Academic administration

Academic administration is a branch of university or college employees responsible for the maintenance and supervision of the institution and separate from the faculty or academics, although some personnel may have joint responsibilities. Some type of separate administrative structure exists at almost all academic institutions, as fewer and fewer schools are governed by employees who are also involved in academic or scholarly work. Many senior administrators are academics who have advanced degrees and no longer teach or conduct research actively.

Key responsibilities

Key administrative responsibilities (and thus administrative units) in academic institutions include:

Administrative titles

The chief executive, the administrative and educational head of a university, depending on tradition and location, may be termed the university president, the provost, the chancellor (the United States), the vice-chancellor (many Commonwealth countries), principal (Scotland and Canada), or rector (Europe, Russia, Asia and the Middle East).

An administrative executive in charge of a university department or of some schools, may be termed a dean or some variation, such as dean emeritus. The chief executive of academic establishments other than universities, may be termed headmaster or head teacher (schools), director (used to reflect various positions ranging from the head of an institution to the head of a program), or principal, as used in primary education.

Academic administration by country

Academic administrations are structured in various ways at different institutions and in different countries.

Australia

Full-time tertiary education administrators emerged as a distinct role in Australia from the mid-1970s, as institutions sought to deal with their increasing size and complexity, along with a broadening of their aspirations.[1] As the professionalism of tertiary administrators has developed, there has been a corresponding push to recognise the uniqueness and validity of their role in the academic environment.[2][3]

As of 2004, general staff comprised over half the employees at Australian universities.[4] Around 65% of these are female.[5] There has recently been a shift in the preferred nomenclature for non-academic staff at Australian universities, from "general staff" to "professional staff".[4] It has been argued that the changing in role of the professional staff has been due to the changing work that they are performing, as professional staff assist students with technology.[6]

The overarching body for all staff working in administration and management in Australia is the Association for Tertiary Education Management.

United Kingdom

Administrative Structures

The structures for administration and management in higher education in the United Kingdom vary significantly between institutions. Any description of a general structure will therefore not apply to some or even many institutions, and therefore any general statement of structures may be misleading. Not all UK universities have the post of Registrar.

The Director of Finance may report to the Registrar or directly to the Vice-Chancellor, whilst other senior posts may or may not report to the Registrar. This next tier of senior positions might include Directors of Human Resources, Estates, and Corporate Affairs. The Academic Registrar is often included in this next tier. Their role is mostly to accomplish student-facing administrative processes such as admissions, student records, complaints, and graduation.

Professional Associations

The overarching body for all staff working in administration and management in the UK is the Association of University Administrators.

United States

Presidents and chancellors

In the United States, a college or university is typically supervised by a President or Chancellor who reports regularly to a Board of Trustees (made up of individuals from outside the institution) and who serves as Chief Executive Officer. Most large colleges and universities now use an administrative structure with a tier of vice presidents, among whom the Provost (or Vice President for Academic Affairs, or Academic Dean) serves as the chief academic officer.

Dean

Deans may supervise various and more specific aspects of the institution, or may be CEOs of entire campuses. They may report directly to the president or chancellor. The division of responsibility among deans varies widely among institutions; some are chiefly responsible for clusters of academic fields (such as the humanities or natural sciences) or whole academic units (such as a graduate school or college), while others are responsible for non-academic but campus-wide concerns such as minority affairs. In some cases a provost supervises the institution's entire academic staff, occupying a position generally superior to any dean. In other instances the Dean of a College may be the equivalent to a Provost or Vice Chancellor or Vice President for Academic Affairs. Below deans in the administrative hierarchy are heads of individual academic departments and of individual administrative departments from groundskeeping to libraries to registrars of records. These heads (commonly styled "chairs" or "directors") then supervise the faculty and staff of their individual departments.

References

  1. Conway, Maree. 'Defining administrators and new professionals.' PERSPECTIVES, VOLUME 4, NUMBER 1, 2000: pp. 4-5.
  2. GORNALL, L. (1988) `New professionals’: changes and occupational roles in higher education. perspectives, 3(2), pp. 44-49.
  3. Conway, Maree and Ian Dobson. 'Fear and Loathing in University Staffing: The Case of Australian Academic and General Staff.' Journal of Higher Education Management and Policy, Volume 15, No. 3,: pp. 123.133.
  4. 1 2 Szekeres, Judy (2011). "Professional staff carve out a new space". Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management 33 (6): 679–691. doi:10.1080/1360080X.2011.621193.
  5. Wallace, Michelle; Marchant, Teresa (2011). "Female administrative managers in Australian universities: not male and not academic". Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management 33 (6): 567–581. doi:10.1080/1360080X.2011.621184.
  6. Graham, C. (2013). "Changing technologies, changing identities: A case study of professional staff and their contributions to learning and teaching". Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education 17 (2): 62–70. doi:10.1080/13603108.2012.716376.

Further reading

External links

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