Wednesday, April 15, 2015

On becoming a former dean

I am always asked: 

Do you miss being the dean?  (Not really!) 

How does it feel not being the dean? (I love being a former dean!) 

What are you doing now that you are retired? (I am not retired yet! I am on a sabbatical leave.) 

How is your book going? (I am not writing a book at this very moment!)  

I was inspired by some publications related to stepping up to come up with what I miss and what I do not miss about being dean, and what I like and what I do not like about my new role as former dean. (Hansen, 2004 and Shipley, 2003)  I must preface my lists, however, with how much I enjoyed my deanship and that I considered it an honor to have served for 12 ½ years as the dean of the School of Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania.  I also considered it a true privilege to have worked with an incredibly stellar group of faculty; to have hired some 43 new faculty whom I consider the future leaders of the School and the discipline as a whole; to have partnered with the most loyal and effective staff, as well as the most brilliant students, who are the future movers and shakers in health care.  How could anyone leave this # 1 School of Nursing without missing a great deal?  Yet, now that I am giving attention to other projects and initiatives that are near and dear to my scholarly heart, I consider being in the role of former dean as equally, if not more so, the best role that I have ever embarked on and adopted.  So let me first start with what I miss about being the dean.

What I miss about being the dean?
People, people, people - and the tons of relationships that come with the deanship
My immediate leadership team, dean colleagues and VP’s and our joint problem
solving and policy forming sessions
Advocating for faculty promotions
Making strategic faculty awards and appointments
Connecting faculty with exciting, new national and international opportunities
Welcoming and bidding goodbye to students upon admission and graduation and seeing the Kimmel Center full of excited and happy faces at graduation
Meeting with parents and hearing their experiences
Fireside chats with students at my house
Announcing celebratory faculty and student awards
Dancing during celebrations where staff desperately tried to teach me line dancing - to no avail
Welcoming international colleagues and telling them about our stellar faculty, bright students and effective staff
Identifying systems and process issues and insuring we have sustainable action plans
Interactions with many constituents – Board of Overseers, Alumni, Trustees, Communities, National Deans, etc.
Successful fundraising for the School
Hosting alumni events and gatherings
Presenting State of the School Address with the pride attached to the accomplishments of our communities and seeing our auditorium full with campus leadership, colleagues, students and faculty
Witnessing and being humbled by the generosity of our School supporters and friends
My parking spot to which my car was programmed to get to
Not having to carry my office key with me everywhere I go (the dean’s office was always open)

What I do not miss about being the dean?
A grueling 24/7 structured and packed calendar without enough time for each appointment
Having to say No to School community’s aspiring proposals due to budget, policies, time, etc.
Continuous thinking and working on budget and fundraising with inability to meet all demands and all strategic goals
Using plane and train rides for thinking time and for making to do lists
Complaints from, and about, faculty, students and staff from faculty, students and staff
Chicken and salmon meals, hence skipping many celebratory meals
Due to time constraints, giving similar and slightly refreshed welcome and goodbye remarks throughout the years
Having to close the School because of University decisions for snow days when important meetings, classes, etc. are planned
Not being with family for important celebrations and not being with close friends due to scheduling issues

What I absolutely love about being a former dean?
Having blocks of time to think, read, write, revisit, debate and challenge ideas, old and new
Reflecting on my intense deanship role and career and processing the meaning and outcomes of strategic decisions
Being invited to speak about transition theory, interprofessional education and women’s health, and witnessing global progress in each of these areas
Reconnecting with my international colleagues, friends and family
Having time to go to lectures and attend conferences and enjoy hallway serendipitous conversations and reconnecting with many old students and colleagues without having to rush conversations because of next urgent deanly appointments, deadlines or meetings
Working in my spacious home office while watching kids playing in Fitler Square
Decreasing the piles of files, articles and books (accumulated over several years) by sorting, reading and sending to the right people
Accommodating my grandchildren’s schedules instead of vice versa
Being considered the wise/experienced consultant, but not the implementer of strategies, ideas and actions

What I don’t like about being a former dean?
Questions about what it is like being retired, when in actuality I am working and on sabbatical (Hansen, 2004)
Not participating in School and University events by choice, hence missing dialogues, debates and people


References
Hansen, H. Reese. "Some Thoughts on Stepping Down after a Long Term of Deaning." University of Toledo Law Review. Vol 36 (2004): 69-72

Shipley, David E. "Resigning as Dean-Stepping down or Stepping Up." University of Toledo Law Review. Vol 35 (2003): 189-193

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