Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England

The higher education sector in England is having to rethink how it will operate in the future. The speed and scale of change; uncertainty and ambiguity; emergence from a global crisis; and the increasing complexity of the environment the sector is operating in has challenged some of the traditional...

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Main Author: Steed, Carol
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71692/
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author Steed, Carol
author_facet Steed, Carol
author_sort Steed, Carol
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The higher education sector in England is having to rethink how it will operate in the future. The speed and scale of change; uncertainty and ambiguity; emergence from a global crisis; and the increasing complexity of the environment the sector is operating in has challenged some of the traditional norms of leadership. With senior leaders, and in particular senior leadership teams, needing to take an active role in this re-engineering, many are recognising that the dial has been reset in terms of the leadership practices that have served them well for many years. Now more than ever it is clear that a greater emphasis needs to be placed on developing leaders who can lead complexity (Uhl-Bien 2021). This research, using a case-study based approach in one English university, has used the lens of the complexity sciences to provide a different perspective on the HE sector and the leadership practices of senior leaders, including the response to change of the senior leadership team in this case study university. First, it highlights the connectivity and inter-connectivity of individuals, the university and the wider sector, showing them to be part of a complex system which is continually emergent and requiring intentional adaptation. Second, it shows the significance of cognitive complexity, and how individual perspectives can influence our personal perception of whether something is complex or not. Finally, it suggests that organisational maturity - or readiness - are important considerations in terms of the ease with which an organisation’s design can or will accommodate emergence and entrepreneurial novelty alongside compliance, stability and order as mutually necessary parts of a complex organisational system. Through using a grounded-theory based approach, this research contributes to, and extends, existing research into leadership in higher education in England. The main contribution of this research is the development of the Bricolage Leadership Practice model, which seeks to bring together a range of elements that are suggested as being necessary as part of individual, or collective, leadership practices moving forward. In addition, this research also helps to fill a gap in the evidence base by looking at senior team leadership in a university context, reviewing the collective team’s attitude and aptitude for change.
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spelling nottingham-716922023-11-01T14:06:24Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71692/ Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England Steed, Carol The higher education sector in England is having to rethink how it will operate in the future. The speed and scale of change; uncertainty and ambiguity; emergence from a global crisis; and the increasing complexity of the environment the sector is operating in has challenged some of the traditional norms of leadership. With senior leaders, and in particular senior leadership teams, needing to take an active role in this re-engineering, many are recognising that the dial has been reset in terms of the leadership practices that have served them well for many years. Now more than ever it is clear that a greater emphasis needs to be placed on developing leaders who can lead complexity (Uhl-Bien 2021). This research, using a case-study based approach in one English university, has used the lens of the complexity sciences to provide a different perspective on the HE sector and the leadership practices of senior leaders, including the response to change of the senior leadership team in this case study university. First, it highlights the connectivity and inter-connectivity of individuals, the university and the wider sector, showing them to be part of a complex system which is continually emergent and requiring intentional adaptation. Second, it shows the significance of cognitive complexity, and how individual perspectives can influence our personal perception of whether something is complex or not. Finally, it suggests that organisational maturity - or readiness - are important considerations in terms of the ease with which an organisation’s design can or will accommodate emergence and entrepreneurial novelty alongside compliance, stability and order as mutually necessary parts of a complex organisational system. Through using a grounded-theory based approach, this research contributes to, and extends, existing research into leadership in higher education in England. The main contribution of this research is the development of the Bricolage Leadership Practice model, which seeks to bring together a range of elements that are suggested as being necessary as part of individual, or collective, leadership practices moving forward. In addition, this research also helps to fill a gap in the evidence base by looking at senior team leadership in a university context, reviewing the collective team’s attitude and aptitude for change. 2022-12-16 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71692/1/C%20Steed%204286405%20FINAL%20thesis%20Oct%202022.pdf Steed, Carol (2022) Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England. EdD thesis, University of Nottingham. higher education HE senior leadership Bricolage Leadership Practice model
spellingShingle higher education
HE
senior leadership
Bricolage Leadership Practice model
Steed, Carol
Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England
title Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England
title_full Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England
title_fullStr Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England
title_short Understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in England
title_sort understanding the dynamics of complexity: new insights for senior leadership practice in one higher education institution in england
topic higher education
HE
senior leadership
Bricolage Leadership Practice model
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71692/