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The books every university leader should read

The book is far from obsolete. Our feature recommends key texts for students, and one v-c looks to Machiavelli for advice

Published on
April 14, 2016
Last updated
April 15, 2016
Human head-shaped bookshelf stacked with books
Source: iStock

Who has time for books when there*s an image to be maintained on Facebook, witticisms to be dispensed to Twitter, and selfies dispatched via Snapchat?

Teenagers, we*re told, are so consumed by digital that they struggle to fit in face-to-face social lives (note the declining teen pregnancy rate), let alone read novels.

It*s not only teens who face greater digital demands on their time. Take the most prolific tweeter among UK vice-chancellors: Dominic Shellard, of De Montfort University, has tweeted almost 40,000 times, which equates to about 600,000 words 每 more, apparently, than in War and Peace. Whatever your age or position, such digital dedication is bound to eat into time to do other things (and I speak as someone who has tweeted 8,000 times myself).

So in our cover story this week, we ask academics to suggest one title they*d urge undergraduates to read before they head off to university.

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In a similar vein, and knowing how pressed for time vice-chancellors are, I conducted a straw poll of university leaders, asking what single book they would recommend to prospective v-cs to prepare them for the rigours of the top job.

Shellard*s choice isn*t Tolstoy but John Kotter*s Leading Change, which he says was recommended to him by Sir Keith Burnett, his old boss at the University of Sheffield, ※with a mischievous, knowing smile which said that this would save me months of false moves. It was a revelation. Clear, accessible and appealingly persuasive, it steadied my nerves for the task ahead.§

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- Scholars choose &essential* texts to introduce sixth-formers to the academy


As a former head of the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Sir David Eastwood*s choice is less obviously from the management canon: he recommends Alexis de Tocqueville*s L*Ancien R谷gime et la R谷volution, and suggests that it*s OK to read it in translation, ※but try to quote from it in French§.

It is, he says, ※a truly great book and a profound exploration of the interplay between ideas, political culture, and structures. It explains how a regime worked, modernised, atrophied and collapsed. It warns against the dangers of over-centralisation, and memorably concludes that &the most dangerous time for a bad government is when it seeks to reform itself*.§ John Cater, vice-chancellor of Edge Hill University, says that his advice would be ※no 1970s management theory, no business process re-engineering, and as few operating objectives and performance measures as you can sensibly get away with§.

※Rather, vision, communication, culture, ethos, strategy. Go back 2,300 years and try Philip Freeman*s 2011 biography of Alexander the Great, the glory not the dirt, the civilising not the brutalising. And avoid the tainted wine. You*ll only ever be Alexandr(a) the Tolerable, but at least you*ve lived past 32.§

For Dame Nancy Rothwell, of the University of Manchester, Stefan Collini*s What Are Universities For? is a must-read 每 so much so that she gave a copy to each of her governors. ※Thoughtful, provocative and amusing, I don*t agree with all of Stefan*s conclusions, but I fully agree with his answer to the question in the title, which is that universities are basically for the public good. This is something that a new v-c should be mindful of,§ she advises.

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Finally, Christina Slade, vice-chancellor of Bath Spa University, has two options to prepare future v-cs for their game of thrones: ※My choice is Machiavelli, The Prince,§ she says. ※If you need another, Hilary Mantel*s Bring up the Bodies

john.gill@tesglobal.com

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Reader's comments (1)

Nice suggestions. I can suggest a career builder and a must read for all and especially for the Techies. The name of the Book is "Inside The Tech Interview" http://insidethetechinterview.com

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