Book Reviews
Issue 29(1)
Strategic Financial Challenges
for Higher Education: How to Achieve Quality, Accountability and
Innovation. (2008).
Lucie Lapovsky & Donna Klinger (Eds.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
152 pp., $29.00, (paperback), ISBN 978-0-470-30408-2
Review
by: Edward
L. Vaughn
Dean,
College for Excellence
Alcorn
State
University
Lapovsky
and Klinger’s Strategic Financial Challenges for Higher Education
provides a thought-provoking treatise of broad implications
for paradigm change within higher education. Long insulated from
marketplace pressures, higher education is now expected to systematically
demonstrate quality, efficiency, and accountability.
The
authors first translate traditional definitions of quality, efficiency,
and accountability into terms that fit the unique complexities
of higher education. This is followed by discussion of the assessment
of student learning and institutional productivity. A wide variety
of indices from full time equivalency ( FTE
) students taught to retention
and graduation rates are included. The reader is able to see the
relationship of various institutional outcomes, particularly student
learning outcomes, to budget allocation decisions. The institutional
outcomes will help the public judge quality.
Authors
within Strategic Financial Challenges suggest ways to
approach maximizing resources in support of academic programming.
Cost containment is a part of that process. Strategic planning
plays a major role in this process. Institutional outcomes are
viewed along with financial data to help guide decision-making.
Changes for improvement occur at all levels in higher education:
institutional, system-wide, and state-wide. Typical measures of
improvement include cost reduction, process improvement, retention,
and student success. Authors within On Becoming a Productive
University offer more detail on cost reduction by suggesting
improvements that can be implemented by faculty.
Lapovsky
and Klinger challenge the reader to consider how changes in the
higher education landscape will lead to decisions that differ
from those of the past. In particular how revenue streams should
be viewed differently and how this new perspective leads to different
resource allocation decisions in response to emerging conditions.
Financial aid policy, net tuition revenue, and endowment policy
are three significant revenue streams that have major implications
for quality and efficiency. In a similar manner, new approaches
to reducing costs are equally important in improving quality.
Several authors within Advancing Campus Efficiencies go
a step further by suggesting how cost savings can be achieved
through consortial relationships.
The
changing competitive landscape for traditional higher education
presents another major challenge. For-profit colleges as well
as globalization have produced significant changes in the delivery
of higher education programs. These new models and the markets
that they serve will continue to prompt changes by traditional
higher education.
This
book does not directly address the day-to-day concerns of academic
advisors. However it gives a broad overview of the higher education
landscape that is useful to academic advisors. It provides a framework
that should enable advisors to understand the importance of student
success as an institutional outcome. It simultaneously provides
advisors with an appreciation of the variables driving institutional
decisions.
All
higher education professionals should find the book useful because
it identifies trends that will increasingly affect higher education
and suggests new ways of thinking that can assist colleges and
universities in the adjustment to the new paradigm. It emphasizes
combining a wide variety of institutional assessment data with
fiscal data for improvement. In short, it shows how successful
institutions define quality, increase efficiency, and act accountably.
References
Groccia,
James E. & Miller, Judith E. (Eds.).(2005). On Becoming
a Productive University: Strategies for Reducing Costs and Increasing
Quality in Higher Education. Bolton,
MA:
Anker.
Johnstone,
Sally M, & WCET Associates. (2007). Advancing Campus Efficiencies:
A Companion for Campus Leaders in the Digital Era . Bolton,
MA.: Anker.