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Leading from a distance: starting av-c job during lockdown

Covid-19 ushered in a very different first 100 days for new University of Auckland head Dawn Freshwater

Published on
July 13, 2020
Last updated
July 15, 2020
University of Auckland vice-chancellor Dawn Freshwater

The first 100 days are considered now-or-never opportunities for incoming leaders to disrupt entrenched practices ever since newly installed president Franklin D. Roosevelt took swift action to steer the US out of the Great Depression.

But in Dawn Freshwaters case, disruption was foisted on her by a pandemic that forced her to spend her first 100 or so days leading the University of Auckland from lockdown.

The former University of Western Australia vice-chancellor arrived in Auckland on 15March and started work the next day. The ramping-up of coronavirus restrictions led to the closure of campuses on 25March, and Professor Freshwater, who had only set foot on campus for two days, would not return until early June.

I had hardly met any of the team, she said. Ihad no coordinates or orientation whatsoever. Then Ihad to make a decision to get everybody off campus.

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Ideally, she said, new leaders start by taking soundings on the organisations atmosphere, culture and potential. Ididnt have any intelligence about the institution. Ihad information, but Ididnt really have intelligence. Ihad to work very quickly to scale up that knowledge and make decisions [because] we had to act immediately.

I got to know the potential of the institution by how people reacted the capability to go fully online, literally within the space of three days, and to get 1,600 programmes up and running, albeit not perfectly. Its been fascinating to see what can be achieved very quickly. Were talked about as monolithic institutions, as not very agile. Weve fractured that concept.

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Professor Freshwater said the pandemic, along with Australias summer bushfires and the turbulence in Hong Kong, suggested that crisis management should now be considered part of vice-chancellors armoury. She says she had benefited from the transferable skills developed in acute hospital settings while working in mental health in the UK.

When you have major incidents, everything else is put to one side, she said. The crash trolley is coming, so you make decisions in that context and afterwards debrief on what you could have done better.

Of course, wed like a longer run-up and a bit more time to reflect. But the reality is that youre faced with a task [where] everybody has to go home, the campus has to be secured, the student experience has to continue. Who wouldve thought that becoming a vice-chancellor in contemporary society means crisis leadership is a critical skill set?

The pandemic also ushered a very steep learning curve on Maori and Pacific culture. Professor Freshwater said she had anticipated taking time to study the distinct status of New Zealands Indigenous people and the universitys obligations to them under the 19th-century Treaty of Waitangi between Britain and Maori chiefs.

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Such insights needed to be factored into her decision-making from the outset, she said, but plans for a Maori staff member to mentor her fell through. Stuck behind a desk for three months, she found it equally difficult to cultivate an understanding of the Samoan, Tongan and other Pacific communities that stamp their character on Auckland.

Professor Freshwater said the lockdown also sharpened up administrators sense of what is missing when you dont have a campus-based experience. Zoom-based chats with students about their reasons for choosing Auckland proved telling.

Of course its about reputation, the programme and the research-led teaching; but its much more than that its about the whole experience of being on the campus, the engagement, the opportunities to interact, the diversity, that feeling of belonging, she said.

Its great to do all the stuff were doing by digital means, but theres not alot of humanity in zeros and ones. Were not 啦堯梗泭紼硃喧娶勳單.

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Professor Freshwater said the pandemic had revived a trust in evidence that has been challenged in recent years. It gives us a really good opportunity to rehabilitate expertise.

It has also delivered new opportunities for two neighbouring island nations with strong ties, shared values, world-leading infectious disease control expertise and globally acclaimed controlled adaptation strategies. We have a great opportunity to work together with our parallel experiences, she said.

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Covid has laid waste to jobs, industries and supply chains. We can either bemoan that fact or think about how we have disciplines working together. Australia and New Zealand have managed the Covid crisis very well. The risk is that having managed it, we miss the opportunity.

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: V-cs start in lockdown was crash course in leadership

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