PRESENTING SUPERB RESEARCH THAT ADVANCES THE FIELD OF EDUCATION
Learning to See the University
Power, Practice, and Improvement in Academic Systems
- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509798
- Language English
- Pages 100 pp.
- Size 5.5" x 8.5"
- Request Exam Copy
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- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509804
- Language English
- Pages 100 pp.
- Size 5.5" x 8.5"
- Request E-Exam Copy
Learning to See the University: Power, Practice, and Improvement in Academic Systems is a sharp and reflective exploration of power, policy, and survival in modern higher education. Written in the spirit of Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince, the book translates political realism into the everyday governance of universities, where authority operates through committees, budgets, rankings, accreditation, and carefully managed narratives rather than formal command.
Neither parody nor exposé, Learning to See the University offers a clear-eyed account of how universities function beneath the language of shared governance and collegiality. Drawing on systems thinking and Improvement Science, it explains why reforms stall, why innovation must often appear as continuity, and why leadership in higher education is shaped more by timing, incentives, and legitimacy than by vision alone.
Structured as a modern adaptation of Machiavelli, each chapter reimagines concepts such as virtù, fortuna, fear, reputation, and loyalty within the academic ecosystem. Departments emerge as semi-sovereign fiefdoms, committees as instruments of stability, rankings as tools of perception, and crises as catalysts for change.
The tone is accessible, wry, and reflective. Humor provides distance without cynicism, allowing readers to recognize familiar institutional patterns while gaining clarity rather than frustration. New administrators will find a survival guide; experienced leaders will recognize a mirror.
Intended for provosts, deans, department chairs, and graduate students in higher education leadership, Learning to See the University is suited for doctoral programs, leadership seminars, and administrative retreats. Ultimately, it is not a guide to manipulation, but an argument for realism with conscience—and for leading universities with wisdom, restraint, and integrity.
Perfect for courses such as: Higher Education Leadership; College and University Administration; Higher Education Policy and Politics; Institutional Research and Effectiveness; Strategic Planning in Higher Education; Change and Innovation in Higher Education; Finance and Budgeting in Higher Education; Higher Education Law and Ethics; Leadership Theory in Education; Organizational Theory in Education; Systems Thinking and Improvement in Higher Education
Author’s Note
Preface
How to Read This Book
For Discussion and Reflection
Letter to the Reader
Part I—The Nature of the Academic Realm
I. Of Types of Universities and How They Are Governed
He who would understand universities must first accept that every one believes itself exceptional.
II. On Acquiring New Programs and Keeping Them
Programs are easily born of enthusiasm and lost to accounting.
III. Of Donors, Legislators, and Regents (The External Lords)
Those who do not labor in the university still command it through purse and praise.
IV. Whether It Is Better to Be Feared or Loved by Faculty (and How to Avoid Being Despised)
Fear ensures compliance; affection ensures forgiveness; respect endures both.
V. Of Managing Departments as Vassal States
Departments cannot be ruled, only budgeted.
Part II—The Instruments of Power and Policy
VI. On the Use of Committees
When many deliberate, none decide, and peace is preserved.
VII. On Reputation and Rankings (The Power of Appearances)
Prestige, once achieved, excuses mediocrity for generations.
VIII. On Adjuncts, Graduate Labor, and the Army You Actually Have
The university marches on invisible feet.
IX. On Allies and Enemies
Allies confer advantage; enemies confer clarity.
X. On Innovation Without Rebellion
The secret of change is to call it continuity.
XI. On Handling Crises
He who controls the narrative survives the scandal.
XII. On Data, Dashboards, and the Illusion of Control
Numbers persuade most when they reveal the least.
Part III—Of Fortune, Legacy, and Liberation
XIII. On Succession and Legacy
Policies outlive their authors; authors outlive their reputations.
XIV. On Fortune, Timing, and Political Weather
Leadership is not mastery of fortune, but grace under its storms.
XV. Exhortation to Liberate the University
To govern the mind is impossible, yet to serve it is divine.
Afterword—Written from the Author’s Study, 2025
In which the author, having survived both provosts and policies, offers affection disguised as irony.
Publisher Notes
About the Authors
The Provost Reflects
Index
NOTE: Table of Contents subject to change up until publication date.
Michael Odell
Michael R.L. Odell, PhD, has spent more than three decades inside the strange republic of higher education — as professor, program founder, administrator, and occasional heretic. He has written strategic plans, accreditation reports, and improvement initiatives that all promised transformation — and sometimes delivered it. He believes in the improbable resilience of the university and the quiet decency of those who still make it work. He currently serves as Professor of STEM Education at The University of Texas at Tyler, where he teaches, writes, and continues to mentor those brave enough to lead from within. He dedicates this work to the faculty, staff, and administrators who, despite bureaucracy and budget spreadsheets, keep learning alive through persistence, humor, and hope.