Book Reviews
Issue 29(2)
Organizing
higher education for collaboration: A guide for campus leaders.
(2009). Adrianna Kezar
and Jaime Lester. San Francisco : Jossey-Bass, 320 pp. $40.00
(hardback). ISBN 978-0-470-17936-9
Review
by: Ruth O. Bingham,
Director
Pre-Health/Pre-Law
Advising Center
University
of Hawaii
at Manoa
Collaboration
has risen to prominence among higher education values, showing
up everywhere from grant applications and prioritization charts
to assessment criteria and budget decisions. Unfortunately, although
many collaborative projects are initiated, many flounder, fail,
or simply fall apart before realizing any benefits.
Here
Kezar and Lester review both collaboration’s benefits and its
myriad obstacles, including higher education’s impetus toward
“siloed” specialized departments, reward systems that focus on
individual achievement, and bureaucratic, hierarchical structures.
Those who have attempted to initiate collaboration in higher education
are often intimately familiar with such obstacles.
More
importantly, Kezar and Lester examined four institutions that
have achieved high levels of collaboration and analyzed their
“organizational context,” defined as “major structural, process,
human, political, and cultural elements” of the campus (pp.34
and 60). While preserving the institutions’ anonymity, they identified
seven features they believe to be essential, with the objective
of “helping leaders create environments that support collaboration”
(p.x).
One
chapter is devoted to each of the features: 1) mission, vision,
and philosophy; 2) values; 3) social networks; 4) integrating
structures such as initiatives, centers, and teams; 5) rewards,
including promotion and tenure criteria; 6) external pressures
from stakeholders; and 7) learning, referring to “developing an
awareness of the benefits of collaboration and acquiring the skills
necessary to effectively collaborate” (p.195). Within each chapter,
the authors explain the feature’s importance, review its background
literature, offer advice, provide examples, point out its challenges,
and summarize its key issues.
In
the final chapters, Kezar and Lester describe a composite model
to demonstrate how features interact and unfold over time in a
three-step process. With only a hint of irony, they conclude that
collaboration is necessarily a collaborative process: “One of
the main lessons learned ... is that this is a collective responsibility.
These campuses realize that it is difficult to do on your own
and that reaching out to groups and individuals who can support
their vision is critical for moving forward.” (p.237).
Organizing
Higher Education for Collaboration
presents its findings as derived theory, stopping short of closing
the research loop, which would entail years of documenting the
application of these principles.
The
book is well organized and clear but includes a fairly high level
of repetition. The chapter on “ Mission , Vision, and Educational
Philosophy,” for example, enumerates seven effects of “mission”
in thirteen iterations, spread in different combinations across
five sentences – all on the same page (p.61).
Despite
occasional signs of having been published quickly, the book reads
smoothly and provides ready access to information and references.
In
their Preface, Kezar and Lester, both research educators, establish
that their focus is on empowering institutional leaders and change
agents. Consequently, they rarely mention academic advising except
to give examples of collaborative advising efforts, including
team-based advising, integrating academic and student affairs,
and increased faculty involvement in advising as a side effect
of collaboration. The authors make it easy, however, to see how
general principles can be applied to specific activities such
as advising.
Academic
advisors, operating as they do in the interstices between students,
faculty/staff, and administration, are perfectly situated to act
as change agents for their campuses. For those who see themselves
as change agents, Organizing Higher Education for Collaboration
will provide insight into their campus dynamics, tools for
fostering successful collaborations, and a path to engaging in
the administration of their institutions.