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The misalignment between accounting faculty perceptions of success and organizational image during a process of institutional change

Silvia Pereira de Castro Casa Nova (Department of Accounting and Actuarial Science, University of Sao Paulo School of Economics, Business and Accountancy, São Paulo, Brazil)
Isabel Costa Lourenço (ISCTE – Instituto Universitário de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal)
Renato Ferreira LeitãoAzevedo (Department of Educational Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign College of Education, Urbana, Illinois, USA)

International Journal of Organizational Analysis

ISSN: 1934-8835

Article publication date: 5 November 2018

372

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to analyse the impacts of an institutional change process on a specific higher education institution in Europe and the trade-offs between the faculty perceptions of success and the organization image during this process, in light of the identity institutional theory.

Design/methodology/approach

The impacts of this institutional change are analysed and discussed based on in-depth interviews conducted with faculty members of the accounting department in which they reflected upon academic success vis-a-vis the career assessment system adopted, followed up by those faculty members’ answering an electronic questionnaire about organizational identity and image perception (Gioia et al., 2000).

Findings

Considering the individual perspectives, faculty are concerned about their vocations and aspirations, with feelings of apprehension and insecurity, perceiving the institutional goals as too high and potentially unattainable. By shifting the priority towards research, costs in terms of losing the institutional excellence in teaching might arise, which has been traditionally keen to the institute’s organizational identity and consistent with faculty’s perceptions of academic success.

Research limitations/implications

As in any research endeavour, some limitations might emerge. First, the authors addressed the context of a specific business school, in a European country. It is certainly true that culture plays a role in terms of both organizational and national levels. The authors acknowledge this as a limitation. Nevertheless, this research takes a “local” stance, the logic of academic evaluation and its impacts on institutional and individual identity formation processes is a worldwide phenomenon. Second, in defining the authors’ selection criteria, the authors excluded the possibility of other voices to be heard, both in the department itself and in the business school. Regarding the department, the authors argue that those are the ones who could influence future decisions, considering that they are the only ones eligible for the governing bodies under the institute’s regulations. Regarding the business school, adding other department(s) means adding other discipline(s) to the authors’ analysis with specific and different dynamics of researching, publishing and teaching, which also impacts the expectations regarding career and academic success.

Practical implications

First, before beginning an institutional change process, it is necessary to assess the vocations and aspirations of its members. The solution requires to reanalyse academic career premises and to reconsider the weights given to each academic activity, or furthermore, to offer more than one career path, so as to make it flexible for each faculty to follow their vocations and aspirations or to adapt to life demands. Second, in terms of organizational identity and image, the challenge is to minimize the gap between the construed external image and the internal identity, striving to achieve a balance between teaching, research, outreach and service.

Originality/value

Because of the nature of the academic work, the authors propose that the application of the theory should be preceded by a careful consideration of what is academic success. The misalignments studied and reported here reveal a multilevel phenomenon, wherein individual academic identities are often in conflict with the institutional image. The authors’ study entails a contribution to the application of the identity institutional theory to academic institutions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to express their gratitude to Professor Carla Millar (Ashridge Business School, UK and University of Twente, The Netherlands), to Professor Dennis Gioia (PennState University, USA), to Professor Nelson Philips (Imperial College Business School, UK) and to Professor Peter Stokes (De Montfort University, Leicester, UK) for their suggestions on previous versions of this paper and also to EnAnpad, EAA and AIRC5 reviewers for their thoughtful comments and guidance. They would like also to express their gratitude to José Rubens Seyiti Kassai and Diele Lôbo for their careful proofreading. This work was supported by the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [Research Project UID/GES/00315/2013] and by the Office of the Graduate Studies (Pró-Reitoria de Pós-Graduação) at the University of Sao Paulo [Edital de Apoio à Internacionalização 02/2015].

Citation

Pereira de Castro Casa Nova, S., Costa Lourenço, I. and Ferreira LeitãoAzevedo, R. (2018), "The misalignment between accounting faculty perceptions of success and organizational image during a process of institutional change", International Journal of Organizational Analysis, Vol. 26 No. 5, pp. 812-841. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOA-08-2017-1216

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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