While one cannot but applaud 鈥渃hange initiatives鈥 of the kind described by Steve Olivier, deputy vice-chancellor (academic) at Abertay University, it is inaccurate to view 鈥渕ost universities as monolithic, conservative, bureaucratic and resistant to change鈥 because of ordinary academics who resist the enlightened vision of 鈥渃hange managers鈥: vice-chancellors and deputy vice-chancellors (鈥How to manage rapid change鈥, Features, 1 October).
Universities throughout their history have proved to be very malleable institutions 鈥 they would have not survived to this day without change, hence the narrative of the immutable university is a historical fallacy. Equally inaccurate is the portrayal of ordinary members of staff as diehard stick-in-the-muds. While some transitions have been reluctantly accepted over the years, staff are willing to embrace change, provided that it stems from a widely shared set of values.
These are times of change in Scotland, where the proposed Scottish higher education governance bill is encountering fierce resistance from universities鈥 leadership despite several progressive aspects. Who would have thought that the status quo would be deemed preferable to a modern emphasis on transparency and accountability?
Anna Notaro
Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, University of Dundee
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