1st Edition

Alternative Solutions to Higher Education's Challenges An Appreciative Approach to Reform

By Laura M. Harrison, Peter C. Mather Copyright 2016
    190 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    190 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Moving beyond critique, Alternative Solutions to Higher Education’s Challenges uses an appreciative approach to highlight what is working in colleges and universities and offers an examination of how institutions can improve practice. Drawing on examples and cases from real higher education institutions, this book offers a solution-focused framework that challenges the negative assumptions that have plagued higher education. Chapters explore how current narratives have perpetuated and maintained systematic flaws in our education system and have hindered reform. This invaluable resource breaks from the substantial literature that only highlights the many problems facing higher education today, and instead provides alternative strategies and essential recommendations for moving higher education institutions forward.

    Preface

    Chapter 1: Developing a Toolbox for Appreciative Approaches to Change

    Chapter 2: Cultivating Organizational Strengths Through Democratic Leadership

    Chapter 3: Fostering an Enriching Community Life and Effective Public Service

    Chapter 4: Centering Institutional Practices Around Meaningful Student Learning

    Chapter 5: Leveraging Liberal Education to Promote Equal Opportunity

    Chapter 6: Embracing the Heart in the Head(y) World of Higher Education

    Chapter 7: Reclaiming Teaching in Person

    Chapter 8: Moving Forward

    References

    Index

    Biography

    Laura M. Harrison is Associate Professor in the Counseling and Higher Education Department at Ohio University, USA.

    Peter C. Mather is Associate Professor in the Counseling and Higher Education Department at Ohio University, USA.

    "In a time of many reform efforts in higher education, a major challenge today is knowing what to preserve and what to discard. In this book, Harrison and Mather offer an approach to reform that is grounded in the strengths and best practices of contemporary higher education. Their book is a repudiation of those who are obsessed with higher education's shortcomings and a gift to those who are dedicated to preserving and ‘paying forward’ the best of today's higher education."

    --Jon C. Dalton, Professor Emeritus of Higher Education and Co-Editor, Journal of College and Character, Florida State University

    "Harrison and Mather provide a well-thought-out approach for reframing organizational structures and activities within higher education using appreciative inquiry and positive organizational scholarship. This text raises questions we must address at a time when higher education is in need of restructuring and reconceptualization, and it pushes the boundaries of current practices in very meaningful ways. The authors use their own personal and professional experiences to expertly transition from theory to practice."

    --Diane L. Cooper, Professor of College Student Affairs Administration, University of Georgia