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Description

While higher education leaders often cite leadership development as a priority, few institutions treat it as a teachable, measurable skill. In this episode of Changing Higher Ed®, host Dr. Drumm McNaughton speaks with Dr. Scott Cowen about why leadership education should be integrated into the academic curriculum—and how institutions can implement it effectively.

President Emeritus of Tulane University, Cowen shares insights from leading the university through Hurricane Katrina and from his new book, Lead and Succeed, which outlines strategies to develop leadership skills in students and early-career professionals. He dispels the “born leader” myth and offers a framework for embedding leadership development at every level of the institution.

This conversation is especially relevant for presidents, trustees, and academic leaders seeking to build leadership capacity across campus.

Topics Covered:

Real-World Examples Discussed:

Three Key Takeaways for Leadership:

  1. Formalize leadership education. Establish structured academic courses with measurable outcomes. Integrate mentoring and reflection into the curriculum to build leadership competencies.

  2. Develop repeatable crisis leadership practices. Use structured daily meetings and transparent communications to align institutional response during disruption.

  3. Implement strategic succession planning. Treat leadership transitions as long-term planning initiatives. Build internal pipelines and normalize leadership exits to support institutional continuity.

This episode offers a practical framework for establishing a leadership-ready culture in higher education academic curricula. 

Recommended For: Presidents, provosts, deans, academic affairs leaders, trustees, and student success strategists.

Read the transcript: https://changinghighered.com/leadership-development-academic-curriculum-design-in-higher-ed/

 

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