2010
DOI: 10.1002/cc.397
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Beyond the headlines: Wounding and the community college presidency

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Affirming prior research (Ackerman & Maslin-Ostrowski, 2002), we found that sooner or later community college presidents were immersed in a crisis situation, such as losing support on the board or being falsely accused, and themes of vulnerability, power, isolation, and fear emerged in their stories (Floyd et al, 2010).…”
Section: Certainty Of Crisissupporting
confidence: 69%
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“…Affirming prior research (Ackerman & Maslin-Ostrowski, 2002), we found that sooner or later community college presidents were immersed in a crisis situation, such as losing support on the board or being falsely accused, and themes of vulnerability, power, isolation, and fear emerged in their stories (Floyd et al, 2010).…”
Section: Certainty Of Crisissupporting
confidence: 69%
“…Although this line of inquiry focused on school leaders, the methodology and concepts are helpful to understanding how higher education leaders experience a crisis (Ackerman & Maslin-Ostrowski, 2004;Floyd, Maslin-Ostrowski, & Hrabak, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Grasmick, Davies, and Harbour (2012) report the value of leaders' vision when implementing participation and shared decisionmaking and Hlinka (2013) One area of interest shown by a number of researchers deals with crises management in relation to sudden changes in leadership. Several articles outline guidelines for presidents when encountering crises (Floyd, Maslin-Ostrowski, and Hrabak 2010;Floyd and Maslin-Ostrowski 2013;Thompson, Cooper, and Ebbers 2012) which can be exacerbated by personal cyber attacks in the social media (Maslin-Ostrowski, Floyd, and Hrabak 2011). Maslin-Ostrowski and Floyd (2012) describe the experiences of a number of college presidents and their sense of isolation when terminated or resigning under pressure and how preplanning could have given them more of a sense of leaving on their own terms.…”
Section: Community College Leadership In the United Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although they studied leaders who had encountered a crisis or dilemma in K-12 settings, the guiding questions and methodology have natural extensions to higher education leaders as well (Floyd & Casey, 2004); our focus is on community college presidents. This paper builds on our previous work (Floyd, Maslin-Ostrowski, & Hrabak, 2010) where we analyzed archival articles and posts dating from 2003-2008 reported in the Chronicle of Higher Education and Google that described campus conflicts or crises faced by community college presidents. In that study, four key phrases and words: ''community college president,'' ''fired,'' ''no confidence,'' and ''conflict,'' had to be present to be considered a ''hit.''…”
Section: Leaders and Crisismentioning
confidence: 98%