HomePublicationsLearning to Lead, Leading to LearnPart 2 Chapter 14: Queering the Administrative Brew: A Possible Impossibility Book MenuLearning to Lead, Leading to Learn SectionsPart 1Part 2ChaptersPrefaceCourse Overview Chapter 1Chapter 2Chapter 3Chapter 4Chapter 5Chapter 6Chapter 7Chapter 8Chapter 9Chapter 10Chapter 11Chapter 12Chapter 13Chapter 14Chapter 15Book Resources Contributors Playbook Open access PDFdoi.org/10.36284/celelon.oa11Metrics: 72 views Jonathan Alexander Drawing on decades of administrative leadership experience, Alexander describes the sometimes uneasy relationship between his identity as an academic leader and as a publicly queer person and scholar. In the former role, he is expected to uphold the norms of the institution and normalized expectations for what higher education is for and produces. But as a queer administrator, he is committed to questioning and challenging these same norms. Instead of trying to reconcile these identities, Alexander writes about the ways in which he uses this irreconcilability to produce new understandings and practices—for example, regarding what counts as “student success.” Discussion QuestionsAlexander’s chapter revolves around his complex relationship with institutional and cultural norms. What norms inform your work as a leader? What is your relationship to them and how do they shape your work? Whose interests do they serve? Do you ever seek to change or challenge norms, and if so, how and with what results? Share: