Can you name your universityâs values? Do you know if it even has any?
Frustration with meaningless lists of institutional virtues â think âopennessâ, ârespectâ or âexcellenceâ perhaps â has boiled over into a global project to get universities to think more seriously about what is important to their staff and students.
The Living Values project, run by the Observatory Magna Charta Universitatum, a Bologna-based organisation that monitors institutional autonomy and academic freedom, has over the past year or so run a series of pilots to help universities live up to their stated values.
âThe whole thing was born from a view that values can be espousedâŠbut unless they are put into practice, they are not very useful to organisations,â explained David Lock, secretary general of the observatory.
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Some universities do think hard about their values, he said, and this feeds into their real-world planning. But at the other end of the spectrum, there are institutions whose âmarketing department or whatever bits of the university are putting values on their website, which are very laudable but may not have traction in the institutionâ.
So far, 10 universities have taken part in pilots. They hail from the UK, Sweden, Italy, Romania, Brazil, Egypt, Mauritius, Russia and Australia.
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The process, Mr Lock stressed, cannot just be driven by managers â staff have to feel involved in the creation of university values or they will fail to âlive by themâ.
The project works by sending in âambassadorsâ from the observatory who meet with university managers, and in some cases broader staff groups. But there is no strict pathway to working out what a universityâs values are; the institutions themselves are in charge of the process.
Proponents say that the project helped to genuinely change university behaviour, steering institutions down a course more in tune with what they think is important.
As part of the project, the University of Tasmania had a âvery deepâ series of discussions about whether it should keep on expanding its student numbers, Mr Lock said, and ultimately decided to stay at its current size. Although managers were having this discussion before joining the project, âyou can argue that as a result of the process, they resisted the pressure to grow, grow, growâ, he explained.
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The University of Bologna decided to get involved when a new rector took over, and a PhD student suggested that the university should rethink what the institution stood for, explained Alessandra Scagliarini, vice-rector for international relations. âWhen we started our self-evaluation, we realised we didnât have any real statement of our identity,â she said.
Because of the universityâs student population of about 85,000, âit was not easy to reach everybodyâ, but in the end, Bologna came up with 10 new values â five of which are particularly important â using a combination of online polling and discussions of senior managers. For example, it now has a working group on research integrity, she said. âBefore, [concern over research integrity] was just a reaction to things that happened,â but now, the university is trying to be more proactive, she added.
At the University of Stockholm, staff jettisoned most of the existing university values and came up with new ones, Mr Lock said, while the University of Mauritius has altered its student induction process.
Others think success constitutes more subtle changes. You will know that the project has worked by noticing a âmyriad of small thingsâ rather than a âbig bangâ, according to Ella Richie, former deputy vice-chancellor of Newcastle University in the UK, and an ambassador who worked with Bologna. For example, if diversity is selected as a value, the university might need to monitor changes in student attitudes.
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In March this year, the Magna Charta ambassadors convened to discuss what worked and what did not (nine of the 10 universities have now submitted their final reports). One lesson was to try not to have too many values. âYou canât remember 15, but you can remember five,â Mr Lock said. Although the participating universities are continuing their engagement with the project â the idea is that change keeps happening â âweâve shown that you can get useful results out of this in a yearâ, he concluded.
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Print headline:Â Seeking university values to live by
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