Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs

Advice and support for achieving promotion is often one of the main tasks of leadership programs aimed at women in higher education. This paper will consider how leadership development strategies can be extended to meet current developments in higher education, where there is a need to respond to in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Groombridge, Barbara, Worden, Suzette
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Australian Technology Network Women's Executive Development (ATN WEXDEV) 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19310
_version_ 1848749996799688704
author Groombridge, Barbara
Worden, Suzette
author_facet Groombridge, Barbara
Worden, Suzette
author_sort Groombridge, Barbara
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Advice and support for achieving promotion is often one of the main tasks of leadership programs aimed at women in higher education. This paper will consider how leadership development strategies can be extended to meet current developments in higher education, where there is a need to respond to increasing complexity within the system, resulting from changes in government policy and the impact of globalisation.We propose that there is a need to address diversity in leadership roles to meet the challenge of complexity, as one outcome of a focus on promotion in leadership programs has been to emphasise and reinforce conventional managerial, hierarchical expectations of leadership. In this context, leadership is predominantly role-related and positional in nature. The ability to develop and change circumstances is gained through the power given by the role. Women in these roles are most often seen as successful leaders when they additionally demonstrate a nurturing and supportive approach.The paper will address the limitations of adopting this view of leadership and examine how leadership can be broadened by and for women in higher education. The paper will consider how different models of leadership in teaching and in research can be developed, and then their potential to influence broader leadership programs in higher education management.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:29:49Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-19310
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:29:49Z
publishDate 2006
publisher Australian Technology Network Women's Executive Development (ATN WEXDEV)
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-193102017-01-30T12:13:07Z Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs Groombridge, Barbara Worden, Suzette gender studies leadership styles promotion Leadership programs Advice and support for achieving promotion is often one of the main tasks of leadership programs aimed at women in higher education. This paper will consider how leadership development strategies can be extended to meet current developments in higher education, where there is a need to respond to increasing complexity within the system, resulting from changes in government policy and the impact of globalisation.We propose that there is a need to address diversity in leadership roles to meet the challenge of complexity, as one outcome of a focus on promotion in leadership programs has been to emphasise and reinforce conventional managerial, hierarchical expectations of leadership. In this context, leadership is predominantly role-related and positional in nature. The ability to develop and change circumstances is gained through the power given by the role. Women in these roles are most often seen as successful leaders when they additionally demonstrate a nurturing and supportive approach.The paper will address the limitations of adopting this view of leadership and examine how leadership can be broadened by and for women in higher education. The paper will consider how different models of leadership in teaching and in research can be developed, and then their potential to influence broader leadership programs in higher education management. 2006 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19310 Australian Technology Network Women's Executive Development (ATN WEXDEV) fulltext
spellingShingle gender studies
leadership styles
promotion
Leadership programs
Groombridge, Barbara
Worden, Suzette
Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs
title Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs
title_full Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs
title_fullStr Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs
title_full_unstemmed Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs
title_short Complexity and Choice: Reassessing Support for Women in Leadership Programs
title_sort complexity and choice: reassessing support for women in leadership programs
topic gender studies
leadership styles
promotion
Leadership programs
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19310