Monday, October 28, 2013

The Professional Development of a Graduate Student

"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work." - Thomas A. Edison

     One of my first meetings with my supervisor and team involved a discussion on expectations, and one of those expectations of my supervisor was that we seek out professional development opportunities beyond attendance at conferences.  It being my second week on the job, and thus second week even working this school, I had no clue how I would meet that expectation and only slightly more of a clue what professional development even was.  The way I saw it, every day of training was professional development for me being new to the field.

     But once we left RA training and began to settle into a routine, I started to realize just what my supervisor expected.  Yes, I am already registered for a professional conference, but every single day new opportunities to develop professionally arise, some experiential and others more passive.  The experiential ones have been my favorite - I enjoy presenting, advising, teaching, and creating and have capitalized on every such opportunity that has come along.  They offer me to hone these skills and put what I learn and read about into practice.  The more passive opportunities, such as attending presentations and conferences, are exciting as well, because I not only learn from my colleagues but also have the chance to take what I learn back to my practice and experiences, employing that newfound knowledge.

     As great as these opportunities are, I have also started to be very conscious of the time commitment they require.  I am still a graduate student and hall director, which amount to a full-time job alone, and it is not as though professional development activities are an excuse for not completing duties for those commitments - those opportunities are extracurricular.  So now I am very careful to consider three questions: (1) How much time will this take?, (2) When will this occur?, and (3) Will I develop professionally in a way I am not already?  If the time is not taking me away for too long or during an important time of the year (i.e., Closing), and it will assist my development along a competency in which I do not have much experience, I consider taking it on.  The way I see it, I might as well make the most of what is available to me, because professional development will only help me in the end! 

Quote Citation: Edison, T. A. (n.d.). The Quotations Page. Retrieved from: http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/793.html 

Monday, October 21, 2013

Some Thoughts on Advising

"Success is the ability to go from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill
     Well, a lot has happened since I last posted.  There was conflict, there were - and still are - readings, and there was a ton of fun (what?! =)).  But there was also group advising.  In my position I have the responsibility of advising a hall council - a group of students who advocate for the residents of the hall and put on programs using a portion of the student fees.  It is essentially a full student organization with a full executive board and everyone contributing.  More importantly, they answer to only themselves, as I can only require actions of them when policy (or the law) forces me to.  Other than that, I am simply a voice on the sidelines that they can choose to listen to when they want.

     I have been developing a lot in what I say with that voice.  Last year I advised an excellent Hall Council as a Head Resident Assistant, but it was a very different experience, because they were all upperclassmen, programmed for an Apartment Complex, and were fairly self-sufficient in generating ideas.  This year's Council consists of mostly freshmen living in a more traditional residence hall, and, even though the ideas are always flowing, the follow-through and communication skills are not always.  This has forced me to step-in and guide conversation much more than ever, but the need to do this conflicts with my own views of what an advisor should or should not do.

     An important aspect I see in advising is allowing mistakes to occur.  Plenty of times last year and already a few times this year, I have seen parts of programs and initiatives that I could and wanted to change, but I had to leave them be.  They were simply not mine to modify.  Instead, they were the residents' programs.  Because I have let them be, they have been able to see the mistakes occur themselves, then reflect upon those mistakes and (ideally) learn from them.  This is part of the leadership development that we facilitate in student affairs - growth through mistakes and seeing what does not work when leading an organization.

     This is not to to say that I am perfect, at all.  I have made, and continue to make, plenty of mistakes when planning and executing programs.  I have advised groups and been surprised when their programs do not go well.  The aforementioned growth occurs at every level - I just have the privilege to advise groups because I have experienced more - this does not necessarily make me better.  It makes my voice louder in the room, which is why I have to restrain it at many point.  Because as much as I have steered students away from mistakes in the past, they have also proven me wrong and experienced great success when I saw flaws.  Their potential to create wonderful programs is so vast that my voice on the sidelines could just get in the way.  And so I will continue to only steer when asked.

Quote Citation: Churchill, W. (n.d.). Goodreads. Retrieved from: http://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/2834066.Winston_Churchill 

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Current Issues - Program Rankings by Public News Mentions

"To devise the rankings, researchers ran searches of the Google News archive to find out how often more than 12,700 faculty members had appeared in 6,000 news sources from 2006 to 2011. The citations for the professors in each department were tallied, averaged on a per-faculty member basis, and then ranked relative to the federal funds their programs had received." - Dan Berrett

Article Link: http://chronicle.com/article/The-New-Rankings-Frontier-/142197/ 

     It is no secret that the issue of how to rank colleges, universities, departments, and programs is currently at the forefront of news on Higher Education.  President Obama's new plan for higher education ranking and funding, which I commented on recently, re-sparked the debate on what constitutes quality and where does one find the value of a college degree.  It is a difficult, if not impossible, question to answer.  Being very new to the field, I am still among those who say it is a too subjective question to answer - quality and value of education depend on the student in my opinion.  If you want to view this issue in academic capitalist terms, the consumer drives the value, not the researcher or anyone else.

     Unless you rank programs using the system devised by the Faculty Media Impact Project, described by Berrett in the article hyperlinked above.  The Project ranks institutions based on the number of citations in the news per faculty member in departments of Anthropology, Economics, Sociology, Psychology, and Political Science/Government. Federal funding was also considered in the rankings.  The lead on the project, Dr. Rob Borofsky, recognizes that this approach has its flaws but simultaneously feels that its merits lie in the measurement of public service.  However, Borofsky also notes that "Much research is valuable and of high quality...while not being of interest to the public" (par. 15). 

     This was the exact sentiment I shared when reading Berrett's article.  For the sake of academic freedom, scholars should be able to research where they feel holes exist in the literature.  If a scholar has left a door open for you, and you want to walk through that door and have the ability to, then no one should be able to tell you "No" - besides your tenure board, federal funding agencies, the mass media, and others.  Cynicism aside, there are multitudes of research out there that no one outside of the scholars in a specific field have read, and yet those studies were incredible discoveries in their own right and led to even more such discoveries.  Furthermore, the frameworks and theories employed by authors of studies that grasp public interest were discovered or invented by previous scholars, and I am sure that most of those scholars were not cited in the news for those articles.  

     This is not to say that Borofsky's project has no merit.  Publicly funded institutions do have some implicit responsibility to their investors. "'People dealing with social sciences should be dealing with social concerns'" (par. 8) is not an unwarranted statement.  It all depends on what you see as the purpose of higher education.  Bowen (1977) separates the goals into those for individual students and those for society, noting some academic freedom in pursuing the direct enjoyments of learning for the individual student, while noting that promotion of social welfare was important in the goals for society.  Guttman (1987) more closely approaches the issue at hand by separating the purposes into academic and societal purposes while nesting both under democratic purposes. I believe that how well an institution meets a healthy balance of these varying goals should contribute to a metric of its quality - operationalizing that metric will be the next challenge.

Citations:
Berrett, D. (2013). The new rankings frontier: Mentions in the media. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved from: http://chronicle.com/article/The-New-Rankings-Frontier-/142197/ 
Bowen, H. R. (1977). Investing in learning: The individual and social value of American higher education. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Gutmann, A. (1987). Democratic education. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Picture source: http://seattletimes.com/html/opinion/2009679209_guest18kim.html 

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Being On Call

"Nothing is so aggravating than calmness." - Oscar Wilde 

     Apologies for the pause in posts last week, but I had two important and time-intensive items on my plate - a leadership retreat for Hall Council two weekends ago and being the Hall Director On-Call from Tuesday to Saturday. Both were amazing experiences that I would do again in a heartbeat (well, I could use a short break from being on call), but the time they took away from work and sleep meant that I needed to read for class in the time I would have taken to write here. But no worries, I'm back!!


     I will eventually write more about helping with the Leadership Camp, but today I wanted to reflect a little on my first experience of being on call. The way our system is set-up here, there is one Hall Director on call for all of the residence halls at all times. We exchange the phone on Tuesdays and Saturdays, and each person does this duty once or twice per semester. The main purpose for having a Hall Director on call is to maintain protocol and procedure - this person enacts certain reporting chains, grants permission to call for emergency maintenance and custodial services, and acts as a consult when Resident and Desk Assistants are unsure of what actions to take. They also respond in person for more serious incidents to take control of these situations, making sure to obtain as much information as possible firsthand and ensure that the well-being of the community is kept in mind.


     All of the above became so much clearer to me after my first time being on call. Before that, I was not only terrified of not knowing what to do, making the wrong decision, etc., but also slightly uncertain of my purpose in everything. There are plenty of people above me in these reporting chains, and the protocols are rather comprehensive and clear. So why was I important, and why do those RAs and DAs need me?


     What I realized rather quickly was that a lot happens on a large campus that requires consultation. This is not to say that protocols and procedures are not clear enough - rather, students tend to find a way to sit in the few gray areas and make decisions difficult for RAs. This is where I come in. Not to save the day or be heroic, just to make the decisions and the calls that the RAs and DAs are unsure of. I get to be that reassuring voice saying, "Good job, you're making the right call" or joke with them about just how far out there an incident is. I hope they appreciate my sarcasm, because that's what I have to go on at 2 in the morning when something outright awkward is occurring. More importantly, though, is the calming voice I have to use when things really do blow-up and the person calling me is truly stressed. I find it extra-important in those situations that I am on my game, because those people are relying on me to be the voice of calm and reason. It is a great experience to be able to do them that kindness.


Quote Citation: Wilde, Oscar. (n.d.). Thinkexist.com. Retrieved from: http://thinkexist.com/quotation/nothing_is_so_aggravating_than_calmness/217597.html


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