Culture and climate theorists push us to examine more closely the social

systems that weave a web of complicated and vital interrelationships – a

web that can either empower and strengthen us or trap and confound us.

Peter Senge (1990) wants us to master the Fifth Discipline, while Jim

Collins (2001) wants us to move to move from Good to Great by leveraging

level-five leadership. Still others advocate that we get in better tune

with our organizational energy systems, develop leader and team maturity,

or look to our authentic selves and organizational souls. Making learning

about leadership even more problematic, chaos theory advocates sometimes

argue that the mix of variables is so out of our control that we have to

release ourselves to this delicate art, which requires a light touch rather

than a driving force. Margaret Wheatley (1999) would say more awareness of

“butterfly wings” and less dogged driving toward strategic plans.

Make no mistake: We feel that these theoretical examinations and

perspectives are useful. However, as Fromm (1956) notes in the opening

quote, to truly advance the art of leadership, we need to test our formal

theories and informal assumptions against the hard and sometimes cold

realities of practice. And with this in mind, we began our initial

conversations about a book dedicated to showcasing the ups and downs, ins

and outs, and joys and pains of leadership.

But it was not just leadership in the abstract in which we were interested.

It was leadership in the community college - this amazingly inspiring and

sometimes confounding context in which we work. We wanted real-life

examples of cases involving community-college governance; executive

leadership; administration and finance; instructional programs and

services; student life; legal issues, politics, and policy; fundraising;

media; technology; and workforce, partnerships, and outreach. And we wanted

a special category for those stories out of the ordinary. The final result

is the new publication from the League for Innovation, The Leadership

Dialogues: Community College Case Studies to Consider.

Of course, our categories are limited in their scope; and we hope to expand

them in the newer versions of this book. Indeed, we see our volume as the

base of an ongoing project to showcase community college cases for use in

graduate programs, leadership institutes, and administrative retreats. It

is meant to be beginning fodder for in-depth conversations about the art of

leadership in the community college.

Why focus only on community colleges? Put simply, all too often we are

lumped into discussions of K-12 or university models without sufficient and

in-depth exploration of the unique nature of our context. We argue that

there are substantially different twists to the art of leadership in a

community college; so much so that we deserve a dedicated dais for our

dialogues.

Before we outline the range and scope of the cases, we need to thank the

dozens of community college leaders who stepped forward to share their

edifying and enriching experiences for this work, which will undoubtedly be

a guide and great resource for those who will follow in their path.

Inspirational and instructive, sometimes wrenching and sometimes wry, these

contributions shine a bright light on the corridor to community college

leadership. To view a sample case study, you can visit the following link

to read George Boggs' Student Diversity Protest case.

(http://www.league.org/publication/abstracts/leadership/labs0304.htm)

To order The Learning Dialogues, visit the League Store at

http://leaguestore.sureshopping.com/, or call Judy Greenfield at (480) 705- 8200. Subscribers to League iStream can download the book free of charge at

http://istream.league.org.

We invite you now to peruse the following table of contents to get and idea

of the twists and turns of leadership in the community college that may be

used to begin your dialogues.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PART I: GOVERNANCE

1. Jumping In With Both Feet

Mary Ellen Duncan, President, Howard Community College (MD)

2. The Florida Council of Presidents

Susan M. Lehr, Vice President for Government Relations, Florida Community

College

3. Strengthening Community Colleges to Meet Public Needs

Kay M. McClenney, Director, Community College Survey of Student Engagement,

The University of Texas at Austin

4. A Change in Board Composition

David H. Ponitz, President Emeritus, Sinclair Community College (OH)

5. An Attempt at Overlegislation

Charles Spence, Chancellor, Contra Costa Community College District (CA)

6. System Within a System: The Evolution of Hawaii 's Community Colleges

Joyce S. Tsunoda, Vice President for International Ed ucation, University

of Hawaii; Emeritus Chancellor for Community Colleges and Distinguished

Senior Visiting Scholar, East-West Center

PART II: EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP

1. Styles or Hubris: The Balancing Act for Strong Leaders

J. David Armstrong Jr, Chancellor, Florida Community Colleges and Workforce

Ed ucation

2. Growing Our Own Leaders

Michael B. McCall, President, Kentucky Community and Technical College

System

3. Leadership for Transformation

Byron N. McClenney, Community College Leadership Program, The University of

Texas

4. Daring to Leave a Legacy

Pamela L. Whitelock, Dean of Lifelong Learning, Gulf Coast Community

College (FL)

PART III: ADMINISTRATION AND FINANCE

1. Build It and They Will Come

John Anthony, President Emeritus, Collin County Community College District

(TX)

2. Thinking Through a Financial Dilemma

Leonardo de la Garza, Chancellor, Tarrant County College District (TX)

3. Raising Tuition: A Conflicting Argument

Glenn Dubois, Chancellor, Virginia Community College System

4. Anatomy of Financial Crises

Rufus Glasper, Chancellor, Maricopa Community College District (AZ)

Debra Thompson, Vice Chancellor, Business Services, Maricopa Community

College District (AZ)

5. A College's Response to a Community's Dream

David W. Sink, Jr., President, Blue Ridge Community College (NC)

6. Weathering the Storm

Tony Zeiss, President and CEO, Central Piedmont Community College (NC)

PART IV: INSTRUCTIONAL PROGRAMS AND SERVICES

1. Assessing Student Learning: What's the Big Deal?

Marsha S. Bordner, President, Terra Community College (OH)

2. Faculty Load Fairness?

Peter D. Boyse, President, Delta College (MI)

3. Creating a Faculty Workload Policy

Diane M. Calhoun-French, Provost and Vice President for Academic and

Student Affairs, Jefferson Community and Technical College District (KY)

4. Partnerships in Technical Programs

Susan A. May, Vice President and Chief Academic Officer, Fox Valley

Technical College (WI)

5. Making the Case for the Baccalaureate Degree

Ed uardo J. Padrón, President, Miami Dade College (FL)

6. A Message of Change

Barbara Sloan, Vice President for Academic Affairs, Tallahassee Community

College (FL)

7. Ensuring Full-Time Quality With Part-Time Faculty

Linda Thor, President, Rio Salado Community College (AZ)

8. Instructional Programming on a Shoestring

B. Kaye Walter, Vice President, Academic Services, Kansas City Kansas

Community College

PART V: STUDENT LIFE

1. The Diversity Protest

George R. Boggs, President and CEO, American Association of Community

Colleges; Superintendent/President Emeritus, Palomar College (CA)

2. Collaboration Leads to New Student Success

Vernon O. Crawley, President, Moraine Valley Community College (IL)

Mary Kay Kickels, Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, Moraine

Valley Community College (IL)

Patricia Bauhs, Vice President for Institutional Advancement and Executive

Assistant to the President, Moraine Valley Community College (IL)

Delores Brooks, Director of Marketing and Publications Services, Moraine

Valley Community College (IL)

3. Intercollegiate Athletics as an Institutional Priority

Scott Elliott, President, Meridian Community College (MS)

4. Inclusion Rewarded

Dug Jones, Director for Student Life, Santa Fe Community College (FL)

5. Introducing Residence Halls to a Community College

Susan Salvador, Vice President, Student Services, Monroe Community College

(NY)

6. Student and Staff Relational Trust

Bettie Tully, Ombudsperson, Human Development Coordinator, and Counseling

Faculty, El Centro College (TX)

Wright Lassiter, Jr., President, El Centro College (TX)

7. Establishing a Learning Continuum

Karen A. Wells, Vice President, Learner Services and Chief Academic

Officer, Lorain County Community College (OH)

PART VI: LEGAL ISSUES, POLITICS, AND POLICY

1. A Web Untangled

Alfredo G. de los Santos Jr., Research Professor, Arizona State University,

Main; Senior League Fellow, League for Innovation in the Community College

2. When Politics and Ed ucation Converge

Robert A. Gordon, President, Humber College Institute of Technology and

Advanced Learning, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Expanding Enrollments: Legal Ramifications for Widening the Open Door

Patricia Grunder, Vice President for Innovation and College Advancement,

Santa Fe Community College (FL)

4. The Sexual Predators

Bill Mullowney, Vice President for Policy and General Counsel, Valencia

Community College (FL)

5. Effective Political Advocacy at Kirkwood Community College

Steve Ovel, Executive Director, Governmental Relations, Kirkwood Community

College (IA)

PART VII: WHAT?

1. Leading a College and a Life Divided

David C. England, former President, Des Moines Area Community College

District (IA)

2. Is an Employment Contract Worth the Paper It's Written On?

James S. Kellerman, Executive Director and CEO, Missouri Community College

Association

3. Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Larry W. Tyree, Director, Institute of Higher Ed ucation, University of

Florida; Executive Director, National Alliance of Community and Technical

Colleges; Senior League Fellow, League for Innovation in the Community

College

4. The Arrested Vice President

Alice Villadsen, President, Brookhaven College (TX)

PART VIII: FUNDRAISING

1. Re-Energizine Your Board

Brenda Babitz, President, Monroe Community College Foundation (NY)

2. A Firm Foundation

Allen Edwards, President, Pellissippi College (TN)

3. Creating a Comprehensive Foundation

Cheryle Mitvalsky, Vice President of Resource Development, Kirkwood

Community College (IA)

Sue Hawn, Director of Planned Giving, Kirkwood Community College (IA)

4. Performing for Friends and Funds

Cash Pealer, President, Central Florida Community College Foundation

Mary Ann DeSantis, Coordinator of Marketing and Public Relations, Central

Florida Community College

5. Building a World-Class Community College Foundation

Peter A. Spina, President Emeritus, Monroe Community College (NY)

PART IX: MEDIA

1. Media Relations in Good and Bad Times

Augie Gallego, Chancellor, San Diego Community College District (CA)

2. The Media and the Gainesville Student Murders of 1990 Lawrence D. Keen, Associate Vice President for College Communications,

Santa Fe Community College (FL)

3. Engagement: It's More Than PR

Carole Lapensohn, Director, Gulf Coast Community College Foundation;

Director, Institutional Advancement, Gulf Coast Community College (FL)

4. Dealing With the Student Press

J. William Wenrich, Chancellor Emeritus, Dallas County Community College

District (TX)

PART X: TECHNOLOGY

1. Implementing and Sustaining a Technology Management Plan

Jan Bullard, Vice President for Administration and Finance, Santa Fe

Community College (FL)

2. Sex, Cyberspace, and the Pursuit of Academic Freedom

Suzanne L. Flannigan, Doctoral Student in Community College Leadership, The

University of Texas at Austin

Thomas G. Greene, Doctoral Student in Community College Leadership, The

University of Texas at Austin

Barbara R. Jones, Doctoral Student in Community College Leadership, The

University of Texas at Austin

3. Technology Refresh Program

Rand S. Spiwak, Executive Vice President, Daytona Beach Community College

(FL)

PART XI: WORKFORCE, PARTNERSHIPS, AND OUTREACH

1. Reforming Workforce Preparedness

Donald W. Cameron, President, Guilford Technical Community College (NC)

George M. Fouts, Former Executive Vice President, Guilford Technical

Community College (NC)

2. The Little Initiative That Could

Charles J. Carlsen, President and CEO, Johnson County Community College

(KS)

3. ESL Ice Hockey Facility

R. Thomas Flynn, President, Monroe Community College (NY)

4. Taking the Wheel of a New Economy

James L. Hudgins, President, South Carolina Technical College System

5. Partnering for Change

Edwin R. Massey, President, Indian River Community College (FL)

6. A Focus on Learning and Serving

Margaret Spontak, Executive Director, Corporate Training and Continuing

Education, Central Florida Community College

7. Adapting a Workforce Development Project to Meet a Utility Company's

Needs

Jim Willis, Vice President, Workforce Development and Continuing Ed

ucation, Southwest Tennessee Community College