Is business performance of further education colleges improved by entrepreneurial leadership and the adoption of a positive market orientation?: an empirical study of English FE collegesTools Flynn, Mark Barry Johnston (2002) Is business performance of further education colleges improved by entrepreneurial leadership and the adoption of a positive market orientation?: an empirical study of English FE colleges. DBA thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractThe political role of English further education colleges has been ambiguous for some 20 years, being a nationally funded service administered by local government. In 1993 this role ambiguity was challenged with the incorporation of colleges, accompanied by a shift in the locus of power to national government. Significant cultural change was driven through by an expansionary yet punitive funding regime based on the principles of the free market. In common with other parts of the public sector, this change in orientation has had mixed results. This thesis explores the issues that face the leaders of the modern FE college, approaching the subject from the perspectives of entrepreneurial leadership and market orientation.
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