Pandemic Changes Trajectory for New University Presidents with Dr. Sam Horn| Changing Higher Ed 058

Published: Sept. 22, 2020, 6:01 a.m.

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The coronavirus pandemic has tested higher education leaders in unprecedented ways\\u2014and has upended the glacial pace of change at many institutions. The pandemic also is bringing changes in leadership. Many presidents are retiring or have said they will stay on for one more year to help the institution to move through this. This turnover means that many institutions have (or will have) new presidents who just took over as the pandemic started or are starting to assume their leadership roles during this pandemic.

This podcast\\u2019s guest is Dr. Sam Horn, the new president of The Master\\u2019s University and Seminary. His move into the presidency, originally scheduled for the start of June, was accelerated by the coronavirus pandemic.

Time Warp

COVID-19 has created a time warp. While this period is disconcerting, Dr. Horn also feels like this has been an interesting and exhilarating time that has energized the institution.

Master\\u2019s is in the coronavirus-hot zone in Los Angeles County. The restrictions in California are extremely pervasive and invasive so most colleges\\u2014especially those in LA County\\u2014are suffering. The economic hit that has come because of the pandemic has been crippling. It also has been compounded by the lack of federal and state guidance and the lack of timely information throughout the summer, which made it difficult for higher ed institutions, who are scrambling and playing catch-up because of it.

Still, the pandemic has given the still-new president and his team the impetus to help the institution move forward. Since taking over, Dr. Horn has led the institution\\u2019s team in planning and execution with the goal of helping the institution evolve over the next 2-3 years. For the immediate future, Master\\u2019s is focused on solidifying enrollment gains; establishing a solid strategy to identify and reconnect with the institution\\u2019s base; determining where the new markets are; and strategizing how to deliver education to constituents that is affordable, accessible and highly useful.

A New Presidency in the Time of COVID

Previously, most believed that the first 100 days of a presidency should be spent as an observer. This involves speaking into things, asking many questions and meeting key stakeholders. Over his three-decade career, Dr. Horn has embraced Peter Drucker\\u2019s saying, \\u201cCulture eats strategy for breakfast every time.\\u201d He believes that until a leader knows and understands the culture of the institution, all strategy will be hindered. Current employees don\\u2019t know how a new leader operates so until people come to know the new leader\\u2019s values and can trust that those values are more than words, it\\u2019s hard to get their commitment to implementing the strategy. Additionally, until the new leader knows the culture, it\\u2019s impossible to identify which strategies to implement.

Dr. Horn initially accepted the presidency in early February and was to start on June 1, thus giving him and the institutional stakeholders a period to get to know each other. He planned to ease into the role, and then when he began in June, he would begin a slow on-boarding process.

The pandemic has changed that.

When COVID hit, Master\\u2019s leadership transition plan had to be aborted, as the institution faced quick decisions that would have long-term impact on its functioning for years to come. The board felt that Dr. Horn needed to be leading this decision-making process. This accelerated the onboarding process, which became a \\u201cpedal to the metal\\u201d approach based on necessity.

COVID accelerated so many things just as the institution faced a number of major challenges that could not be ignored without harm. Dr. Horn said everyone on the team understood that the first 100-day waiting period needed to be put aside. He noted that everyone understood this change in plans was board- and COVID-driven, and everyone bought into the need for the presidency to be started in a different way than was planned.

The Challenges

Dr. Horn described a handful of challenges threatening The Master\\u2019s University and\\xa0 Seminary right after the pandemic started. He and the leadership team decided it was important to identify the values that would guide the institution\\u2019s decision-making process. As a Christian liberal arts university, The Master\\u2019s University\\u2019s leadership agreed on three critical values: do justly; love mercy; and walk humbly.

These challenges were:

  • Closing the campus, which was Dr. Horn\\u2019s first decision. The institution extended spring break before the California governor decided to shut down the state. That opened up a number of questions -- Would people who were bound to the college campus be unable to leave? Did it mean if they were out of state, they couldn\\u2019t come back? Dr. Horn said the institution made the difficult but right decision to close, which was done several days before the stay-at-home order came down from the state. He credits many institutional leaders and faculty members with helping the institution pivot on a dime.
  • Refunding room and board fees. Because Master\\u2019s is small and has tight margins, refunding money was a difficult budgetary decision. However, Dr. Horn said the institution went back to the values driving decision-making and decided to refund the money. Interestingly, on the last day of the fiscal year, the university\\u2019s CFO came to Dr. Horn and said, \\u201cYou\\u2019re not going to believe this.\\u201d The institution finished almost $1 million in the black.
  • The institution had seen declining enrollment for many years\\u2014and anticipated that COVID would accelerate that trend. Dr. Horn got the enrollment teams from the institution and the seminary together to work on the issue. This approach led to a 6% increase across the board and Master\\u2019s had the highest new student numbers that they\\u2019ve had in a decade.
  • The institution was facing issues with accreditation. However, with the assistance of Dr. Drumm McNaughton, the university\\u2019s accreditation and governance consultant, they had a strong accreditation visit and anticipate a good report in the coming weeks.

Tactical and Strategic Approaches

Noting that much of his career has been spent in higher education management at the cabinet or vice president level, Dr. Horn has learned that only addressing immediate challenges created by COVID (such as focusing only on the reopening plan) would mean missing incredible opportunities to look at the institution\\u2019s context and situation within higher education.

He pointed out that there are many contexts within higher education, which include:

  • Community college or university
  • University instruction focused on professional training, liberal arts or a mix
  • Categories within private, independent universities, including one called Christian universities

Master\\u2019s is in a small subset of Christian liberal arts universities. Leaders of institutions who fall into this subset have known for a while that massive changes have been coming to this niche. COVID has accelerated these changes so leaders are forced to consider how to navigate the various tidal waves coming at the institution, whether it\\u2019s the pandemic\\u2019s crises, demographics, the birth dearth, the broken financial aid model or changes in where potential students live. Basically, Dr. Horn noted, the higher education model has become unsustainable.

COVID has forced presidents and senior leaders to think beyond the moment, because higher education is not going back to what previously existed. The present ways of operating are unsupportable; too much has been uncovered.

Additionally, there are too many factors that have come together in the population\\u2019s mind based on what they\\u2019ve heard from the news media, e.g., higher education is now facing the greatest challenge to its credibility in the eyes of the public. For decades, the public has bought into the idea that the path to the future requires a four-year degree. Now the public\\u2019s mind has changed.

Institutional leaders must come to realize that the true end users of higher education\\u2019s degree programs are the employers who hire graduates \\u2013 that higher ed is part of the \\u201ctalent supply chain.\\u201d The employers also are saying that the higher education system is broken because it is not training students to succeed in the workforce. Because higher education is not producing graduates who are ready to step into the jobs that are available, employers are moving to other options, such as credentialing.

The only way forward for higher education is forward. That means coming up with new ways to do business, especially at smaller institutions.

Three Recommendations for New Higher Education Leaders

Dr. Horn suggested three takeaways for new higher education leaders:

  • Be positive. In a culture of fear, fear can set the agenda. Someone has to help people rise above the fears and show the way forward.
  • Be proactive. Get ahead of the curve.
  • Be prepared and be informed, both in higher education and out of higher education. Dr. Horn recommends three books \\u2013 \\u201cPivot: A Vision for the New University\\u201d by Joanne Soliday and Mark Lombardi, \\u201cSurviving to Thriving\\u201d by Joanne Soliday and \\u201cThere is Life After College\\u201d by Jeffery Selingo.

Bullet Points

  • The pandemic has created an unprecedented wave of change in higher education. It\\u2019s important for higher education leaders and their teams to think strategically about their next moves.
  • The pandemic also has changed the induction process for many new higher education presidents. They no longer have the luxury of spending months assessing the situation. Now they need to be able to create strategic movement.
  • Many new leaders find that they are facing significant issues as they start their presidency. In Dr. Horn\\u2019s case, these issues included the campus\\u2019s closure in March as the pandemic moved through, refunds and the effect on the institution\\u2019s budget, enrollment, and accreditation.
  • Leaders have the opportunity to think more strategically at this point thanks to COVID. Instead of focusing only on smaller decisions (such as closing the campus), institutions need to think about what they need to be in the future. This conversation is made even more important because of declining credibility among both the general public and business leaders. It\\u2019s important for higher education leaders to now envision a new way to do business.

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