The VineDown with Emily Smith
Everyone in higher ed agrees the ground is shifting. The disagreement is about what to do while it's moving. Dr. Ramon Blakley, who leads admissions at one of the most-watched public institutions in the country, has a deceptively simple answer: stay in your lane, keep moving, and check on your people before they break. As Assistant Vice Provost for Admissions at UT Austin, Blakley sits behind what he calls a loud institutional megaphone: decisions made in his office ripple across Texas and nationwide. In this conversation with host Emily Smith, he trades the inspiration-poster version of leadership for the specific practices that keep a public admissions office functional when everything around it isn't. He says the quiet part out loud about the May 1st "finish line," makes the case for why college isn't the right path for every student, and explains the difference between being data-driven and data-informed. It's a credible, grounded look at leading under pressure… useful whether you run a team, advise students, or are a family trying to understand how admissions decisions actually get made. In this episode: - Why "mission drift is real" and the one rule Blakley uses to avoid it - The May 1st truth most colleges won't admit to families - How he spots burnout on his team long before someone says "I'm done" - The hidden, exhausting job every manager does and never names - Why he insists leaders are built, not born and where they're actually made - Data-driven vs. data-informed, and why the difference matters for students - His case that college isn't the only valid pathway from someone who sells four years of it If conversations like this help you make sense of college and leadership, follow The VineDown so you don't miss the next one. Watch on YouTube or listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
68 episodios
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