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Why Spend Time on This? May have only worked in one college and it is good to know the variations Can help you understand your own organization better.

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Presentation on theme: "Why Spend Time on This? May have only worked in one college and it is good to know the variations Can help you understand your own organization better."— Presentation transcript:

1 Finding Your Way Through the Maze: Navigating Internal Organizational Structures

2 Why Spend Time on This? May have only worked in one college and it is good to know the variations Can help you understand your own organization better Useful in considering future positions at other colleges

3 Typology Single college - one campus
Single college with outlying centers Single college with multiple campuses Macomb Community College Main Campus Hall Road Campus University Center

4 Typology Lone Star College Multi-college district
More than one college under a board of trustees College or district president/chancellor Campus presidents or chancellors Lone Star College Florida State College at Jacksonville

5 Typology A sub-unit of a four year institution
University of Arkansas – Fort Smith WI two-year transfer campuses Ohio state university branch campuses A statewide system—several colleges, a statewide board Ivy Tech Community College

6 The Good and the Bad Which type is closest to your setting?
What’s good about it? What’s not so good?

7 Internal Organizational Structure

8 Internal Organization
Most common structure: all units are grouped (think VPs) Instructional Student Services Fiscal/operations Human Resources/Personnel Institutional Effectiveness Foundation Workforce Education and Training?

9 Internal Organization
Provost Model Instruction Student Services Workforce Education and Training? Administrative Services Model Business Office – Fiscal Operations Foundation Human Resources

10 Never Forget….. It is a political organization Collaboration but…..
Budget, space, faculty positions, staffing are all “fighting words” Collaboration but…..

11 Important Players Senior leadership Operational Offices Faculty
fiscal, HR, maintenance, foundation Faculty Academic Senate Curriculum Committee

12 Important Players Collective Bargaining Units Support Staff
Board of Trustees

13 Never Forget….. Buried somewhere in all of this is the goal of student success Important that you are able to distinguish between what’s on paper and how it really works organizational culture

14 Workforce Education Models Myriad of Structures!

15 Workforce Education Models - Traditional
Vice President of Instruction or Academic Affairs Dean or AVP of Workforce Education Division Deans CTE Programs Noncredit Programs

16 Workforce Education Models - Equalizing
Provost VP or AVP Academics VP or AVP of Workforce Education CTE Programs Noncredit Programs

17 Workforce Education Models - Evolving
President Vice President of Academics Vice President of Workforce Education CTE Programs Noncredit Programs

18 Workforce Education Models - Emerging
President Vice President of Academics Vice President of Workforce Education CTE Programs Noncredit Programs

19 Workforce Education Models - CTE
CTE Programs are Integrated CTE Programs are Separated departments are concentrated in one or more divisions

20 Workforce Education Models - Noncredit
Where is adult basic education and English Language Learning? Humanities? General Education? Workforce Education? How does contract training relate to the rest of the institution? Credit? Noncredit?

21 Nomenclature Workforce and Economic Development Workforce Solutions
Continuing Educating and Training Workforce Development and Basic Studies Workforce Development and Community Education

22 All of the Models in the Room!
Where do you fit in? What do you like about where you fit in the organization? What don’t you like?

23 Knowing All of the Players in the Maze!
Student Services Fiscal/Budget Human Resources Operations/maintenance Institutional Effectiveness Grants Foundation Strategy for success—ask how you can best work with them

24 Being Successful in the Maze
Do your job well (obvious but…) On time –reports, meetings, evaluations Own your mistakes Choose your battles Do you really want to die on that hill today? Lose gracefully

25 Being Successful in the Maze
Understand and respect the perspective of the decision-makers above you They have more information than you do and make decisions based on that information Don’t get caught up in gossip or innuendo Use data Communicate, communicate, communicate


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