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Jack Stripling – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Private-college presidents often draw scrutiny for their hefty compensation packages, but most of them have a ready comeback: I could make a lot more money in the corporate world. While this statement is surely sometimes true, it is also true that some of the nation's top-paid presidents continue to receive perks that their corporate counterparts…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Compensation (Remuneration), Fringe Benefits, Private Colleges
Stripling, Jack; Fuller, Andrea – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
In a long-simmering national fight over compensation for public-college presidents, the State of California emerged this year as the primary battleground. More than any other institution in recent memory, California State University has publicly and sometimes bitterly wrestled with a vexing question for higher education: How much does a public…
Descriptors: Governing Boards, College Presidents, Compensation (Remuneration), Salaries
Stripling, Jack; Fuller, Andrea – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
As president of the University of Miami, Donna E. Shalala answers to dozens of trustees, many of whom are captains of industry. But two of those board members also answer to her. Ms. Shalala's uncommon role reversal is a product of her lucrative service on the boards of two different companies headed by members of Miami's Board of Trustees. In…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Income, Industry, Governance
Jenkins, Rob – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
The author has been reading George R.R. Martin's marvelous fantasy epic, "A Song of Ice and Fire," about a medieval-ish kingdom and its wars and intrigues. What fascinates him most about the narrative is the extent to which it parallels his experiences as a community-college professor and administrator. The author argues that for all the good they…
Descriptors: Governance, Leadership Effectiveness, Leadership Qualities, Leadership Styles
Stripling, Jack – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Bob Kerrey's rocky tenure as president of the New School may seem a fading memory, but the recent disclosure that he earned $3-million from the institution last year could rekindle resentments on campus and raise questions about Mr. Kerrey's continuing and lucrative role at the college. Under fire from New School faculty over turnover in the…
Descriptors: Tenure, Governing Boards, School Holding Power, College Presidents
Selingo, Jeff – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
A college's graduation rate is such a basic consumer fact for would-be students these days that it's difficult to imagine that the federal government didn't even collect the information as recently as the early 1990s. If not for two former Olympic basketball players who made their way to Congress and wanted college athletes to know about their…
Descriptors: Student Records, Nontraditional Students, College Presidents, Private Colleges
Hoyle, Michael J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
As a young man the author dreamed of becoming a college president by his early 40s, and he achieved that dream in 2007 when he became president of McIntosh College, in Dover, New Hampshire. But organizing a teach-out to close the college after 112 years of operation wasn't part of the plan. Closing a century-old college, however, is what the…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Program Termination, School Closing, Emotional Experience
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In July 2009, Felix V. Matos Rodriguez will take over as president of Hostos Community College of the City University of New York, which in 1970 opened in a converted tire factory in the South Bronx to educate members of a primarily Puerto Rican community. Like Mr. Matos Rodriguez, who moved to the mainland United States at age 18, many of those…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Presidents, Administrative Change, Cultural Pluralism
Peterson, Harry L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A new president comes to the job with enthusiasm and optimism. The board that hired the president, as well as the faculty and staff members who anticipate the new leader's arrival, share those sentiments. Some people hope he or she will do as well as the previous president; more often, they hope the new president will do everything that the…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Administrator Behavior, Problems, College Administration
Ungar, Sanford J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
What do college presidents do, anyway? There was a time when American college presidents were looked to for intellectual, and even political, leadership. One of the most famous examples is Woodrow Wilson, who, as the head of Princeton University, was recruited to become governor of New Jersey in 1910 and, just two years later, was the successful…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Job Analysis, Salaries, Compensation (Remuneration)
Killough, Ashley C. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In a daylong meeting broadcast online this month, David B. Ashley, the president of the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, was repeatedly grilled, and then publicly demoted, during a contentious gathering of the university system's Board of Regents. The dressing-down followed months of public disputes over the conduct of Mr. Ashley's wife and…
Descriptors: Governing Boards, College Presidents, Dismissal (Personnel), State Regulation
Kevin Carey – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
When John B. Simpson, president of the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo, compares the campus over which he presides to its public-university peers, the contrast can be unflattering. Buildings and laboratories need upgrading. Richer, more prestigious institutions have a leg up in attracting renowned scholars and big-ticket federal…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Public Support, Higher Education, College Presidents
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Like most university presidents, Irvin D. Reid is used to having his wife at his side during important events at Wayne State University. She has been here to help greet donors during celebrations of the capital campaign and has attended every football homecoming game during his decade-long presidency. But since last month, Mr. Reid has been…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Spouses, Family Work Relationship, Career Development
Schmidt, Peter – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
College faculties often use votes of "no confidence" to try to push out the leaders of their institutions. Many do so, however, without giving much thought to what such a vote actually means, whether they are using it appropriately, or how it will affect their campus--and their own future. Mae Kuykendall, a professor of law at Michigan State…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Administrative Change, Dismissal (Personnel), Voting
Lipka, Sara – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Students have cheated for centuries, but the problem is knottier than it used to be. The Internet and its infinite dishonest shortcuts have made many cases more complex, and antiplagiarism software like Turnitin flags more potential offenses than could be caught before. At the same time, professors' and college presidents' run-ins with plagiarism…
Descriptors: Cheating, Integrity, Ethics, College Presidents
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