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The Graduate School Alliance for Executive
Coaching
A Brief History
2004
Dr. Stephen Brock from Kennesaw State
University met with Dr. Ray Forbes and Dr. John Brent from Franklin University
to discuss establishing a coaching program for Kennesaw State’s Executive MBA
program that would be similar to the one already in place at Franklin. Their
conversation touched on the belief that, at that time, no academically-based
education programs existed for coaching. The three agreed that coaching needs
to become a profession, and they recognized that a profession has, by
definition, an academic grounding. Representatives from the two schools began a
series of joint meetings that were joined by Dr. Rodney Alsup and Dr. Deborah
Roebuck from Kennesaw. This dialogue continued with meetings being held at one
or the other of the schools about once each month for a period of nine months.
During that time, various issues were raised: setting uniform standards for
university programs that offer coaching education; the potential curriculum that
constitutes coaching; what existing disciplines and portions of disciplines
might contribute to such a curriculum. After extensive discussion, the
participants concluded that they were ready to invite other schools to join the
discussions and began the search for colleges and universities that were engaged
in coach education in some form.
2005
As an initial step it, was determined that
Franklin and Kennesaw would cosponsor a two day conference on coaching and
higher education at Kennesaw State in May of 2005. The organizers invited every
school of which they were aware, and several additional schools joined in the
dialogue. These included representatives from Vanderbilt, Xavier, Georgia
State, and the University of Texas at Dallas. The outcome of this meeting was a
commitment to establish an alliance of schools around the issue of establishing
standards for coaching education.
In October of that year, a follow-up meeting
was held at the University of Texas at Dallas, where representatives from the
Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology, New York University, Duke, and
Rutgers joined the discussions. Minutes of that meeting are in the archives.
The outcome was a determination to incorporate the universities in an official
501 (c) 3 organization to be called the Graduate School Alliance for Executive
Coaching. A financial commitment was determined for those schools who would
become the “founding members,” and assignments were made to write a set of
By-Laws, establish a website, and in general begin forming an organization with
legal standing . A task force was further established to begin the process of
establishing potential standards for a curriculum in coaching education.
2006
The next meeting of the participating
institutions was held in January, 2006. The minutes of this meeting are also to
be found in the archives. At this meeting the group was joined by
representatives of Babson College, Fielding Graduate University, and the Adler
Graduate School in Canada. Discussion of a structure for the organization was
outlined, including a Board of Directors, voting rights for member schools, and
the role of officers. Dr. Rob Hicks of the University of Texas at Dallas was
appointed as acting President, Dr. Stephen Brock as acting Secretary/Treasurer,
and Dr. John Brent as a volunteer Executive Director.

In April of 2006, the group met again, this
time at Babson College. Detailed minutes are in the archives. At that meeting,
representatives of University of Pennsylvania joined. A draft of the By-Laws
was approved, along with a Mission Statement for the organization, and a
definition of Executive Coaching. An Academic Standards Committee, a
Membership, Committee, an Incorporation Committee, and a Public Relations and
Communications Committee were created and assigned tasks. Following approval of
the By-Laws officer elections were held, and Dr. Robert Hicks was elected the
first President, Dr. Dianne Stober ,Vice-President, and Dr. Stephen Brock ,
Secretary/Treasurer.
During the summer of 2006 GSAEC was incorporated, and
representatives of the founding schools became the first official Board of
Directors. These included Adler School of Professional Studies , Fielding
Graduate University, Franklin University, Kennesaw State University,
Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology, University of Pennsylvania,
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, and The University of Texas at
Dallas.
2007
January 2007 saw the first annual meeting of the Board and
the launching of several major initiatives. The minutes may be consulted for
details. Two key undertakings for the organization's first year of operation
included a joint research project to draft academic guidelines for graduate
education in executive coaching and to begin to gather information about which
academic institutions in North America offer graduate education in the field.
Both projects were completed. A draft guideline was created, and a national
survey revealed that more than 120 US universities had coaching programs. As
well, in October, 2007 GSEAC received a grant from the Foundation of Coaching to
expand this list by identifying other graduate institutions internationally and
to ask those in North America and in other parts of the world to review, test,
and provide feedback and enhancement of our proposed academic guidelines. Our
goals is to establish a peer-reviewed and agreed upon body of knowledge that may
influence the eventual setting of standards for graduate education in executive
coaching in the future.
Additionally, GSAEC decided to become one of several
sponsoring (and active participating) organizations for the first world-wide
conference on coaching proposed to be held in Ireland in the summer of 2008. |