In his February 2010 TED talk, CEO and author Chip Conley tells a fascinating story about the nation of Bhutan and their transformation from an isolated, undeveloped nation to a modern, technologically rich nation that still manages to maintain the essence of their original culture and traditions. Bhutan’s story is one of striking the balance between progress and innovation, while stilll maintaining core elements of an identity (a rare feat for any country, organization, or school in today’s rapid-paced world). One of the most interesting parts of Conlee’s telling of the story is his reason for Bhutan’s ability to transorm in these ways. Quite simply, he believes that it is because Bhutan has learned to “count” the right thing, gross national happiness. Forty years ago, Bhutan’s King coined the term rather off-handedly to describe his commitment to building an economy that would allow for growth, while staying true to Bhutan’s Buddhist roots. Bhutanese officials ran with the concept, developed sophisticated instruments to measure the concept, and used it as a model for the development plan that brought Bhutan into the 21st century. This all stands in stark contrast to most nations’ preoccupation with Gross Domestic Product and their belief that it stands as the supreme indicator of a nation’s well-being.
02
Jul 10
Measuring what matters: How much should we really care about retention?
07
May 10
The forgotten part of the First-Year Experience
A recent discussion on the first year experience listserv has gotten me thinking about the way we allocate resources across the first-year experience. If your campus is like mine you likely have a variety of programming for first year students with most of it being front loaded to the first semester or even the first two weeks of their time on your campus (it’s always been interesting to me that we speak of our work in terms of the first year experience, when most of us do very little in the way of formal programming during the second half of that year).
16
Apr 10
In Virginia, We Are All Hokies Today (4/16/07)…What Has Transpired Since The Largest College Massacre In Our Nation’s History
Since the Virginia Tech tragedy, 3 years ago today, all Virginia Higher Educational Institutions must convene a Violence Prevention Committee to find ways to prevent another ‘VA Tech’ at their campuses. This is mandatory via legislation after the Va Tech tragedy. What does this mean? With huge budget cuts and increased enrollment, higher ed professionals in Student Services must find a way to protect their students from this kind of tragedy.
A simple email to me last summer from my program lead, asked me to create a program that addressed ‘threat assessment management’ with my students. My first question was, can we call it something else? My next thought was how do I fund this and make it something students will attend. Luckily, I have a great network of community professionals that were ready and eager to take time from their busy schedules and help the community college students that we all serve. I called in my network and got a program together called “Wellness, Life’s Hard We’re There”. This program consisted of guest speakers to address topics such as: The Connectedness of Everything, Campus Safety, Suicide Prevention, Healthy Relationships, and Prescription Drug Abuse Awareness. I also, applied for a mini-grant and was approved for extra funding. I also asked my current students and college alum to be available for any students who need to talk about problems, knowing that this generation is more peer related than any other generation. I put together a brochure with local help hotlines and the peer’s information for students. This program was immensely popular and to my surprise found more students interested in becoming a mentor than ones who declared they needed help. I will never know how many individuals this program touched but I do know that this is the first of its kind in the Virginia Community College System that this simple program may lead to a new community ‘Wellness Initiative’ that brings local businesses and community leaders in to help students in the future and I am excited about this new endeavor. Stay tuned for how this comes together.
So out of tragedy, comes something positive.
02
Apr 10
How do we get young men to want to go to college and want to work hard once they get there?
Earlier this week I read an article about the challenge of engaging male students in a meaningful college experience. I saw the anti-intellectual attitude alluded to in this article displayed at the high school level when I was a teacher and coach, and I see it now in my work in higher education. It’s not that male students aren’t intelligent, don’t work hard, or aren’t prepared for college-level work. It’s just that, in far too many cases, being a good learner and being a “man” are mistakenly viewed as being mutually exclusive. This false dichotomy leaves young men feeling like they have to choose one role or the other. And, at 18 years old being “cool” or “chill” generally wins out. This means that participating in class, being seen in the library, or having any sort of academic conversation outside of class is strictly taboo (Note: many will do “academic” things when no one is looking, but my experience has been that the best kind of learning is, at least part of the time, public and social).
22
Mar 10
LMS, FYS, going green and other fun things
Almost two weeks ago I presented at the NASPA conference on Infusing Technology into Student Affairs. While the presentation focused on developing strategic partnerships to utilize your Learning Management System (LMS), we also discussed tapping into free technology solutions such as big huge labs, creating word art, and googledocs to create learner centered classrooms. I love big huge labs in particular as they allow you to make successories style posters, among other cool things. It is a great tool to engage your students around copyright, creative commons and other ethical/legal issues.
In any case, I was reading Wesley Fryer’s Speed of Creativity blog the other day and he featured edmodo.com, a social network for the classroom. You can check out his great instructive blog post here: http://tinyurl.com/ykfbr4f
This fit in well with what we discussed during the NASPA presentation. Edmodo.com can make your First Year Seminar class paperless and develop some online community, almost like a cross between Ning.com and a Learning Management System. Because I use Blackboard, my institution’s Learning Management System, I haven’t tried out Edmodo.com yet, but I am intrigued by the possibility and may be using it for some upcoming Orientation staff training.
At my institution, we decided to move the First Year Seminar to our Learning Management System for a variety of reasons. The largest reason was philosophical. Many of our major classes use Blackboard in the first semester to post lecture notes, syllabi and tests or quizzes. Therefore, it made sense that the First Year Seminar acclimate students to using our LMS. We built one of the first seminars around accessing and gaining familiarity with the most commonly used tools Blackboard. The rest of the seminar then used Blackboard as a supplement to the face to face classes, allowing students to gain a tremendous comfort level with the platform before they took their first test or quiz.
The other main benefit is that the LMS, like edmodo.com, is web-based. This allows both instructors and students to access the course from anywhere. For students, we posted a helpful resources folder that contained a guide to Boston as well as links to time management tools and other helpful items. Students could access this folder from anywhere they had an internet connection. Instructors could prep their classes at home without lugging binders around. Using an LMS facilitated an easier connection to the course as well as allowed us to go “paperless” and live up to the commitment to be more environmentally responsible.
The best part about moving to an LMS was that it was free. We ended up with a more environmentally friendly class that gave students the opportunity to practice a vital skill needed for success at our institution. To boot, we ended up with easier facilitation of the class for instructors and a more mobile version for the students. It was a win-win for us.
Chances are very good that you already have an LMS on your campus. Find the instructional designers or academic technology people in the phone directory and call them up (or email them). Find out what they have and whether or not you can tap into it. Start collaborating across the digital divide. If you run into roadblocks, trying checking out edmodo.com as an option.
19
Mar 10
Managing Transitions: What FYE can learn from the corporate world
Recently I have been reading a book from business literature called Managing Transitions. In it the author (William Bridges) describes a philosophy and accompanying set of strategies that organizations can employ to successfully navigate difficult transitions (e.g. a merger, downsizing, closing, etc.). The premise of the book is that transitions, while filled with anxiety and the sometimes debilitating potential for failure, present tremendous opportunities for growth and innovation.
16
Mar 10
Hall Government Programs
I would like to talk about Residence Hall Government and how it helps to further First Year development. Residence Hall Government groups are known by many names on campuses around the country such as, RHA, RHC, IRHA, RSA, RSO, IRHC and many more. A common structure is one where hall government programs work on a campus level and with individual in-hall councils. Hall Governments have the opportunity to work with a regional/national organization called NACURH, Inc or the National Association of College and University Residence Halls. NACURH is an organization very similar to ACUHO-I. NACURH is also split into 8 regions that cover the US, Mexico, and Canada.
Now how does this relate to first year experience? I think that hall councils have the ability to be huge leadership growth tool for first year students. The hall councils I have worked with work with students within a hall being elected to exec board and representative positions within the first couple weeks of the school year. In a first year building this means that students are taking on this role in the first couple weeks of college. What other organizations on a college campus recruits students to be leaders so early? Add in the fact that the hall government programs can implement leadership and position training early on, with ongoing training throughout the year, you have the potential to see very well developed student leaders by the end of the first semester.
On my current campus we have a 65% first year population, and 5 buildings that have first year students with a hall council in each. The campus hall government body has 2 retreats a year (they call them advancements) and have a leadership topic presentation each week at their general body meetings. We have 850 first year students on campus and 70 of them participate actively in hall council. We do see some drop off as the year goes on and we do have some students that participate out of popularity, however overall we have had a great success with the program here in its first four years.
Some benefits we have seen from our first year hall council groups;
- Increase in number of first year RA applicants
- Increase in programming initiatives in residence halls
- Increase in hall pride
- Increase in suggested improvements from residential students
- Decrease in residence hall damage
- Leaders branching out to participate in other campus organizations
Creating a residence hall government program can be beneficial in the creation of a successful first year residential experience program. The key is getting student buy in. My suggestion is to try to get your students to attend a regional or state conference. Check out this link to find your regional information. If that is not possible to attend a conference, connect with some advisors that are out there. I am willing to help you or put you in contact with advisors that I know that have worked with starting a hall government program. There are also some guidebooks here that may help in your creation journey.
I would love to hear your expereniences with Hall Government.
Please get in touch if you have any thoughts or questions!
09
Mar 10
conferencing…
I am here at the NASPA2010 annual conference in the great city of Chicago. While the weather has left something to be desired, the conference so far has been great. I spent some time exploring Universal Design principles, thought critically about how my institution engages commuter and adult students and listened to a fantastic group of educators explain how they expanded their common reading program into a full fledged experience. The most thought provoking part of my day was the keynote speech with Condoleezza Rice, former Secretary of State under George W. Bush. I confess I arrived at the session ambivalent and not really sure what to expect. To my surprise, she was funny, relevant and engaging. Dr. Rice shared personal stories about higher education based on her experiences as a student, professor and provost. She told poignant stories about a crisis of confidence that caused her to change her major, the value of education in her family and her father’s legacy as a student affairs professional.
As intellectually stimulating as this day was, my key take away from the day had nothing to do with the sessions I attended. For some reason, as I was making my way to the 8:30 AM session with Dr. Rice, I found the conference venue incredibly difficult to navigate. I felt like I was surrounded by people I did not know, who all seemed to know each other. I felt stressed that if I didn’t arrive on time, I would be embarrassed to walk in late to the session. I got annoyed that there weren’t very good signs pointing the way. I almost gave up trying to find the session.
As I was on the verge of retreating back to my hotel room, I realized this was the first time in years I had been immersed in something completely foreign and new. If you were at the conference you might have seen the light bulb go on over my head as I stood there with a dumbfounded look on my face. That was me blocking the escalator (sorry!). I was viscerally experiencing some of the feelings that my first year students experience on their first days on campus. Don’t get me wrong, I try new things, especially technological things, in my job all the time. I try new food, new restaurants, new work outs and new routes to work. However, all of those things have an element of familiarity to them. This was different as I was completely encompassed, completely in this new, foreign experience. I may start a new project at work, but I am comfortable in my job. I may try a new restaurant, but with old friends. Very rarely am I in a new environment surrounded by unfamiliar faces trying to find my way.
As I literally struggled to find my way through the conference, I pledged to remember this feeling as I work through the craziness that is August in Student Affairs. I also decided to make sure I get completely immersed in something new and foreign every once in awhile. It is a powerful reminder of the experience of our new students
05
Mar 10
A “Third Place” on campus: What would an academic town hall for freshmen look like?
I just returned from a meeting with a group of librarians on my campus (as an aside, whatever stereotypical illusions I held about librarians being socially awkward book worms were destoryed in the 90 minutes I spent with them). Our conversation centered on (1) their desire to create a third place space within the library that students can come to when they aren’t at home and aren’t in class and (2) my department’s desire to create a space where freshman students and their mentors can build relationships, work collaboratively, and engage in meaningful dialogue. The concept of third place was pioneered by Ray Oldenburg and, in short, describes a public space where members of a community can come together to dialogue and form bonds.
26
Feb 10
How much should we “require” of students?
Brigham Young University (BYU) recently announced a new and expanded Freshman Mentoring initiative that will provide every incoming freshman with the opportunity to connect with an upperclassmen peer mentor and enroll in two linked university core courses. While most people associated with BYU are very excited about the change, we have encountered some resistance from incoming students and their parents who don’t like the idea of being “required” to participate.
