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Orientation: Not Your Average Life


Posted by Cindy Kane on 30 Jun 2010 / 25 Comments



I remember being a grad student and thinking about areas I wanted to pursue in student affairs. I thought “wow, being an OL was a great in college. Being in charge of the program would be really amazing.” That was back when my view of Orientation was like a pause in the great time/space continuum. Everything just switched on in June when my fellow OL’s and I moved on campus and everything switched off when we left. It was all matching shirts and name games in my head and all the life-changing opportunities came with it just arrived on campus like turning on a faucet.  I also remember thinking I “knew Orientation” when I was just a supporting staff member who was on the committee.

Over the years, my roles with orientation have progressed from OL to graduate assistant to the “person who presents the getting involved session and helps with training” to the person in charge of it to today. Now I am the person who supervises the person in charge of it, so I have a little more of an objective eye on this phenomenon we see every summer than I used to. I’m writing today to tell you that even after 15 years in the field there is still no experience quite like directing Orientation. What’s so unique about it? Here’s my two cents:

• If you really want someone with broad campus knowledge and perspective, ask someone who coordinates Orientation.
There’s a reason why my Assistant Director for New Student Programs can quote what placement scores will get a student into Writing II and what types of health forms are required for immunizations. It’s because she is responsible for an important conduit of communication for the new students to get this information. Every orientation professional I’ve ever worked with has a great knack for taking a wide view of the incoming student experience. How can we get the rest of campus to see even parts of that wide view to understand the college transition from outside their own areas? It’s such a great skill.

• “Other duties as assigned” is the rule, not the exception!
My staff members have filled roles in place of colleagues from areas like Counseling Services, Information Technology, Transit… you name it. We’ve set up rooms, consulted on dining support for those with severe food allergies and had to deliver news of family tragedy to a student who was with us at orientation.  Most duties that we would never be expected to handle during the year.  When the campus is on “skeleton staff” in the summer you find yourself in an array of situations needing your quick attention when your colleagues might be on other projects or on vacation. You have a choice. You can lament this situation, or you can use it to let the campus see you and your team shine.

• If you want some experience in navigating campus politics, direct Orientation.
Part of coordinating orientation means taking a lot of moving parts and trying to get them to move without hurting each other in the process. We struggle to get these parts to collaborate all year long, but somehow they have to make it work during Orientation. If you’re running Orientation you likely don’t supervise all of these parts all year long, but suddenly you’re in a position to dictate where and how these areas will contribute to the new student experience. So, when one of these parts messes up royally…how do you address it? The political savvy needed in these situations is not for the faint of heart.

• Most of your campus believes “if I had five minutes at Orientation” that they would get automatic success in their major, program or organization. They may not say it out loud, but the number of people who agree that just five minutes of talking head stardom with the incoming students would change everything is staggering. It’s a compliment to what they believe is the impact of Orientation, but also can be difficult. What we can do is to help them understand that there’s some important time to be engaging students between the time they get their acceptance letter and their first day of classes. As we who preach social media opportunity know, there’s ways to engage people that don’t require sitting in a room together!

• Orientation is a process, not an event.
This is my mantra to every colleague who campaigns for “just five minutes.” Students begin their transition to college from the first moment they consider what college might be like through their entire early time period on campus. As institutions, we miss out on so many opportunities with new students by not being intentional about how our messages are communicated. As an example, even my own department promotes a “Get Involved” message at Orientation without recruiting students for the SGA or program board. We show them how to find this information, but if we get them thinking about specific organizations too early they will miss the point of emphasis on the impact of involvement on campus.

• Group development – on fast forward!
I’ve been advising student leaders for my whole career, but group development in an Orientation setting is just not the same. It’s a great study in group development because they are with each other 24/7 and their sole focus on campus is this program. During the year, they have a billion other things going on, but we ask them to work together on one giant project all month long.

I always enjoy watching groups progress through stages of group development, but as my Orientation colleagues know, the intensity of this group experience makes each stage come and go quickly! When you don’t have a whole year together to patiently await self-actualization, the urgency factor makes things much more dramatic. Small problems can’t just be brushed aside in hope of them “working out eventually.” There’s just no time. On the bright side, the great moments are magnified too. That’s just incredible to watch.

Oh, but what do I know. We’re just the people who play name games, right?

I’m going to go write my staff member a card now that it’s finally over. I know what she’s been through!

What do you think? I know that every campus has its own unique dynamics around their program format, timing, structure and responsibilities, but is your experience anything like mine?

Written by Cindy Kane


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  • http://twitter.com/sarahhcraddock Sarah Craddock

    That's exactly what I love about orientation! And every part of it is so true, at least from my experience as an OL and grad.

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  • Carter Roane

    Great post! All the orientation leaders that I have encountered always worked extremely hard and seemed to wear many different hats so I think its definetly the nature of the job. Orientation has always been an interest of mine and would like to experience that in my student affairs career.

    • http://twitter.com/cindykane cindykane

      Thanks for your comment. Do you see the administrators that work with orientation wearing the many hats you reference too? Or, is it just the students?

      • Carter Roane

        Without a doubt..both the students and the administrators! I have some experience with summer conference work so I was around a lot during orientation. I remember the Director of the Student Union and the Director of Student Activities driving around campus in a golf cart because more often than not, during orientation they may have had to be in two different parts of campus very quickly. I was very impressed with how hard they worked and that stuck with me! Now, how long is orientation at your school?

  • beekayroot

    Great post… I don't have any experiences running or even pseudo-running orientation events; but I have a lot of respect for those who do. Partly due to my fascination with working with first-year students, I also enjoy the orientation process because of this reason.

    I particularly liked your statement that “orientation is a process, not an event.” Too many people forget that.

    Also, I enjoy your reference to Tuckman's group development stages. I go over Tuckman's model each year with my executive boards of student organizations. I think it's helpful for them to understand the process/stages.

    • http://twitter.com/cindykane cindykane

      Thanks for your comments! The Tuckman model is always so interesting in an Orientation context. They really zoom through it at warp speed and I'm pretty sure that would be a common observation for all groups that are “intense” in spending time together. Do you think that development process would evolve really fast on other groups like Alternative Break groups that only have a short time together but spend ALL their time together?

      • beekayroot

        I think you're correct… I've chaperoned a few alternative spring break trips, and I can definitely see the Tuckman model at work. Also, during intense RA training periods. My pre-fall RA training periods have ranged from 1 to 2 weeks, and that always seems to be ample time for the staff to make its way through Tuckman's model.

  • Erin Morrell

    Great post Cindy! I totally agree that Orientation folks get a broad knowledge over everything about the college because of all the questions that they field…I can read medical forms down to the nitty gritty details to make sure the students have their immunizations, as well as I can tell you which faculty members to talk to about which majors and class registration! It's a crazy world, but a fun process nonetheless!

    • http://twitter.com/cindykane cindykane

      I will bet you never figured a knowledge of medical forms would be up your alley, did you? :-) That broad based knowledge should be what all of us strive for in all of our areas…but I think at larger schools it might be tougher than at smaller ones. Do others at your institution have the same type of knowledge about your area? (as an example)

  • http://blog.swiftkickonline.com tomkrieglstein

    I'm passing this on to several people I know who are right now knee deep in orientation. So much of it rings true.

  • http://karupert.com Kristen

    Its long, time consuming, stressful, and wonderful. I love Orientation and I loved this post. YOU ROCK.

    • http://twitter.com/cindykane cindykane

      Stressful and wonderful is a great explanation!

  • Erin Courville

    Cindy, I love this post! It is so true, I had no idea really what I was signing up for when I took my grad position with Orientation. It was night and day from working as an OL. I like your message here.

    • http://twitter.com/cindykane cindykane

      Interesting to hear from you on this… given you were one of “my” OL's! I always wonder – how much should we “protect” OL's from the true craziness of the Orientation world? Any insight into that, Erin?

      • Erin Courville

        It is tough to say since I would not trade my experience for anything else I did at college. I think no matter how much you tell students it is different they probably won't truly believe/understand until they experience it for themselves. It does however make me really respect and appreciate the time and effort that was put in by the administrators to make my experience “protected” and awesome :)

  • http://twitter.com/lvanlysal Liz Van Lysal

    What amazes me at my campus is the lack of involvement in orientation from offices and staff that don't have an “official” role. Just because you're not presenting at orientation doesn't mean you have an impact on each orientation day. Is your office staffed to accommodate student AND parent walk-ins? Does summer construction limit access to your building? I'd love to see a campus (and I'm sure there are a few) where every staff member who works during the summer would be able to tell you it's an orientation day, and what they're doing to make sure students have a great experience while they're on campus.

    • http://twitter.com/cindykane cindykane

      Best reply I can offer: Amen!

  • Cbjellqu

    As a former OL, current graduate assistant and hopefully a future director… this article literally made my night. After a long day of Orientation that had many ups and downs, I have a renewed energy to great tomorrow. THANK YOU SO MUCH!

    • http://twitter.com/cindykane cindykane

      Wow – that is such a kind comment and I totally know those “ups and downs” you are talking about. It's just amazing how those days can be so totally terrible sometimes yet it leaves you wanting to just keep working to make it better!! Keep up the energy and be confident that your new students appreciate it…even if they don't realize it yet!

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  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=3428247 Tom Studdert

    I think your experience is exactly what every Orientation professional experiences. Nicely written!

  • http://twitter.com/donaldsteele Donald Abels

    Just by being involved in orientation as a student leader, I can relate a great deal with what you’ve said. AWESOME post! 

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