Date of Conferral
1-27-2026
Date of Award
January 2026
Degree
Doctor of Public Administration (D.P.A)
School
Management
Advisor
Walter McCollum
Abstract
Leaders of structured alternative academic environments often struggle to sustain operations because of limited resources, fragmented leadership, and high staff turnover. This business problem is important to leaders of structured alternative academic environments because ineffective resource management and operational inefficiencies threaten program sustainability and continuity of services for at-risk student populations. Grounded in transformational leadership theory, the purpose of this qualitative pragmatic inquiry was to explore the strategies leaders in structured alternative academic environments use to improve resource management, operational efficiency, and program sustainability. The participants were six leaders from structured alternative academic programs in southeastern New Mexico. Data were collected through semistructured interviews and analysis of publicly available organizational documents. Braun and Clarke’s (2022) thematic analysis process was used to analyze the data. Four themes emerged: (a) transformational leadership and collaboration, (b) resource optimization and staff development, (c) individualized practices for efficiency, and (d) managing change for sustainability. A key recommendation for business and educational leaders is to institutionalize transformational leadership practices through collaboration and intentional staff development. The implications for positive social change include the potential to enhance sustainability and educational continuity for underserved students.
Recommended Citation
Clark, Sean D., "Strategies Leaders in Structured Alternative Academic Environments Use to Improve Resource Management, Operational Efficiency, and Program Sustainability" (2026). Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies. 19004.
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/19004
