2009 is our year, student affairs!

Hello SA Blog readers!

I'm so excited to meet you as a "guest blogger" with this group.  I'm new at this blogging thing, but really excited to get involved in this community.  Since I'm new here, I figured i'd start by sharing a link that got people really riled up in my office this past week.  Check out what US News and World Report has to say about a career as "higher education administrator" for 2009!

http://www.usnews.com/articles/business/best-careers/2008/12/11/best-careers-2009-higher-education-administrator.html

Don't get me wrong, I'm thrilled that a publication like this would pay attention to our world and do know that job security is better for us than our peers in much of corporate life.  But, the review of our field as "unusually pleasant" really does carry some "tone".  Also, if he thinks that competition for student life/student affairs jobs is "less rigorous" has clearly not done his homework. I know the last time we hired someone for our programming position we reviewed nearly 100 resumes, so I think that's pretty darned "rigorous."

As a now veteran student activities professional, it is getting more and more clear that we have a problem in our field about articulating what we do.  Higher education scholars use this as a call to improve assessment and I completely agree with that as a big need.  However, we have to focus on the "everyday audience" as well.  All someone from "the outside" can sometimes see is a group of excited students dancing in front of the stage at a concert we have sponsored and obviously can never understand all of the surrounding experiences.

I'm making a few New Year's resolutions in the name of our profession and hope you'll have some too:

  1. Help more people on campus understand the campus programming board and the students behind it.  More people need to hear their stories and we need to make them more "high profile" even when it's not comfortable for them or us.  After I finish typing, I'm calling our PR office to talk to them about student stories.
  2. Be more assertive about the expertise our department holds about students, their experiences, and what makes them tick. People on campus are baffled by this and we are not, so let's share what we know! 
  3. Figure out better ways to promote our successes on campus to everyone who will listen.  Our colleagues in Career Services can do it and do it well…why not us?  I know the usual response is that our field is not as tangible in results, but let's figure out a way to change that.

I'm working on my list this week – what other committments should we make to make campus activities less of a mystery? 

  • Andrew R

    Thanks for your post! I can’t wait to see what else you have to tell us!

  • http://blog.swiftkickonline.com Tom Krieglstein

    I think part of the challenge of not being able to define Student Affairs is how broad it’s become. Just look up SA on wikipedia.
    There are over 25 areas that fall under it. Without borders, SA is becoming the catch all for an institution. Should these areas all still stay under SA? Or should they be broken out into their own branch like Christianity has done?

  • Andrew R

    Thanks for your post! I can't wait to see what else you have to tell us!

  • http://blog.swiftkickonline.com/ Tom Krieglstein

    I think part of the challenge of not being able to define Student Affairs is how broad it's become. Just look up SA on wikipedia.
    There are over 25 areas that fall under it. Without borders, SA is becoming the catch all for an institution. Should these areas all still stay under SA? Or should they be broken out into their own branch like Christianity has done?

  • http://profile.typekey.com/1231771324s28118/ Cindy Kane

    Tom,
    Great comment – the list of areas that fall under “student affairs” when you think about an entire division is really crazy. The craziest part is the lack of consistency across the board, in my opinion. It would be one thing if some smaller schools just didn’t have separate departments for certain functions, but it’s really starting to look like across campuses the definition of “student affairs” is hard to pin down.
    Student activities, specifically, has the same identity crisis. I can count the number of colleagues who are responsible for all kinds of “miscellaneous” areas. In my own department, we have about 8 different areas under us that all could be their own departments and I”m sure many others have the same issues.
    The question is what is going to have to happen to fix this? What kinds of “branches” would we establish if we had the power?

  • http://profile.typekey.com/1231771324s28118/ Cindy Kane

    Tom,
    Great comment – the list of areas that fall under “student affairs” when you think about an entire division is really crazy. The craziest part is the lack of consistency across the board, in my opinion. It would be one thing if some smaller schools just didn't have separate departments for certain functions, but it's really starting to look like across campuses the definition of “student affairs” is hard to pin down.
    Student activities, specifically, has the same identity crisis. I can count the number of colleagues who are responsible for all kinds of “miscellaneous” areas. In my own department, we have about 8 different areas under us that all could be their own departments and I”m sure many others have the same issues.
    The question is what is going to have to happen to fix this? What kinds of “branches” would we establish if we had the power?

  • john c

    In agreement with Marty Nemko, I do believe that Academic Positions are more rigorous. These positions usually require a doctorate, published works of literature, and teaching experience. A higher ed administration job usually requires a masters, some work experience, and a resume. This comparison doesn’t and shouldn’t belittle the rigors of a student affairs profession. I have had professors who have doctorate,have taught for decades, are in their fifties and sixties, and still are unable to land a tenured position. That is pretty darn competitive…

  • john c

    In agreement with Marty Nemko, I do believe that Academic Positions are more rigorous. These positions usually require a doctorate, published works of literature, and teaching experience. A higher ed administration job usually requires a masters, some work experience, and a resume. This comparison doesn't and shouldn't belittle the rigors of a student affairs profession. I have had professors who have doctorate,have taught for decades, are in their fifties and sixties, and still are unable to land a tenured position. That is pretty darn competitive…

  • http://ericstoller.com/blog/ Eric Stoller

    2 things:
    1) I blogged about this article over on my site:
    http://ericstoller.com/blog/2009/01/15/higher-education-administrator/
    2) I noticed that my friend, classmate and colleague – Annette Martel is now listed as a SA Blog author…she rocks!

  • http://ericstoller.com/blog/ Eric Stoller

    2 things:
    1) I blogged about this article over on my site:
    http://ericstoller.com/blog/2009/01/15/higher-education-administrator/
    2) I noticed that my friend, classmate and colleague – Annette Martel is now listed as a SA Blog author…she rocks!

  • Fragmented Self

    In thinking about the arrival of new master’s students this coming fall of 2009, I thought I would share some piece of writing I recently completed:
    Rethinking How We Teach Identity And Its Supposed Development
    By Fra.Gm_en:ted “Self”
    Because the Journal of College Student Development is set up in such a way that disallows for thoughtful commentary that is not based upon the empirical studies that we privilege so as to attempt to legitimize our field, I thought it appropriate to send my writing out via electronic media to people who I perceive as having an interest in the ideas I put forth below. The Internet, along with its oppressive qualities, also enables academically suppressed voices to subvert traditional modes of knowledge dissemination in the academy and in doing so, be heard. With that said, knowing full well that many will delete this email instantly, I proceed in hopes that my voice will be acknowledged at least by a few.
    Upon getting ready to start a student affairs M.A. degree in a renowned program, I was exhilarated by the opportunity to finally know what identity and student development “actually was.” As a white, lower-middle-class, heterosexual, epistemic agnostic, ontological atheist, feminist, football-watching, high art appreciating, United States citizen, long had I struggled with questions about who I really was, who others were, and how we develop as people. At last, thanks to the milieu of theories, frameworks, and models I was about to learn, I could determine what exactly constitutes the self, my self, and other selves. I could finally become whole, and see others as whole, thus fitting Western Enlightenment’s demanding articulation of being that has pervaded our thinking for many years now. Once my graduate education began, however, is the point I recognized the futility of using neat and tidy theories to understand what identity and its supposed development is.
    To begin, I should make known my epistemological promiscuity. I reject two things about the idea of identity development: the concept of identity and that of development. The former, steeped in its etymological root of “sameness”, from the Latin word idem, inherently implies that one’s identity is that thing they are or should be, regardless of situational context, culture, or intrapersonal onto-epistemic orientation. For the “healthy” individual, one’s identity stays congruent when traveling amidst the many landscapes of life. As regards the latter, as I see it, development is a dressed up notion of becoming more responsible and decentering one’s self from being the focus of worldly experience. It is an exclusive piece of rhetoric, embedded in the Grand Narrative of Progress, that tells us that developing or being developed is something we should strive for in hopes of overcoming our fragmented realities and becoming whole.
    Thanks to “advances” in psychosocial theory, many have come to accept that this thing-we-call-identity-development is experienced differently by people depending upon their race, sexual orientation, gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, nationality, or religion (or the lack thereof), among many other variable dynamics.
    Brilliant! We have done it at last!
    We have figured out that how one perceives their self and other selves is shaped, in part, by the endless slew of discursively constituted categories that are often thought to comprise the self. I do not mean to take lightly the formerly fresh idea that peoples’ dynamics greatly influence how they think of themselves and others and knowledge; it is quite the contrary. I applaud this growth, this quasi-extension beyond essentialist claims of what the self is or should be. A problem arises, however, when we jump too quickly from nuanced ideas or empirical interpretations (as insightful as they may be) to developing theories, stages, and models that simply subvert the former foundationalist notions of identity. This form of reductionism, radiated throughout graduate education in student affairs usually starting the first day of the Introduction to Student Development course, through the textual likes of Chickering (1969), or perhaps Chickering and Reisser (1993) for the real trailblazers, stifles graduate student creativity during their own conceptualization process of thinking about what identity is or even, if it is.
    It is important to be clear here by being iterative. The introduction of psychosocial theories of identity development has done wonders for complicating our thinking about identity beyond the days of idem, and they should be applauded as such. A constraint of intellectual flexibility, however, precipitates when these theories are introduced to students at the onset without first letting them think through the idea of identity and trace the connections between the various human and non-human actors (Latour, 2005) that eventually play a role in shaping who we are (or are not) for themselves. With this in mind, I should mention that in my personal experience with student development courses during my master’s program, I was fortunate to have a professor that allowed for this type of organic learning. Instead of pulling out Education and Identity on the first day of class, he challenged each of my classmates and I to first write our own narratives of how we make sense of our selves. This self-reflective task, free from the ideas of theorists past, permitted students to write their own micro-theory of identity development. It was not until later that we were asked to compare our stories with those of the theorists that have hegemonically preceded us.
    So, the question becomes, what do we start with then with respect to teaching new master’s students about identity? My answer is two fold and I could see them being approached individually or conjoined. The first approach would be that sort of organic self-theory creation I mentioned just above. Although some students will inevitably express frustration that they are not learning about the famous theorists in our field right away, this angst can be used as a teachable moment by introducing the idea that we are all creators of knowledge, its just that some people’s knowledge eventually makes its way into journal articles or books, which doesn’t necessarily mean it’s “good” knowledge.
    The second approach would be to introduce students to difficult literature that interrogates rationalist claims of identity (Foucault, 1986; Fanon, 1952, 2008) or more digestible writing that takes up this same task (Gergen, 1991, 2000; Turkle, 1984, 2005). Because I assume many master’s students come to graduate school with traditional ideas about what identity is, would it not be a prudent exercise to have them first question these claims so as to disrupt their discursively constituted, often positivist realities? This cognitive dissonance may then be a space for embarking upon the pursuit of more creative interpretations of sense of self.
    It is at this point (if it hasn’t already occurred) that I am guessing my readers’ critique alarms are sounding. One form of disagreement I anticipate surfacing goes something like this. “Whoa, hold up. We can’t be teaching Foucault and Fanon to mere master’s students. For they could not deal with the intellectual turbulence that authors like this often incite in their readers. These works are too dense, too complex, too fragmented for people with only a humble bachelor’s degree in hand to comprehend.” To this type of critique, all I can say is, how do you know? Have we tried this approach, tried it again, and again, and again? Why is it that simply because someone is at the master’s level in their education do we often think they are not ready to undertake the interpretation of more complex ideas? Who says they are not ready? Instead of chalking up our lack of introducing more difficult texts into our curriculum to the cognitive immaturity or simplicity of student thinking, perhaps this deficiency is more a reflection of professors’ lack of skill in facilitating the teaching and learning of more complex ideas?
    The point here for instructors, as I see it at least, is not to advance one idea of thinking about the self over another. But because the identity development we currently teach is so wrapped up in categories and stages, in the Enlightenment Self, a seemingly fruitful strategy would be to deconstruct this traditional tidiness in hopes of opening up more space for students to reflect on how they personally make sense of their selves and how they develop, or do not, in an effort to promote more intense critical thinking.
    In closing, I would like to leave readers with a question to consider: Is the state of student affairs graduate education, drawing upon Foucauldian insight here, an exemplar of our discipline disciplining students to construct essentialist ideas that we have or should have coherent identities? You, the all-knowing professor may have an answer to this question, but as for our master’s students, those lowly intellectual minions, many of them likely will not because of our “benevolent” shielding of them from “too complex” of ideas.
    References:
    Chickering, A. W. (1969). Education and identity (1st ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
    Chickering, A. W. and Reisser, L. (1993). Education and identity (2nd ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
    Foucault, M. (1986). The care of the self: The history of sexuality (volume 3). New York: Random House, Inc.
    Gergen, K. J. (1991, 2000). The saturated self: Dilemmas of identity in contemporary life. New York: Basic Books.
    Fanon, F. (1952, 2008). Black skin, white masks. New York: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
    Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the social: An introduction to actor-network theory. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Turkle, S. (1984, 2005). The second self: Computers and the human spirit. Cambridge: The MIT Press.

  • Fragmented Self

    In thinking about the arrival of new master's students this coming fall of 2009, I thought I would share some piece of writing I recently completed:
    Rethinking How We Teach Identity And Its Supposed Development
    By Fra.Gm_en:ted “Self”
    Because the Journal of College Student Development is set up in such a way that disallows for thoughtful commentary that is not based upon the empirical studies that we privilege so as to attempt to legitimize our field, I thought it appropriate to send my writing out via electronic media to people who I perceive as having an interest in the ideas I put forth below. The Internet, along with its oppressive qualities, also enables academically suppressed voices to subvert traditional modes of knowledge dissemination in the academy and in doing so, be heard. With that said, knowing full well that many will delete this email instantly, I proceed in hopes that my voice will be acknowledged at least by a few.
    Upon getting ready to start a student affairs M.A. degree in a renowned program, I was exhilarated by the opportunity to finally know what identity and student development “actually was.” As a white, lower-middle-class, heterosexual, epistemic agnostic, ontological atheist, feminist, football-watching, high art appreciating, United States citizen, long had I struggled with questions about who I really was, who others were, and how we develop as people. At last, thanks to the milieu of theories, frameworks, and models I was about to learn, I could determine what exactly constitutes the self, my self, and other selves. I could finally become whole, and see others as whole, thus fitting Western Enlightenment’s demanding articulation of being that has pervaded our thinking for many years now. Once my graduate education began, however, is the point I recognized the futility of using neat and tidy theories to understand what identity and its supposed development is.
    To begin, I should make known my epistemological promiscuity. I reject two things about the idea of identity development: the concept of identity and that of development. The former, steeped in its etymological root of “sameness”, from the Latin word idem, inherently implies that one’s identity is that thing they are or should be, regardless of situational context, culture, or intrapersonal onto-epistemic orientation. For the “healthy” individual, one’s identity stays congruent when traveling amidst the many landscapes of life. As regards the latter, as I see it, development is a dressed up notion of becoming more responsible and decentering one’s self from being the focus of worldly experience. It is an exclusive piece of rhetoric, embedded in the Grand Narrative of Progress, that tells us that developing or being developed is something we should strive for in hopes of overcoming our fragmented realities and becoming whole.
    Thanks to “advances” in psychosocial theory, many have come to accept that this thing-we-call-identity-development is experienced differently by people depending upon their race, sexual orientation, gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, nationality, or religion (or the lack thereof), among many other variable dynamics.
    Brilliant! We have done it at last!
    We have figured out that how one perceives their self and other selves is shaped, in part, by the endless slew of discursively constituted categories that are often thought to comprise the self. I do not mean to take lightly the formerly fresh idea that peoples’ dynamics greatly influence how they think of themselves and others and knowledge; it is quite the contrary. I applaud this growth, this quasi-extension beyond essentialist claims of what the self is or should be. A problem arises, however, when we jump too quickly from nuanced ideas or empirical interpretations (as insightful as they may be) to developing theories, stages, and models that simply subvert the former foundationalist notions of identity. This form of reductionism, radiated throughout graduate education in student affairs usually starting the first day of the Introduction to Student Development course, through the textual likes of Chickering (1969), or perhaps Chickering and Reisser (1993) for the real trailblazers, stifles graduate student creativity during their own conceptualization process of thinking about what identity is or even, if it is.
    It is important to be clear here by being iterative. The introduction of psychosocial theories of identity development has done wonders for complicating our thinking about identity beyond the days of idem, and they should be applauded as such. A constraint of intellectual flexibility, however, precipitates when these theories are introduced to students at the onset without first letting them think through the idea of identity and trace the connections between the various human and non-human actors (Latour, 2005) that eventually play a role in shaping who we are (or are not) for themselves. With this in mind, I should mention that in my personal experience with student development courses during my master’s program, I was fortunate to have a professor that allowed for this type of organic learning. Instead of pulling out Education and Identity on the first day of class, he challenged each of my classmates and I to first write our own narratives of how we make sense of our selves. This self-reflective task, free from the ideas of theorists past, permitted students to write their own micro-theory of identity development. It was not until later that we were asked to compare our stories with those of the theorists that have hegemonically preceded us.
    So, the question becomes, what do we start with then with respect to teaching new master’s students about identity? My answer is two fold and I could see them being approached individually or conjoined. The first approach would be that sort of organic self-theory creation I mentioned just above. Although some students will inevitably express frustration that they are not learning about the famous theorists in our field right away, this angst can be used as a teachable moment by introducing the idea that we are all creators of knowledge, its just that some people’s knowledge eventually makes its way into journal articles or books, which doesn’t necessarily mean it’s “good” knowledge.
    The second approach would be to introduce students to difficult literature that interrogates rationalist claims of identity (Foucault, 1986; Fanon, 1952, 2008) or more digestible writing that takes up this same task (Gergen, 1991, 2000; Turkle, 1984, 2005). Because I assume many master’s students come to graduate school with traditional ideas about what identity is, would it not be a prudent exercise to have them first question these claims so as to disrupt their discursively constituted, often positivist realities? This cognitive dissonance may then be a space for embarking upon the pursuit of more creative interpretations of sense of self.
    It is at this point (if it hasn’t already occurred) that I am guessing my readers’ critique alarms are sounding. One form of disagreement I anticipate surfacing goes something like this. “Whoa, hold up. We can’t be teaching Foucault and Fanon to mere master’s students. For they could not deal with the intellectual turbulence that authors like this often incite in their readers. These works are too dense, too complex, too fragmented for people with only a humble bachelor’s degree in hand to comprehend.” To this type of critique, all I can say is, how do you know? Have we tried this approach, tried it again, and again, and again? Why is it that simply because someone is at the master’s level in their education do we often think they are not ready to undertake the interpretation of more complex ideas? Who says they are not ready? Instead of chalking up our lack of introducing more difficult texts into our curriculum to the cognitive immaturity or simplicity of student thinking, perhaps this deficiency is more a reflection of professors’ lack of skill in facilitating the teaching and learning of more complex ideas?
    The point here for instructors, as I see it at least, is not to advance one idea of thinking about the self over another. But because the identity development we currently teach is so wrapped up in categories and stages, in the Enlightenment Self, a seemingly fruitful strategy would be to deconstruct this traditional tidiness in hopes of opening up more space for students to reflect on how they personally make sense of their selves and how they develop, or do not, in an effort to promote more intense critical thinking.
    In closing, I would like to leave readers with a question to consider: Is the state of student affairs graduate education, drawing upon Foucauldian insight here, an exemplar of our discipline disciplining students to construct essentialist ideas that we have or should have coherent identities? You, the all-knowing professor may have an answer to this question, but as for our master’s students, those lowly intellectual minions, many of them likely will not because of our “benevolent” shielding of them from “too complex” of ideas.
    References:
    Chickering, A. W. (1969). Education and identity (1st ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
    Chickering, A. W. and Reisser, L. (1993). Education and identity (2nd ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
    Foucault, M. (1986). The care of the self: The history of sexuality (volume 3). New York: Random House, Inc.
    Gergen, K. J. (1991, 2000). The saturated self: Dilemmas of identity in contemporary life. New York: Basic Books.
    Fanon, F. (1952, 2008). Black skin, white masks. New York: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
    Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the social: An introduction to actor-network theory. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Turkle, S. (1984, 2005). The second self: Computers and the human spirit. Cambridge: The MIT Press.

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