The Balancing Acts of Academic Leadership is an essential book for every department chair's personal library. As the “front line” of academic leadership, both new and veteran chairs will benefit from the critically important toolkit that Professor Hey provides. The combination of practical tools, experiential insights and guidance affords every chair the opportunity to assess their own readiness for leadership, the qualities they bring to the work and the additional support they will need from the dean or provost. As we address higher education’s existential moment, tools such as those Professor Hey provides become that much more indispensable.
— Kathleen A. Rinehart, JD, MDR, 9th president of Cardinal Stritch University, dispute resolution professional and leadership coach
Academic leaders seem to be balancing things all the time: work and life, teaching and research, decisions and delegation—the list goes on and on. Perhaps the most important balancing act is the question, “Do I see myself primary as an academic or as administrator?” In this book, Jeanne Hey helps academic leaders work their way through these issues and more. If you are or may someday become an academic leader, I know you’ll profit from the advice she provides.
— Jeffrey L. Buller, senior partner, ATLAS Leadership Training
In The Balancing Acts of Academic Leadership: A Guide for Deans and Department Heads Jeanne A.K. Hey argues that while institutions of higher education rely more than ever on leaders at all levels to think creatively, adopt new practices, and lead change, the leaders are frequently stuck in us vs. them and either/or thinking and action. Hey’s “seesaws of academic leadership” framework is a powerful method of better balancing the competing demands today’s program directors, department chairs, and deans face in collaboratively governing their units. Hey teaches us how to ask the right questions to discern our positions on the seesaws of professional identity, professional role, leadership comfort zone, decision making style, management style, availability, focus of attention, and feedback processes. She provides valuable tools for contextualizing and adjusting our positions on these seesaws to become more effective leaders. Hey helps us to silence both internal and external doubts and embrace leadership: “When academic leaders allow themselves to own their authority, without apology, excuse or embarrassment, they not only find greater professional satisfaction, they become better at their jobs.” I hold monthly meetings to mentor my first year department chairs, and can hardly wait to use this book as an assigned reading to facilitate my department chairs’ leadership embracement!
— Walter R. Jacobs, dean of the college of social sciences; professor of sociology & interdisciplinary social sciences, San José State University