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Shane Young, M.Ed

~ Student Affairs Professional

Shane Young, M.Ed

Tag Archives: housing

Conference Contemplation [GLACUHO 2019)

24 Thursday Oct 2019

Posted by Shane Young in Education, Higher Education, Student Affairs

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Education, GLACUHO, GLACUHO2019, housing, residence, residence education, residence life, residence life and housing, residential education, residential life

Conference

A Brief Message from Your Sponsor

I wanted to spice up my professional development so I joined a regional housing organization’s committee structure. I have served on the Professional Foundations committee through GLACUHO and it all culminated in attending this year’s annual conference in East Lansing, Michigan. This was my second GLACUHO and the only conference where I was the entire delegation (big yikes). I took a chance and presented at the conference. I can confirm that I still have a deep discomfort with public speaking.

I really enjoyed my time at GLACUHO. I was able to see old colleagues and supervisors from a new context. I even was able to see several of my graduate school peers! It has been a little while since I have been to or presented at a conference. I forgot how much I missed learning from the many other professionals across the Great Lakes region. I am at a unique point of my life and career where I am not entirely sure that residence life or student affairs is for me any more. I want to and feel that I am capable of so much, but I simultaneously feel stuck in place. I like money and need (not want) more of it to live my best life. Seeing so many awesome professionals has not helped any of these feelings; in fact I feel more confused than before. Well…. onto the fun stuff!

In the sections below, I am going to tell you what session I attended, provide a brief summary of what the session was about, and then post a few takeaways. I won’t include my own presentation, because you can find that here.

Shane’s GLACUHO Summary

When Individual Rights vs.  University Values Collide

Presenters:

  • Chelsea Knarr, Kent State University
  • Richard Danals, Kent State University

Summary:

The presenters speak about a contentious rally on campus that made regional and national headlines. How do campus organizations respond when outside organizations want to come to campus and speak about divisive topics that invoke large counter rallies? Who pays for security? What were the key issues faced by the administration and what lessons did they learn?

Takeaways:

  • Even when facing a crisis there will still be plenty of time for multiple stakeholders to interpret and reinterpret existing policies in new and sometimes imaginative ways.
  • Sometimes your job is to be the bearer of bad news to multiple parties.
  • One of the key responses that I found the most interesting was that professional and student staff members were not required to be on campus during this time. The leadership asked that those who needed or wanted to not be on campus during that time simply let them know. As a professional who has been asked to “ensure that we have bodies available” I thought this was a good move. 

Unpacking Our “Profession”

Presenters:

  • Kyle Sabin, Michigan State University
  • Kim Christian, Michigan State University

Summary:

This session was a panel presentation from some Michigan State University faculty and staff to discuss professionalism within student affairs. The beginning started with identifying what the word “professional” meant in its most basic definition. I do not recall the exact definition, but I believe it was “a person who has obtained a certain level of competency within a selected field.” Professional has moved from this noun to an adjective and because now of its descriptive nature there is an expectation of what professionalism means. The panel discussed their marginalized identities and how the concept of professionalism has resulted in negative life experiences.

Takeaways:

  • It is important for our offices, departments, divisions to review dress codes and policies and make them more inclusive
  • Professionalism is rooted in whiteness; in oppression

Diversity Education Training: Where Are We, Where Do We Want to Go, and How Do We Get There?

Presenters:

  • Lloyd Graham, Indiana University Bloomington
  • Jackie Mayfield, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
  • Elijah Zagorski, Southern Illinois University Carbondale

Summary:

The Inclusion and Equity Committee completed a survey of GLACUHO institutions focusing on diversity education training. There were 67 responses; 51% of them from public institutions, 28% from  private (non faith-based), 20% from private (faith-based), and 1% from community college. The three main topics of the survey were: learning outcomes for diversity education training, type of training provided, and what assessment was conducted afterwards.

Takeaways:

  • A majority of these institutions indicated they did not have or were not sure if they had learning outcomes for diversity education training.
  • Most public and mid-size to large institutions had diversity offices complete training
  • Most smaller institutions would have their own professional staff complete training for student staff
  • 24/67 provided responses assessment that was done.
  • 10 of those 24 indicated that no assessment is done.
  • My takeaway: we have to do better. 

Not Another Training Montage: An RA Training Revamp with a One-Two Punch of Outcomes and Assessment

Presenters:

  • Joshua Maxwell, Bowling Green State University
  • Brittany Krisanda, Bowling Green State University

Summary:

After noticing that staff performance in certain areas were dropping, that staff were focusing too much on session titles, that there were so many campus partners who wanted full training sessions within training these professionals finally took the time to complete revamp their training planning. They developed a 10 step training road map and shared it at the GLACUHO conference.

Takeaways:

  • Job Description Bullets > Learning Outcomes > Training Topics > Actual Sessions is a very simple and easy to follow method for transforming training.
  • Training Presentation Outlines sent to presenters that they need to fill out/return is a fantastic method of presenter accountability.
  • A Daily Wrap Up is a great way to give opportunities for questions.
  • A Morning Report where professional staff respond to all questions based on the evening’s assessment is something I am 100% going to add to my training.

Being the Squeaky Wheel: Advocating for Yourself & the Collective

Presenters:

  • Cassie Govert, IUPUI

Summary:

The presenter recognized that “there are many ways we’re taken advantage of in our roles” and that we are not always well trained on advocating for our selves or our students. The presented used the analogy of Residence Life as a Dumpster Fire. The presenter asked us to identify a topic from our home institution and as we went through each of the steps they identified we applied that knowledge to our own issue and discussed it with another person in the room.

Takeaways:

  • One must know thyself in order to advocate for oneself or others.
  • You are in the room for a reason.
  • There are multiple ways to advocate.

Sound the Alarm: Crisis Management – Before, During, and After

Presenters:

  • John Kendall, Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy

Summary:

An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, especially in crisis management. The Presenter for this session provided some research backed tips on crisis response by breaking down the responsibilities of crisis management into before, during, and after. Afterword, the presenter shared a compelling story about their own crisis that they handled.

Takeaways:

  • It is important to clearly identify who does what during an emergency before one takes place.
  • When a crisis begins one of the most important aspects is to begin gathering facts and identifying an effective way to communicate them between various response teams.
  • The before and after is important, but after a crisis it is important to review everything that happened and make necessary changes. Sometimes what we plan for isn’t what happens and we need a new plan for the next time.

MBAs in Residence Life: Why Get Another Master’s?

Presenters:

  • Jim Herman, Western Michigan University
  • Alex Peterson, Western Michigan University

Summary:

Both presenters are master’s level student affairs professionals from different backgrounds, but both of them are in the same MBA program. They discussed the MBA in general as well as the results of a brief survey that they conducted regarding MBAs and skills perception from Senior Student Affairs Officers. Recognizing that higher education is a business, the presenters spoke on the new context they were getting from their newfound skills and knowledge within their own work.

Takeaways:

  • According to ACUHO-i standards completion of an MBA may qualify candidates for a Director of Housing related position.
  • MBA professionals average salary is significantly higher than student affairs professionals.
  • A lot of the lessons and skills learned from an MBA is applicable to housing operations.
  • Excel is very important (I knew that, but this just reinforced it more).

 

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A Year in Brief Review

13 Sunday May 2018

Posted by Shane Young in Student Affairs

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

blogging, housing, loss, losses, planning, politics, reflect, Reflection, review, win, wins

Wins and Losses of 2017-2018

Wins

  • I met and worked with some phenomenal graduate assistants whom, although had no idea what they were getting themselves into, have given me one of the best years of supervision I have ever had.
  • I was chosen to lead the student staff recruitment and selection committee. At the beginning I was given a lot of freedom to build a process that resembled what I might have wanted as an applicant.
  • At the end of the year during an abruptly planned appreciation event the week before finals I was forced to realize that members of my staff actually liked me. Throughout the year I had deluded myself that my staff either hated me or had no thoughts about me, but the kind things they said and wrote to me as well as the conversations during final one on ones helped me see I did something. I had an impact. Still unclear if it is a good one.
  • I have managed to add Desire 2 Learn and Jotform to my repertoire of technology that I know how to use based off integrating them into my job’s processes. It was one victory this year in my endeavor to make things simple and efficient.
  • I am able to write this post, meaning I may have more time to blog in the future! Or not. We will see.

Losses

  • Volunteered (under duress, I assure you) to move from a supervision area where I was happy, had the small campus feel, and was going to be filled with staff members I had selected to another side of campus with none of those factors (well, the happiness came later re: see wins).
  • Once the process I built became internal and there were no more candidates to interview it became riddled with political battlefields.
  • I still refuse to come to terms with one of my greatest weaknesses and continue to fight it without assistance.
  • Holistically, I have been unable to steer as much positive change as I would have liked. There is still so much that can be better but for each one there is three barriers, whether a person or a mindset.

 

This is just a snippet of the year. Not everything has made it and there may be major things that I have overlooked or forgotten. This is just what is running through my mind recently as well as the desire to post on this website I bought. After all, letting my money go to waste is not Sensibly Shane.

Conference Contemplations [GLACUHO]

20 Monday Nov 2017

Posted by Shane Young in Education, Higher Education, Student Affairs

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

#sachat, brand, collaboration, disAbility, GLACUHO, housing, information sharing, job searching, mid-level, mid-level myths, myths, office politics, political capital, politics, professional, professional brand, protest, residence life, rights, SAGrad, satech, selection process, student centered, wiki, young professional

Conference

I recently had the pleasure of attending my first GLACUHO (Great Lakes Association of College and University Housing Officers) annual conference. I attended with seven other representatives from Southern Illinois University Carbondale over the course of three days, two of them filled with awesome presentations. As I have not been to a conference in a little while, my readers may have forgotten that I offer small summaries of information I gained at conferences through my blog series titled “Conference Contemplations.” We have been in hiatus for a little while because conferences are expensive. Feel free to skip around and read what interests you almost like a small online conference.

Job Searching: Should I Stay or Should I Go Now?
Presenters: Kristen Brewer & Aaron Copley-Spivey
This session started a little bit late due to a business meeting that ran over, but it meant that the content was made more concise. We started out the session with a series of prompts that forced the audience to reflect. My notes were a little bit jumbled and written in a lost form of scribbles so please bear with my translations. The prompts were directed at our current position and included the following:

-What are 3 frustrations you have with your current position?
-What are 5 enjoyments you have with your current position?
-Is your current environment negative or abusive?
-Have you attempted every action to make your position workable?
-Do you have more to give in this position or at this institution?
-Strategize your 5-10 year plan; where do you want to be?

Working with Wiki: Maximizing Information Sharing and Collaboration in Housing and Residence Life
Presenter(s): Eric Musselman
I have an entire section of my website dedicated to technology. I must attend anything relating to technology at any conference. This session was ultimately about trust because Wiki is just a tool that the presenter has used at their institution to collaborate with each member of their team and across the board. Wiki allows everyone to see and have access to all of the things that is happening in the department, which makes it very easy for a team to work together on a document, task, or project without being constrained to ownership and sharing difficulties that OneDrive or Google Drive can produce. Yes, there is a feature that makes it so that information that is not yet announced or contains information that should not be shared can be accessed only by certain users, but Wiki puts transparency on the forefront of thought and makes departments confront whether they to be or seem transparent.

Specific ways Wiki has been used include:
-curating large projects such as move in year to year for updates
-Emergency or department procedures, when they were last updated, and who is responsible for updating them
-facilities information such as furniture and room dimensions, colors, and ordering information
-Embedded forms
-meeting agendas and one-on-one tracking viewable only be those two persons
-task delegation and tracking

There is a lot more available as well, but I have a lot of other great content to write about too!

Creating Your Professional Brand
Presenter(s): Tiffany Gonzales & Justin Schuch
I operate this website and have a lot of work to do so I felt this was also a mandatory session for me. This session came with a handout (I love handouts)! The handout demonstrates most of the content of this session so let me tell you a little about what is on there.

One of the most important things in building a brand, however, is you. Who are you and what do you represent? What do you value? Do you have goals? How does your brand align with them? Where are your strengths? Areas of improvement? In order to create a brand one must know thyself!

“Create Your Brand Card” A nifty acronym to help you build a brand.
-Consistency: Create a coherent brand voice and tone in all verbal an visual communication across media platforms.
-Authenticity: Emphasize a true attribute.
-Relevance: Base the branding on an insight into you and your potential clients.
-Differentiation: Create a unique visual and verbal presence.

Ditch the Draft: Creating Student Centered Selection Processes
Presenter(s): Shandee Ewert & Marci Walton

This was the session I was most looking forward to attending as I am the chair of our recruitment and selection committee this for this year. I left the session with a lot of notes and ideas based on the points the presenters made, but also the comments from those in the audience. I am looking forward to attempting to implement some of this information into our ongoing selection process. One common item between the processes at the presenters’ institution is that there is one for new hires and one for returning staff. My current institution only recently began to use a process to determine if staff were going to be offered a contract for the next academic year.

The presenters talked about group discernment as a method for decision making. In group discernment there are 5 tenets:
-Ready to move
-Open to Sharing
-Compromise
-Quest for Union
-Collective Decision Making
Fairly simply to understand these five pillars combine in order to promote the best decision for the entire whole rather than the individual interests or interests of those we represent (i.e. specific buildings/areas).

If you aren’t going to score it then don’t ask for it.

This is the one statement that stood out to me throughout the presentation. Often times we collect applications an ask for information that is ultimately never used and this is disrespectful to the time and effort student applicants put into the process. If you have questions in your application, how do you score them? What does this score me? In addition to scores for the rubric, both presenters utilize a bias reduction training for their student staff, who often assist in conducting the many interviews for new staff. There was a lot said during this session and I am hopeful to have the opportunity to use even a fraction of it.

Can we Protest: How your right to demonstrate intersects with your expectation as a professional
Presenter(s): Alison Sinadinos
Political activism has been a part of my life since the early 2010s. I recall being in Washington D.C.  during the Occupy movement and talking with several of the protesters who had set up homes in the area. Furthermore, since entering the profession there have been many movements, especially by students protesting white nationalists, police brutality, and even an institution. This session is important because we are political persons interested in exercising our freedom of speech, but may pause due to employment concerns.

The presenter convened a panel of professionals to discuss this matter, but a large portion of the discussion focused on student staff members rather than ourselves as professionals. In many cases (and at many institutions) the right of a student staff member to exercise their free speech was supported. There were occasional limitations, such as ensuring that a person did not flaunt or use their position within Housing when engaging in protests. There was some discussion, using a case at Miami University of Ohio where a departmental policy did not allow graduate students to engage in protests. After some legal conversations it was clarified that graduate students did have the right to engage in protests.

I Want to Be In the Room Where It Happens: Building Political Capital as a Young Professional
Presenter(s): Stacy Oliver-Sikorsky & Rexann Wharton
I was really looking forward to this session due to my training as a political scientist at Hiram College. This session included what I think is really important information for graduate students and entry level professionals regarding transitions (#schlossberg). Students and graduate students are often able to sit on committees, boards, and given seats at the table that are exclusively for them. They are recruited and in some cases groomed to be on these committees and given the opportunity to influence decisions. Entry level professionals (and in some cases  graduate assistants) must demonstrate that they are really good at their job before they will be given these same opportunities. It can take years.

Some methods of gaining capital:
-Excel at your job
-Don’t expect extra in your first year
-Learn how opportunities are awarded
-Ask for supervisory assistance/permission before signing up for additional work
-Build external relationships

Rumor Has It: Myths and More from the Mid-Level
Presenter(s): Shandee Ewert & Marci Walton
Myths of the Mid-Level include:

  • You will have more time
    • Entry level after hours work is more visible than mid-level
  • Significantly More Decision Making Power
    • Politics are more intense
    • You spend more time preparing your boss to make decisions
  • More Disposable Income
    • Live-on may have more take-home cash at end of day
    • Consider rent, utilities, internet, groceries/meals
  • You no Longer need Professional Development
    • Relationship building is new pro devo
    • No one tells you when you need to learn
  • Supervision will be Easier
    • Varying levels of buy in/experience in supervisees
    • Longer duration of relationship
  • You will receive extensive training
    • Nope, nope, nope
    • Practice on providing options to supervisees
      • There was an earlier mid-level roundtable that came up with the phrase “solution based bitching” for additional reference
  • You will have colleagues in similar positions to you
    • Not everyone levels like you, so don’t burn bridges
  • Your Contributions will be Visible and Recognized
    • You will be the villain more often
    • You are the gatekeeper and often have to say no
  • You no Longer Understand Student Needs
    • You now have a larger perspective to account for
    • Build trust; help them learn that there are things they do not know
  • Good Entry-Level = Good Mid-Level
    • Necessary skills to develop are administrative skills, campus politic navigation, supervision, relationship building, and facilitation/articulation of your ideas/vision

Professional disAbility: A round table on working/ living in Reslife with health issues & disabilities
Presenter(s): Michelle Cecil
I joined this roundtable as an advocate and it was one of my most candid sessions of GLACUHO. The attendees demonstrated vulnerability and talked about their experiences thus far. One of the first important takeaways of this session is the exhaustion they feel when they not only need to muster the courage to disclose but to educate about their health issue or disability simultaneously. This conversation does not just occur with the professionals’ supervisor though. It sometimes occurs with student supervisees as well.

Privacy also emerged as an important concern because a persons basic instinct has not necessarily been to preserve others persons privacy. When student staff or even supervisors ask why a person is gone all the time or “are you really that sick?” It can become frustrating for those who need to utilize that time. Student affairs is not a field that has shown it is able to let those with time off be off, but this can prove more inconvenient and inappropriate for those living with health issues and disabilities. One of the last items we discussed that is tied to using time off is the potential need for medical specialists. An appointment with a specialist needs to be made two to three months in advance and requires insurance. If a professional has to relocate to another staff, there is  chance they will not have insurance until they arrive on campus. What if it is a person’s dream job but the nearest specialist is two hours away? The #sasearch becomes more complicated and becomes a matter of a persons health.

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Recent Blog Posts

  • Conference Contemplation [GLACUHO 2019) October 24, 2019
  • Scary (and not so scary) Things every SApro Should Learn October 2, 2019
  • Shane’s Sensible Guidelines for Communication July 31, 2019
  • This I believe July 8, 2019
  • Nostalgia at Work: Replaying our Greatest Hits May 21, 2019

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