Source: Alamy
Among the pigeons: research found that âhigher management scores are associated with better performanceâ
Departments in older, research-intensive universities are better managed, according to a new study that challenges âthe commonly held viewâ that academics are âimpervious to good (or bad) managementâ.
There is âa growing body of research that has demonstrated that good management practices improve firm performanceâ across all business sectors, say University of Bristol academics John McCormack, Carol Propper and Sarah Smith, in the paper ââ.
But does this also apply within universities or is there something that distinguishes academics from âworkers in most other organisations in ways that may make management tools less effectiveâ?
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In order to assess this claim, the authors measured âcore operations-oriented management practices (monitoring of performance, setting targets and use of incentives)â in individual university departments. They then tracked these against âexternally assessed measures of performance in both research and teachingâ, namely rankings on the Complete University Guide website and performance in the 2008 research assessment exercise and the National Student Survey.
What emerged was that standard management techniques work even in academia: âhigher management scores are associated with better performance on externally validated measures of both research and teachingâ. With regard to specific tools, âgood practice with respect to incentives â the freedom to retain, attract and reward good performers â is the most important correlate of good performanceâ. Far less significant were target-setting and monitoring policies such as performance tracking and review, despite having proved their worth in other sectors.
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The authors also consider variation between types of university. Even after controlling for resources they point to âsignificant differencesâ in student satisfaction as well as research performance. Russell Group universities âtypically score highest on measures of performance, followed by the other old universities, the former polytechnics and the other new universitiesâ.
Part of the explanation, they suggest, is that âdepartments in older and more research-intensive universities tend to be better managed than departments in newer and more teaching-focused universitiesâ. They note that âuniversities that decentralise incentives to the department level score more highly and this decentralisation is more common in the elite universitiesâ.
Asked to comment on the paper, management expert Adrian Furnham, professor of psychology at University College London, said that there were âseveral features that make university management different and universities strange places to work inâ, where academics âreceive conflicting messages about being entrepreneurial, self-sufficient, etc, when they find their efforts are in reality highly controlledâ.
He said that the reporting structure in universities was âunmanageable and unclear. Most dons have never been asked the simple question: âTo whom do you report?â They havenât the slightest idea.â
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Professor Furnham added that even if academics know to whom they report, there may still be about 50 people in a big department reporting to one person.
âThe simple span-of-control idea, a Weberian concept, goes out of the window. Nobody can manage 50 direct reports, particularly if they are maverick dons,â he said.
âHerding Cats? Management and University Performanceâ has just been published online in The Economic Journal.
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