Mark Pegg: lack of female leaders stops sector fulfilling potential
The chief executive of the Leadership Foundation for Higher Education has spoken about the âbig, bigâ priority of increasing the number of female vice-chancellors and senior figures as he prepares to launch a project to tackle the issue.
Mark Pegg, who in January took charge of the body that provides leadership development programmes for the sector, said the Aurora project would âwork with organisations to improve the chances of women leadersâ.
The programme â named after the goddess who according to Roman mythology renewed herself every dawn and heralded the arrival of the Sun â will aim to recruit four women below head of department level from every UK university, with each institution also appointing a senior female role model as âchampionâ.
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According to Universities UK, there are 20 female heads of institution among the organisationâs 133 members.
Dr Pegg said that Aurora would give women greater âconfidenceâ and âunderstanding of organisational politicsâ while changing organisations as well. Without the projectâs intervention, institutions will âcontinue as beforeâ and âdisappointment will ensueâ, he added.
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The lack of female representation among sector leaders was not just an equality issue â âwomen should have the same life chances as menâ â but also meant that âhalf of the full potential of the workforce is not being utilisedâ.
Dr Pegg â who holds a doctorate from the University of Oxford on the social history of broadcasting â has a background in executive education. As a former director of Ashridge Business School he trained senior civil servants in leadership as well as working with âbig global corporationsâ.
Speaking about his appointment, he said that the Leadership Foundation board âwanted me to increase the risk appetiteâ among the sectorâs leaders â âthey could see more challenging times aheadâ.
Since taking over from Ewart Wooldridge (chief executive from the organisationâs foundation in 2004 until the end of last year), Dr Pegg has looked at the foundationâs Top Management Programme, which counts 56 current vice-chancellors among its graduates.
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He said he was seeking to âbring it up to date, refresh itâ with a new delivery team and content from the autumn.
Discussing the courseâs programme of external speakers, Dr Pegg said that participants âloved to hear from chief fire officers, from police officersâ, but âthe appetite is there to hear more from people who have made a success of leadership in entrepreneurial activitiesâ, as long as it is âdone sensitivelyâ.
Meanwhile, on other potential role models for the sectorâs leaders, he said that Sir Alex Ferguson was one name mentioned. However, he argued that the former Manchester United manager would be âtoo autocraticâŠI donât think he would work very well in something as sensitive as a universityâ.
Nevertheless, Dr Pegg could see plenty of leadership virtues in the Scot.
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âWhen youâre at the top, you have to keep reinventing yourself, you have to keep improving what youâre doing, you have to live with the changes and the competitive pressures â thatâs what universities are looking for, without scaring the horses.â
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