Thanks to everyone who participated in yesterday’s #SAchat focusing on defining diversity across different campuses. This week, our chats produced more than 1,000 comments from 197 student affairs professionals,  graduate students and undergraduates interested or working in the Student Affairs field!

This week’s conversation produced some lively discussion about the challenges of defining diversity on campuses. In case you missed it, below is the transcript. If you haven’t yet participated in an #sachat, learn more here.

Full Transcript

DAYTIME:  View as a Google Document

Feel free to edit the transcript to participate in chat or keep the conversation going via Twitter.

This Week’s Top Contributors

@JennaMagnuski
@KARupert
@ericstoller
@CledaWang
@ARL275
@MikeJHamilton
@bryceehughes
@ErinKEbert
@BeccaFick

What are some other topics you would like to see us cover?  Please let us know your ideas and feedback to keep #sachat growing strong. Until next week, (if you haven’t already done so) please make sure to LIKE our growing Facebook Page, currently more than 3,130 and adding new #studentaffairs friends every day!  Thanks for your continued support!

It’s the most wonderful time of year. The school supply displays are up in major retailers. Commercials are touting the must have shoes for back to school. Every week a Bed, Bath and Beyond catalog appears in my mailbox to highlight some new thing that college students need for their dorm rooms. Beneath all of the commercialization, the anticipation for the upcoming school year is palpable. It’s a time of new beginnings and opportunity on the horizon.

I took a much needed break on a Saturday afternoon in early July to see Toy Story 3. Armed with a wad of tissues and the warnings of those who had gone before me, I thought I was prepared to say goodbye to Woody, Buzz, Andy, and the rest of the gang. As I watched Andy go through the process of preparing to leave for college and make decisions about what he would take with him and what he would leave behind, I realized how wrongly many of us are doing our jobs this time of year.

What’s on your desk right now? Look around. Is it the welcome week schedule? The latest round of room assignments? Updates to degree requirements for advisees? A revised syllabus for the first year experience course you teach?

We are enthused about the opportunities that we provide to incoming students, and rightfully so. As a collective field, we have a lot to offer our students. We have classes, programs, events, activities, organizations — all of them our toys. New ones! Shiny ones! Ones that our new friends have never seen before!

But in our excitement, we sometimes forget about the toys that our students have relegated to bags in their attics and basements, the things they leave behind and give up to be with us on our campuses. We lose sight of the people they are because we’re so focused on the people they can become.  They are away from family and friends; they made choices about schools and may have cold feet. Over the next weeks as students begin to arrive on our campuses, remember for a minute what you felt stepping onto campus for the first time. Remember your friends who weren’t with you and the newness of everything around you.  Think about what you left behind and the trepidation you felt about replacing those things too quickly.

Meet yourself where you were at to better equip yourself to meet new students where they are.

Career Services and Social Media: Todd really says it best ;-)

@EricStoller If there is a single Student Affairs dept that could *pwn* social media it is career services.less than a minute ago via web

Let’s shift some paradigms: Introducing my new blog at Inside Higher Ed.

Challenge and Tech Support: Student Affairs practitioners and Tech Support departments…please let us be admins.

Do you YouTube? Don’t forget to add captions: Would you build a new building without an elevator? Nope… Then why would you ever create videos without captions?

George Orwell, Web Stats, and Your Site Visitors: Student Affairs + Web Stats….Nerdvana :-)

It’s qualitative research time!  Enter your response to the question below.

If you cannot view this poll click here.


And here are the results from the last poll.

The results of the first weekly #SAbest poll are in! Here are twenty of the top tweets that you voted for last week:


What is the first thing you do when you get to your office in the am? I peel off my #office page-a-day calendar for a good laugh. #sachatless than a minute ago via web


Just a thought but could Lebron James (’84), DWade (’82), and Chris Bosh(’84) be a case study in today’s athletic millennials? #sachatless than a minute ago via web


Breaking News: @jacksonj admits to stealing toilet paper in college! #sachatless than a minute ago via TweetDeck


FT: Take ur training schedule from last yr, replace fun w/new ideas, move edu sessions to diff days, change atleast 30% #sachatless than a minute ago via TweetGrid


We had a World Cup Theme, and we constantly played our Vuvuzelas during the presentations. #sachatless than a minute ago via HootSuite


For many people working in HigherED, summer is defined by the days you have orientation and the days you don’t. #sachatless than a minute ago via web


FT: YOu want a collective rolling of the eyes from students? Use themes #sachatless than a minute ago via TweetChat


With the #sachat superlative results revealed, I’m wondering what everyone was voted in high school. Care to share?less than a minute ago via web


@Brown_Melissa You can contribute right now! Your ideas and experiences are just as imp. as those w/20+ yrs of FT work. Jump in! #sachatless than a minute ago via Twitterfall


Students are so honest. And dramatic. #sachat http://yfrog.com/4bl9iqjless than a minute ago via Twitter for iPhone


In the last 7 days, there have been 202 unique contributors using #sachat. Wow.less than a minute ago via web


RT @Davey_Jacobson: How Social Networking Helps Teaching and Worries Professors http://bit.ly/9TYzHV via @Chronicle #sachat #smchat #edtechless than a minute ago via TweetDeck


If you have embedded videos on your student affairs webpages, you need to check out this post: http://bit.ly/cOX4LY #SAchatless than a minute ago via TweetDeck


Hello #sachat, busy week, baby #2 born & job interview w/ a search com. any advice for group interviews, esp when they include students?less than a minute ago via TweetDeck


Awww… @littleredsaid hit the 200 follower mark today! I think we owe it all to his fame as an #sachat superlative winner! Thanks all :) less than a minute ago via TweetDeck


Just learning about #sachat but excited to join the conversation!less than a minute ago via TweetDeck


Interesting. States with greatest and lowest 6-year graduation rates. http://bit.ly/bHVXS1 #sachat #higheredless than a minute ago via Seesmic


Good night #SAchat – my topic may not win this time…but we’ll be back. Oh how we’ll be back!less than a minute ago via Seesmic


FT: Themes underestimate the developmental level of our students #sachatless than a minute ago via web


Wow, I can’t believe I missed out on the Theme Debacle of 2010 at the end of #sachatless than a minute ago via Twitter for iPhone

The poll is open for this week’s #SAbest – let the nominations begin!

#SAchat Superlatives

July 23rd, 2010 | Posted by Niki Rudolph in Uncategorized - (0 Comments)
Thank you all for your votes for the first ever (at least to my knowledge) #SAchat Superlatives. We will be scheduling times later to take your photos for the yearbook, but in the meantime, congrats to all of the winners. We hope you appreciate the momentous honor the #sachat community has bestowed upon you. The envelope please…
Most likely to tweet through major life event (wedding, birth of child, etc): @cindykane
Most likely to tweet after midnight: @EricStoller & @jacksonj
Most likely to tweet the same thing: @mikesevery & @beccafick
Most likely to bring the snark: Twittertwins @EricStoller & @StacyLOliver
Most likely to bring the sunshine: Definitively @KARupert
Most likely to tweet a great resource: @reyjunco & @JPKirchmeier
Most likely to make you LOL: @clconzen & @StacyLOliver
Most likely to attend an #sachat tweetup: @edcabellon
Most Likely to Require Reconstructive Thumb Surgery: Too many nominated, and no clear winner. Apparently, that means everyone in #sachat tweets too much.
Honorable Mentions:
Most likely to melt your heart: @littleredsaid
Most likely to make you think about gender issues: @JPKirchmeier
Most likely to spark a random trivia contest: @Kathy_Petras
Best quotes: @BrianLeDuc
Rock stars of #sachat: @ericstoller, @lvanlysal, @nikirudolph, @edcabellon

Thanks to everyone who participated in yesterday’s #SAchat focusing on strategies for staff training and development. This week, our chats produced more than 1,100 comments from 192 student affairs professionals,  graduate students and undergraduates interested or working in the Student Affairs field!

This week’s conversation produced some helpful information about the processes involved in developing successful training programs, both in the fall and year round. In case you missed it, below is the transcript. If you haven’t yet participated in an #sachat, learn more here.

Full Transcript

DAYTIME:  View as a Google Document

Feel free to edit the transcript to participate in chat or keep the conversation going via Twitter.

This Week’s Top Contributors

@JPKirchmeier
@reyjunco
@Dramanique
@MikeJHamilton
@ericstoller
@mickeyfitch
@cindykane
@DebSR58
@studentlifeguru

What are some other topics you would like to see us cover?  Please let us know your ideas and feedback to keep #sachat growing strong. Until next week, (if you haven’t already done so) please make sure to LIKE our growing Facebook Page, currently more than 3,100 and adding new #studentaffairs friends every day!  Thanks for your continued support!

Developing Respect for Student Affairs

Break the System to Remake the System

student engagement: participation policy vs participation

the debate rages on and i’m tired of it

trenton, the wire, and jasper howard

change is blowing

staff led or student led

Filed under: Blog Post Tagged: jeff lail

If you cannot view this poll click here.





And here are the results from the last poll.


In recent news, Prince spoke out against the Internet stating, “All these computers and digital gadgets are no good. They just fill your head with numbers, and that can’t be good for you.” After reading the article, I’ve imagined this is all a publicity stunt to promote his new album (which I’m not going to promote). But his comments do cause me to reflect on the impact technology has had on our learning and development. Can Prince be right about gadgets not being good for you? I also thought to myself, if technology is not good for us, then is what we do in student affairs not good either?

So I thought about mp3 players – I have several different versions – ones that hook right up to the computer with the USB port and of course, a ipod. Are they no good? Sure, I can load them up with useless songs, but I have found that mp3 players (the same as the old personal cassette and CD players) represent a part of our soul. We put music, podcasts, shows, pictures, and other items on these devices because they mean something to us. When I’m running and a song comes on, it immediately transports me to a different place and time. When I’m listening to a podcast like “Tech Therapy” from the Chronicle, I’m learning and reflecting. My physical presence hasn’t changed – I’m still running physically, but my mind is running all over previous held knowledge and new thoughts and ideas are emerging. I think sometimes, student affairs can be seen as a mp3 player. We provide a menu of options for students to engage in.  We have weekend programs, community service projects, student activities, student groups, intramural teams, and the list goes on.  Sometimes, we have large attendance and sometimes a program or new initiative fails. As student affairs professionals, we reflect and re-analyze our efforts to reach students and provide support to them. But it’s important to remember, just as a mp3 player, students participate in different college programs as a reflection of who they are. Similar to a playlist on a mp3 player, students pick and choose their engagement on what reflects their interests and what would help them grow. We may not see how our actions impact them in the moment, but perhaps students’ cognitive processes are in motion helping them further in their development.

I also thought of computers. Are they filling my head up with numbers and useless information? Are they leading us to be disengaged with others and ourselves? There are numerous scholarly articles and research examining the effect of technology on disengagement (i.e. Main, Student disengagement in higher education: Two Trends in Technology, and Lindos and Zolkos, Technology, Community, and Education in Neoliberal Society: A Review of Michael Bugeja’s Interpersonal Divide). In these articles, arguments are presented regarding technology’s threat to higher education by encouraging commercialism and disengagement among students. For example, in a survey conducted with 116 students with GPAs below 2.0, one-third of participants acknowledged the impact recreational computer use had on their academic performance (Farrell, 2005). Many electronic addictions are also becoming prevalent on campuses like gaming, gambling, and web surfing (Carr-Chellman, 2005; Farrell, 2005). So how does student affairs practices fit into this new era of engagement? Often, student affairs professionals are seen as the experts in student engagement, being sought out by others on our expertise and talents. We are not limited by time and space. Our business is students, which sometimes requires accessibility at all hours and in various forms. There are arguments out there that state that student affairs is useless to the enterprise of higher education, that we should simply be “house mothers” and let the learning be left for the experts (i.e. faculty). But student affairs, like technology, does have a role in educating students. We can assist students in maximizing their academic goals by developing strategies to reach them. We provide a framework for challenge and support as students navigate through their college experience. Technology does the same, if utilized and directed with intentionality and purpose.

So I go back to my original question: Is technology no good for our brain? I don’t have a clear answer to that, but I know that my mind has been challenged by what technology has provided me. Technology makes me think of my practices. It delivers information to me daily that requires me to mull, reflect, act, and react to. I use a cell-phone to communicate with friends and family. I use a computer to manage all my professional responsibilities. I skype, I twit, I blog, I post, I read, I reflect, and I learn. Technology for the good or bad allows me to grow. So maybe Prince wants us to stay partying like it’s 1999, but I prefer to party it on into the future and let my mind keep growing.

Licinia “Lulu” Barrueco Kaliher, Ed.D., is a Ray Street Complex Director at the University of Delaware.

References

Carr-Chellman, A. A. (Ed.). (2005). Global Perspectives on E-learning: Rhetoric and Reality. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Farrell, E. F. (2005, September 2). Logging on, tuning out: When students lose themselves in online worlds, it can be hard to bring them back to reality. The Chronicle of Higher Education, p. A46.