- "I had the opportunity to observe first hand the priorities
of the institution."
- "The internship experience was a life-changing event for
me."
Additionally, we solicited a written, open-ended evaluation
of the program from the internship supervisors. From the
mentors, we received such comments as:
- "I would certainly take on another intern. It was of value
to the college and to the individual."
- "The university needs more women administrators who can
assume line responsibility positions, and involvement in
such a program can provide just that."
The promotion of program participants into administrative
roles was yet another indicator of program success. In the
first year alone, five graduates (20.8 percent) of the WLP
received promotions. Three assumed associate deanships (regular
or interim), one became an associate vice-president, and one
left the university to become a corporate director of marketing.
Because of the success of the pilot program, the president
provided an additional three-year budget totaling $156,000.
The workshop series has expanded to thirty hours with networking
dinners included after each workshop. At the end of the project
period, some eighty-five women will have graduated from the
WLP. Several spin-off projects have evolved with women other
than Steering Committee members taking the leadership for
related initiatives. We now have a WLP alumni group that brings
corporate, educational, and non-profit women leaders to campus
as speakers. We have an informal networking group of women
with young children regularly discussing work-life balance
issues. Each year, a celebratory dinner is held, with a distinguished
external speaker for all WLP graduates, intern supervisors,
and top-level administrators. The provost office has established
a Women's Initiatives Network that provides coordination and
advocacy for all campus women's projects involving students,
faculty, staff, and alumni. Currently, 29.4 percent of the
deanships at the University of Cincinnati are held by women
and two more women have assumed vice provost roles since the
WLP's inception.
Keys to program success
There are many factors that account for our modest success
in increasing the number of women administrators at our university.
First, we garnered campus-wide support from key women and
top-level men on campus. Frankly, we made it nearly impossible
for anyone to oppose the project. By strategically choosing
to function as an ad-hoc group rather than to have a direct
reporting role in the university structure, we retained freedom,
flexibility, and an ability to move quickly. We designed a
credible, stringent program to develop women as leaders and
to attract the attention of the campus at large. Our program
is cost-effective in that all workshop presenters are drawn
from internal sources, with no associated speaking fees or
travel costs.
Having women with and without academic appointments participate
together has created a new dialogue and a cross-fertilization
of ideas. There have been intangible educational benefits
of having some forty administrators as workshop leaders who
publicly analyze their leadership roles and administrative
relationships. Women's issues and women's leadership have
gained recognition and momentum on campus. While the glass
ceiling has not been dismantled at the University of Cincinnati,
the culture of the university is moving in the direction of
greater gender equity.
Challenges and future directions
While the Women's Leadership Program has been relatively
successful in meeting its original goals, the project is not
without its challenges. Now that the program is in its third
year, we are exploring a permanent home for it within the
university. Independence was useful for project start-up,
but credibility, continuity, and clerical support needed to
maintain the project would be enhanced by moving it into the
university structure. Another unexpected challenge has been
the dissatisfaction from many mid-level administrative women,
who have few development opportunities in the university,
but who do not quality for this program. They have criticized
the WLP for its elitism or exclusivity, and the university
has not developed a comparable leadership development program
for these women.
In order to maintain program viability and energy, the Steering
Committee is planning to move to a regional program in conjunction
with other public and private colleges and universities in
Southwest Ohio. We will plan, with other interested institutions,
revised workshops that address higher education issues more
generally. We will need to rotate workshop locations across
the local geographic area and enlist speakers from all participating
institutions. Questions of revised eligibility criteria, internship
placements, program assessment, and regional funding must
be addressed.
Given the paucity of women in central university administration
nationwide as well as the gender-related climate and satisfaction
issues affecting academe generally, regional cooperation for
gender equity makes sense. With the financial constraints
faced by institutions of all types, the sharing of resources
and expertise for improved university leadership offers a
collaborative model of success.
Cynthia Berryman-Fink is a professor of
communications; Brenda J. LeMaster is professor of professional
practice, and Kristi A. Nelson is vice provost for academic
planning at the University of Cincinnati
Works Cited
Altbach, P. G. and M. J. Finkelstein, 1997. The academic
profession: The professoriate in crisis. New York: Garland
Publishing Company.
Glazer-Raymo, J.1999. Shattering the myths: Women in
academe. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Firestone, J. M. 1999. Women, men, and job satisfaction
in academia: Perceptions of a glass-ceiling among faculty.
In M. McCoy and J. DiGeorgio-Lutz, eds. The woman-centered
university. New York: University Press of America.
Kearney, M. 2000. Women, power and the academy: From
rhetoric to reality. New York: Berghahn Books.
Morley, L. 1999. Organizing feminisms: The micropolitics
of the academy. New York:St. Martin's Press.
Rai, K. B. and J. W. Critzer. 2000. Affirmative action
and the university. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska
Press.
Twale, D. J. and D. M. Shannon,. 1996. Professional service
involvement of leadership faculty: An assessment of gender,
role and satisfaction. Sex Roles, 34, 117-126.
Wenniger, M. D. and M. H.Conroy. 2001. Gender equity
or bust. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass Publishers.
|
 |
|