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Your Career: Leading Through Emotional Exhaustion

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Mon, Jun 14, 2021 11:07 AM

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Are academe’s managers talking enough about mental health and wellness? ADVERTISEMENT You’

Are academe’s managers talking enough about mental health and wellness? ADVERTISEMENT [Advertisement]( [logo] Was this newsletter forwarded to you? [Please sign up to receive your own copy.]( You’ll support our journalism and ensure that you continue to receive our emails. [Read this newsletter on the web](. Are academe's managers talking enough about mental health and wellness? Working and leading through turbulent times make it difficult to put your best professional foot forward, day in and day out. Sure, the work still needs to be done. Managers still must hold teams accountable, ask for updates, and resolve problems. But if 2020-21 taught us anything, it’s that campuses won’t succeed in the long term if managers do not take care of the people they manage. Leading through emotional exhaustion is not easy. It demands sophisticated soft skills. It means learning how to motivate a team, raise morale, and demonstrate empathy. It requires those of you who are managers to put aside your own feelings and focus on other people’s needs. That can be difficult with a large team, especially if the leader is stressed and emotionally exhausted, too. Remember: A few bad days do not represent someone’s overall ability or personality. A few meetings where the tone of someone’s comments is off does not make that a habitual problem. A few mistakes or absent-minded errors do not make someone a screw-up. Yet leaders often spend more time offering negative feedback — harping on mistakes — than celebrating all the things employees do right. And, sadly, that is understandable in difficult times, when managers may focus on the negative because they are under pressure to “fix” things. No one is suggesting that academic managers ignore repeated mistakes or avoid reprimanding employees if it is deserved. But we are in different times, and leaders need to think about why a problem in someone’s work is important to bring up now, and how to deliver the message. Continue reading: "[How to Manage Through Emotional Exhaustion]( by Kerry L. O’Grady Share your thoughts and suggestions on the newsletter with Denise Magner, an editor at The Chronicle, at denise.magner@chronicle.com. If you'd like to opt out, you can log in to our website and [manage your newsletter preferences here](. ADVERTISEMENT [Advertisement]( Subscribe to The Chronicle The Chronicle’s award-winning journalism challenges conventional wisdom, holds academic leaders accountable, and empowers you to do your job better — and it’s your support that makes our work possible. [Subscribe Today]( Latest Career Advice, Opinion, and News WORK FORCE [Inside One University’s Hybrid-Work Decision]( By Lindsay Ellis [image] The University of Utah’s decision-making process for its new telecommuting rules can serve as a guide for other colleges making similar transitions. Paid for and Created by Rice University [Elevating Leadership Development in Higher Education]( Focused on sharing best practices to maximize the effectiveness of leadership programs, learn how the Doerr Institute at Rice University is elevating the practice of leadership education and development in higher education. ADVERTISEMENT [Advertisement]( ADVICE [How to Obtain (and Survive) a Meaningful ‘Administrator Review’]( By Jeffrey Ratje [image] Senior administrators oversee a lot of performance evaluations, but what happens when they are the ones in the spotlight? THE MASK DEBATE [More Colleges Are Going Mask-Optional — Some by Choice, Others by Law]( By Megan Zahneis [image] In an early sign of an anticipated “return to normal” this fall, a wave of colleges have announced they’re ending or loosening their mask mandates. ADVICE [Who Chooses What Ed Tech to Buy for the College Classroom?]( By Jenae Cohn [image] Decision-making silos are the likely culprit behind disappointing digital teaching tools. CAMPUS SAFETY [Was This Antiracist Task Force Set Up to Fail?]( By Sarah Brown [image] This spring the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor tried to confront racial bias in campus policing. It got complicated. Today's Global Campus Strategies for Reviving International Enrollments and Study Abroad Pandemic travel restrictions cut both ways, causing international enrollments to plummet and limiting study-abroad opportunities. This Chronicle report provides an in-depth look at how the global education experience has changed and offers strategies for assessing and adapting programs to ensure students' exposure to cultural and global diversity. [Order your copy today.]( What we're reading. Here's more on career issues and trends from around the web. See something we should include? [Let me know](mailto:denise.magner@chronicle.com?subject=Your Career feedback). - In “[You Can’t Cure Your Employee’s Existential Crisis]( You Can Help]( a management professor offers three ways to retain employees who are seeking more meaning in their lives. - An essayist in Science magazine [writes about Covid impact statements]( and wonders why it took a global pandemic for institutions to ask their scientists for a realistic account of their work challenges. - Can you ask your colleagues if they’ve had a Covid vaccine? The New York Times’s [Ethicist column]( tackles that question. - Some institutions, including [Penn State]( are letting faculty members ask to teach remotely in the fall semester. Job Announcement Dean, School of Dental Medicine at Boston University. [Visit jobs.chronicle.com]( for more details. More Career Resources LIVE CORONAVIRUS UPDATES [Here’s a List of Colleges That Will Require Students or Employees to Be Vaccinated Against Covid-19]( By Andy Thomason and Brian O’Leary [image] More colleges are mandating vaccinations. Here are the ones we know about. DATA [How Many Black Women Have Tenure on Your Campus? Search Here]( By Audrey Williams June and Brian O’Leary [image] The stalled tenure bid by Nikole Hannah-Jones at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has shined a light on the anemic rates at which colleges award tenure to Black female professors. DATA [State Funding for Higher Ed Increased in 2020 for the 8th Straight Year. It Won’t Make Up for Past Cuts.]( By Audrey Williams June [image] In 25 states, students now account for at least half of total education revenue. [Faculty and Staff Salaries at More Than 4,700 Colleges]( [Browse the data]( by state, sector, and Carnegie classification, and break out salaries by institution, rank, and gender. Job Opportunities [Tenure-Track Faculty Position in Anti-Racism By Design]( University of Michigan [Dean, School of Dental Medicine]( Boston University [Open Faculty Position in the Howard University Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology]( Howard University [Vice President of Academic Affairs]( Danville Area Community College [Chancellor]( City College of San Francisco [Cal U Faculty Positions in Biology, Radiologic Technology & Communication Disorders/Health & Human Services]( California University of Pennsylvania [Research Biologist / Social Scientist]( USDA Agricultural Research Service [Rutgers Business School Tenured Associate or Full Professor of Marketing]( Rutgers University - New Brunswick [Search the Chronicle's jobs database]( to view the latest jobs in higher education. What did you think of today’s newsletter? [Strongly disliked]( // [It was OK]( // [Loved it](. [logo]( This newsletter was sent to {EMAIL}. [Manage]( your newsletter preferences, [stop receiving]( this email, or [view]( our privacy policy. © 2021 [The Chronicle of Higher Education]( 1255 23rd Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037

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