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2026-02-10
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Copyright (c) 2026 ANANG FATMA T. JAWALI*

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How to Cite
Educational Leadership Strategies for Work Harmony and Productivity of Alpha-Oriented Behaviors of Multidisciplinary Faculty in Higher Education Settings
ANANG FATMA T. JAWALI*
Sulu State College, Jolo, Sulu 7400, Philippines
DOI: https://doi.org/10.59429/esp.v11i2.3918
Keywords: Strategies; Work Harmony; Productivity; Alpha-Oriented
Abstract
In the dynamic environment of higher education, managing multidisciplinary faculty with dominant or "alpha-oriented" behaviors presents unique challenges to educational leadership. Despite the strategic imperative for collaboration, limited research exists on specific strategies that foster both work harmony and productivity among these assertive groups. This study addresses this gap by exploring the containment and empowerment strategies employed by academic administrators. Using an exploratory qualitative design, the research engages 25 purposively selected academic leaders through one-on-one interviews. Data were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis, guided by Trait Activation Theory to understand how leadership behaviors trigger or suppress dominant personality traits. Key findings reveal that impersonal structural mechanisms, specifically shared governance and data-driven dashboards, act as critical neutralizers that de-personalize authority and reduce territoriality. Regarding productivity, the study identifies bounded autonomy, defined as high-trust models operating within co-authored project charters, as the optimal approach for managing alpha faculty. Furthermore, the results highlight the necessity of epistemic translation to resolve disciplinary clashes and structural empathy interventions, such as story circles, to prevent the emotional fatigue associated with distributed leadership. The study concludes that effective leadership translates affective conflict into cognitive conflict, transforming potential disruptors into engines of institutional innovation.
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