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  • Ask the Administrator: How to Change a Culture?

    By Dean Dad November 29, 2009 9:07 pm

    A regular correspondent writes:

    I'm hoping your wise and worldly readers can shed some light on my
    anonymous, and of course (despite its curiously detailed nature),
    purely hypothetical problem.

    I'm a grad student in a Prestigious Atlantic College where our
    department is being a little bit roiled by the efforts of some faculty
    and students to change the department culture. The specifics don't
    matter, except to say that this isn't a case of one methodology or
    approach being hailed as superior but rather of commitment to
    academics instead of policy relevance as the departmental norm. The
    shift is well underway, but the current push is, essentially, to
    consolidate the academic side's gains.

    My question, however, deals with broader questions of cultural change
    in academia. I'd been in the "real world" for a few years before
    coming to academia, and so I think that I'm a little bit more tolerant
    of blunter, bottom-line assessments of situations and of direct forms
    of communications than some of my colleagues. More to the point, I'm
    also a little bit less interested in questions of personal style in my
    interlocutors than I am in effectiveness and usefulness. That, however,
    does not seem to be the case with others. And although I'm aware that
    I may be incorrectly perceiving as "acceptable" what others see as
    "unprofessional," the broader issue of how to broach cultural change
    initiatives is what really preoccupies me.

    How, in other words, do you change a culture without appearing to
    blame people for what went before? Is there any way to do that? And
    what are the best ways of coping with the problem and mitigating the
    conflicts these processes seem to generate?

    Nope, nothing tricky here!

    I read once that philosophers never really settle a question; over time, they change the subject. That's how I see conscious cultural change working. (Unconscious cultural change is another matter altogether. That's the kind that sneaks up on you as a result of changed circumstances. It takes longer, but it tends to have staying power.)

    Changing the subject will come across as rude, impertinent, and arrogant, at first. The people who have prospered under the old culture will often defend it beyond reason. Though dogmatic, they won't see the dogmatism in themselves; they'll think of themselves as open to any reasonable answer to the questions they consider important. Cultural change means considering different questions important.

    Anyone who has switched workplaces has seen this. Issues that one workplace considered worthy of mortal combat, another won't notice, and vice versa. Since academics tend to stay rooted for extended periods, that comparative perspective is relatively rare. That's unfortunate, since getting some distance on local issues can bring helpful clarity. To give a concrete example, in statewide discussions of outcomes assessment, I've heard from some campuses that standardized measures are of the devil, and from others that they're the greatest thing since sliced bread. I was struck at how far apart the two were, and at the relative shallowness of the arguments presented for both positions. It seemed that each campus chose a side and developed arguments later.

    Back to your question. I'd be surprised to see meaningful cultural change occur without either internal conflict or a really massive exogenous shock. The perceived stakes -- whether rightly or wrongly perceived isn't entirely relevant -- are too high. The real questions are about how to manage the conflict, and how to calculate how much conflict is worth it. I'll address the first, and just suggest that the second is entirely too context-dependent to generalize.

    If you want to try to push the culture without entirely upending it, I'd recommend starting with a serious inquiry into the perceived needs that the status quo serves. What, exactly, are the partisans of the status quo anxious about? What anxieties does the dominant culture address? (Alternately, what anxieties does it generate?) Some opposition will simply be fear of the unknown, or of change generally; that's annoying, but there it is. But if you can skip past the particular manifestations and get at the anxieties underlying them, you might actually be able to get somewhere.

    You can also try to tie old rules to past circumstances. "That rule was developed when the program was struggling to survive, and it made sense. It served its function well. Now the program has outgrown the rule, and needs to change it to continue to move forward." If you can make some version of that argument honestly, you can simultaneously honor what came before and make a case for change. I've had good luck with that when I could use it truthfully. The more you can make the change look like a response to larger circumstances, rather than someone's pet idea, the better your chances. (Some people are good at a close variation on this: the "make them think it was their idea" model. If you can pull it off, more power to you.)

    If the issue is subtler -- a longstanding practice, say, rather than an explicit rule -- then simply cultivating an alternative and letting its success speak for itself can work. It's hard to beat something with nothing, so it's better to have something to show.

    In the best of all possible worlds, you'd be able to have long, connect-the-dots conversations in which both sides spell out exactly what their concerns actually are. Once in a blue moon, that actually works. It's rare, though, since it's risky, and since people aren't always aware of their own motivations. In my early days of deaning, I had several occasions in which people who expressed that they were fine with something at the proposal stage take great offense at the implementation stage. At first, I wrote it off to misunderstanding, then, later, to failings of character. Now I'm inclined to think that it's limited self-awareness. I don't always know how I'll react to something once it becomes real, so why should anybody else?

    The books I've read about 'difficult conversations' and the like usually advise something like "make it safe." That's great when it works, but in this setting, it's a tad idealistic.

    Good luck!

    I've had my turn, so let me turn to my wise and worldly readers. Have you found ways to change a culture without provoking open warfare?

    Have a question? Ask the Administrator at deandad (at) gmail (dot) com.

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Comments on Ask the Administrator: How to Change a Culture?

  • changing the subject
  • Posted by Gary Davis , Principal at Board Solutions on November 30, 2009 at 3:45pm EST
  • Dean Dad has the right idea. Whenever a culture needs to be changed, the best way to proceed is to agree on a "focus question" to be explored. Begin by asking: "What do we want to know?"

    Defenders of the old culture will be embarrassed to say, "We want to know how to hold on to the old ways of doing things."

    More acceptable will be the questions "What good do we want to do for others?" and "What are some ways we might do good better?"

    Answers to the last question will change the culture.

  • Gary Davis
  • Posted by DFS on November 30, 2009 at 6:15pm EST
  • Nicely stated, except:
    The "old culture" does not mean by default that the old ways must prevail. We dinosaurs are not all of the same flavor.
    Instead, I am more interested in how to advance knowledge. This means, of course, that previous knowledge must not be lost.
    But, I agree with your post, otherwise.

  • Change?
  • Posted by Lil Johnny on December 4, 2009 at 6:00am EST
  • Have you found ways to change a culture without provoking open warfare? Not really. Dean Dad and others suggest changing the topic or question? That helps to decrease the tension a little bit, but there will also be some who remain committed to open warfare (there are always a few). Even worse and more damning for the college culture are those who are committed to hidden warfare. There are also those who just remain passive aggressive when a new initiative comes. But I have news for the adminsitration!!! Faculty members are bright, highly educated people. They know how the game is played. They know what you are doing when you change the question or deflect. They also know that whenever things change, it is going to mean more work and more chaos for all. That is the trend in higher education. Even if something is working excellently, we still have to find a way to document "continuos improvement" of it. It is never good enough. They always want more. When you are continually asked to do more and more and more and more, with less and less and less and less, for the same basic salary, you tend to want to resist anymore "change." Change equals more work. Does anybody who is already working 50+ hours a week want more work? We are tired of these new initiatives. There are too many of them. They fail to have substance or any real effect because we don't have the proper time to dedicate to them. Perhaps if some of these new ideas (which are usually just old ideas repackaged) meant we would make things easier for people, better for all people involved, and more substantial, people would embrace change more often. Unfortunately, experience indicates that change in higher education just means more "additional duties."