Best Careers 2009: Higher Education Administrator

December 11, 2008 RSS Feed Print

Overview. If you liked attending college, chances are you'll like working there, too. Compared with most office environments, college surroundings are beautiful, the atmosphere intellectually stimulating, and the work hours more forgiving. And things really lighten up in the summer. For better or worse, there are lots of management jobs on campus because university bureaucracies tend to be large, from student affairs to academic affairs, admission to alumni affairs, physical plant to student health service. The job market is projected to be strong and, unlike so many teaching positions that are part time/temp/ and have few benefits, most administration positions are full time, benefited, and relatively permanent.

One downside: Office politics can be brutal. Political correctness also bothers some people, who feel that holding liberal views is a litmus test for getting hired or promoted. Many administrator positions require a master's or Ph.D. Universities sell degrees, after all. They need to practice what they preach.

A Day in the Life. You review your budget to discover that the college's urban outreach program is spending too much money. So, you schedule a meeting with that program's manager. Next, you interview a series of candidates for residence hall supervisor. Then, a parent comes in furious that her child's dormitory roommates are pot smokers: "Can you even monitor that?" she fumes. You use your people skills to calm her down and assure her you'll bring up the issue at the next housing staff meeting. You're glad that your final task of the day is to conduct an evaluation of your favorite staff member.

Smart Specialties

Student Affairs/Student Life. The work is unusually pleasant: You spend your day dealing with orientation, residence hall activities, and student clubs and organizations. Competition for these jobs is less rigorous than for academic ones, so you can often get your first job with just a bachelor's degree with nearly any major, although a master's in college student affairs will help you move up.

Learn more: NAPSA Student Affairs Careers Page

Community College positions. Growth in this sector is expected to be particularly strong, with ever weaker high school students encouraged to consider postsecondary education and more adults seeking retraining.

Salary Data

Median (with eight years in the field): $61,400

25th to 75th percentile (with eight or more years of experience): $59,000-$115,000

(Data provided by PayScale.com)

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Tags:
colleges,
education,
careers

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People always ask two questions about the state of higher education today: (i), is our children learning; and (ii), why does college tuition keep rising faster than inflation? Thanks for pointing out a possible answer. According to your article, higher education administration is a top-30 growth industry in today's economy, paying above-average salaries, up to six figures. "Unlike.....teaching," presumably the true purpose of higher education. Meanwhile, the crusty old liberal professors are being replaced by adjuncts, or "temps" with "few benefits." Having identified this trend, where do you suppose it takes us?

fred276 of OH 4:27PM January 20, 2010

It might be true that holding liberal views is a litmus test for getting hired, but that does not mean the colleges are biased; in other settings, holding conservative views is a litmus test. In the US the dominant view is that unregulated capitalism is better than mixing capitalism with regulation. Is that liberal or conservative? Its conservative, and its often the dominant view in college. Lynn Cheney has become an activist to agitate against those who find evidence of crimes committed in government, and much pressure has been exerted against professors that have identified false statements or fraud in government reports produced by NIST and FEMA. The University of Chicago has been producing almost incompetently ideological (right wing) economics for decades. If there were pressure to be liberal, we (any of us in college) would have heard about the dissents of CIA agents who regretted having been required to undermine human rights around the world. People would know the degree to which big money controls politics, and how much easier it has been in other countries to provide people the dignity of services such as affordable health care. If there is pressure in some places to not be a right wing *ideologue, it might be because truth has a moderate (not right or left) slant. Note Georgetown and Berkley had no qualms about hiring almost-fascist demagogues named Feith and Yoo. Almost all universities failed to see the massive disinformation promulgated about weapons of mass destruction. That is conservative, not liberal.

John of IN 2:49PM January 06, 2010

I definitely have to agree that the salary information is incorrect. I have 13 years of experience and am only making $46,800. The reality is that with universities receiving less aid from the government while the same government officials are implementing tuition caps, layoffs, salary decreases, and benefit slashes are more realistic. I was shocked that this industry was recommended as a top career in this economy. Until the federal government starts recognizing the importance of higher education (and begins funding institutions again), adminstrators within higher education settings will continue to face downsizing and the never ending challenge of doing more with significantly less.

OH Admin of OH 9:03AM December 22, 2009

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