Research or management? An investigation of the impact of leadership roles on the research performance of academic administrators

  • Wen Lou
  • , Yuehua Zhao*
  • , Yuchen Chen
  • , Jin Zhang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study quantitatively investigated whether the research performance of academic administrators (leaders) was affected by their administrative services. We sampled 111 academic administrators, including 90 department deans and 21 university presidents, from 26 universities. These leaders’ research performance was determined by the number of their publications and citations in the Web of Science databases. To compare the effect on their research performance by their administrative roles, we proposed four periods: the pre-position period, the latest position period, the reference period, and the in-position period. Statistical methods were applied to compare the research performance of the sampled administrators before and after they accepted the current administrative roles. The results suggest that 80% of academic leaders’ productivity and citation have fallen by 42 and 62% averagely. The extent of such impact varied in different disciplines. Leaders’ performance in medicine fields has declined the most (60%). The impact on research productivity appeared to be stronger for administrators serving in higher-ranking universities. In addition, the research performance of both university presidents and department deans were substantially influenced by their administrative services.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)191-209
Number of pages19
JournalScientometrics
Volume117
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2018

Keywords

  • Administrative roles
  • Career path
  • Leadership
  • Research performance

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