Title: Examining the Campus Environment
1Examining the Campus Environment
2The Institutional Mission
- The mission statement should do the following
- Provide guidance to the day-by-day practices
within the institution - Provide a statement of the broad long-term
purpose of the institution (should articulate why
the institution was created and defines the
constituencies the institution will serve) - Guide the academic leadership of the institution
in determining what educational programs are
appropriate within the context of the institution
3The Institutional Mission
- The mission statement should do the following
- Provide specific guidance to student affairs
professionals in developing policies and
implementing program initiatives - Provide guidance to students by providing
information regarding the expectations of the
institution for students
4Factors Influencing the Mission
- Affiliation
- Characteristics
- History
- Focus
- Governance
- Higher Education System
- Geographic Location
5Affiliation
- Religious affiliation can play a large part of an
institutions mission - Earlham, Haverford, and Guilford are distinctive
for being founded by the Quakers - Notre Dame, Georgetown, DePaul, Loyola of
Chicago, and Loyola of New Orleans are shaped by
their affiliation with the Catholic Church - These affiliations can influence the life of the
campus related to governance structures, control,
behavioral expectations for students, and
recognition of student organizations
6Characteristics
- Another way to understand an institution is to
look at the characteristic of the institutions,
such as - Residential or commuter
- Degrees offered
- Part-time or Full-time
- Cost of tuition
- Size
7History
- Historical factors that can influence the
institutional mission - The intention of the founders
- Creation of state legislature or private group of
individuals - The heritage of an institution can be one of the
building blocks of it mission - (Lyons, 1993)
8Focus
- Some mission statements are focused with regard
to whom they serve - Community Colleges
- serve a bounded demographic community and develop
programs and activities to meet the needs of the
communities where theyre located - Historically Black Colleges
- founded to serve those that were unserved or
underserved - Many were and are religiously affiliated and are
public and private - Unique mission was challenged by the integration
of public and private institutions after the
Civil Rights Act - Tribal Colleges
- Schools founded primarily for Native Americans
- Currently there are almost 30 tribal colleges
9Governance
- Very nature of an institution is influenced by
the statutory, constitutional, or charter
provisions governing the formation of the
institution - The corporate governance structure dictates much
of the day-to-day work of the institution
10Higher Education System
- Institutions of higher education may be connected
through the development of a university system - Individual campuses then have less autonomy
- Policies and procedures are administered on a
system wide basis - It would be a mistake to assume that all campuses
in a system are the same and function the same way
11Geographical Location
- Physical location also influences the mission
- The creator of the institutions created it in a
particular place to meet a particular need - Population sometimes dictates geographic location
- Location also influences the role and scope of
student affairs work on campus
12Geographic Location
- Example of influence
- Historically Black institutions are found more in
the south than the north - Schools located in rural areas tend to focus more
studies on agriculture - Growth of normal schools responded to the need
for educated persons to serve as teachers in
communities across the country
13Institutional Governance
14Institutional Distinctions
- Public Institutions
- Independent or Private Institutions
- Size Distinctions
15Public Institutions
- Student affairs staff need to be aware of the
concerns of the legislature that controls their
status - Public institutions in statewide systems usually
employ someone in the state capitol to keep them
up to date about legislative and funding
developments - Governing boards in public sectors are usually
quite small - Legislature determines tuition and fees and
compensation for faculty and staff
16Independent or Private Institutions
- Governing boards are much larger
- Trustees are usually benefactors
- Governing board has greater control over fiscal
matters - Set fees for students
- Control compensation levels for faculty and staff
- Decide parameters for budget decisions
17Size Distinctions
- Larger institutions need representative groups
for faculty, staff, and students to be effective
in governance - Members feel more distanced from the decision
making process - At times may not feel comfortable with or agree
with the decision making process - Smaller institutions dont always need
representative groups because the group is often
small enough to represent itself - The small the institution the more confident the
members feel in the decision making process
18Governing Boards
- Purpose
- Selection and Preparation
- Activities and Operations
- Student Life Committee
- Other Board Committees
19Purpose
- Typically the board of trustees
- serve as the final authority on
- Institutional decisions
- Fiscal matters
- Major policy changes or developments
- Insure students rights are protected
20Selection and Preparation
- Selected in different ways depending on
institutional size or type - At public institutions
- Appointed by state government process
- Elected
- At private institutions
- Boards are self-selecting and self-perpetuating
- At religious based institutions
- Nominated through process managed by church or
religious organization
21Selection and Preparation
- Board members
- Come from professional backgrounds
- Business, law, medicine, philanthropy
- Can have little to no knowledge about higher
education - Chief student affairs officer create special
programs to orient board members to the
institution
22Activities and Operations
- Select and supervise the president of the
institution - President is a non-voting member of the board
- Often the president is the only member of
administration on the board - The board acts as a collective entity not as a
collection of individuals - Working with individual trustees can be
interpreted as attempting to exert unwarranted
influence
23Student Life Committee
- Work by boards is often done through committees
- Chief student affairs administrator is usually
assigned the responsibility of staffing the
student life committee - Includes suggesting agenda topics, meeting with
the president and committee chair about said
topics, gathering info and materials to make the
meeting as effective as possible - Committee is usually commissioned with the
responsibility of representing student interests
in the policymaking activities of the board
24Faculty GovernanceRoles and Functions
- Faculty are expected to
- Lead scholarly development in their field
- Provide service to their institutions and
community - Be expert in imparting knowledge
- Participate in the governance of the institution
- Direct the process of selection of their peers
- Help direct decision making process for promotion
and tenure status for each member of faculty - Typical student affairs staff members have little
to no role in such matters unless they are also a
faculty member
25Faculty GovernanceRoles and Functions
- Larger Institutions
- Have faculty senates or councils to represent the
faculty and their interests - Typically there is no place for a student affairs
officials on these boards - Smaller Institutions
- Often engage the faculty as a whole in governance
and decision making - Student affairs staff are sometimes part of the
process
26Student and Staff Roles
- Student Roles
- Student government used in student programming
and student representation in decision making - Students have a voice but due to constant
turnover they are unable to keep up with
specifics of many issues - Many institutions allow a student to attend
trustee meetings as a representative with no
voting rights - Staff Roles
- Many institutions have staff committees or
councils - Some use staff reps as observers and commentators
at trustees meetings
27Understanding Campus Envirtonments
28Importance of Institutional Context on Student
Learning and Development
- Students benefit more from their college
experience when their total level of campus
engagement is mutually supporting and relevant to
a particular educational outcome. - Involvement in the academic and social life of
the institution enhances student learning - Integrated and complementary academic and social
programs, policies, and practices enhance student
learning - Students who feel they belong and are valued as
individuals are more likely to take advantage of
the resources the institutions provides for their
learning
29Framework for Assessing Influence of Contextual
Conditions
- Substantive Frames
- Take into account physical and psychological
properties that influence learning - Size and shape of structures
- Campus use of green space
- Students perceptions of what the institution
emphasizes and quality of relations among groups - Interpretive Frames
- Serve as a filter or lens through which to
analyze and understand how students interactions
with institutions contextual conditions
influence behaviors
30Substantive Frames
- There are three sets of institutional properties
that can influence student learning - Institutional Mission and Philosophy
- Opportunities, Support, and Rewards
- Faculty and Student Subcultures
31Institutional Mission and Philosophy
- No institutional factor is more influential in
directing student and faculty behavior that the
institutions mission and philosophy
Mission May or may not be congruent with how the college describes itself May change intentionally or in response to external environment In smaller schools the mission is usually salient meaning even those not directly tied to the institution know exactly what the institution stands for Philosophy Often not stated in writing Mainly discerned from its acts which represent the institutions values and beliefs as they are enacted by institutional agents or policies, practices, and standard operating procedures
32Opportunities, Support, and Rewards
Opportunities Examples Include Social programming bodies Governance structures Performing arts venues Intercollegiate and intramural athletics Should encourage spontaneous interaction among students and between students and institutional agent consistent with institutions educational purpose Support may take the form of an ethic of care, a belief system that permeates the institution that encourage faculty, staff, and students to reach out to those in need Safety nets made up of faculty and staff are often available to intervene with students encountering difficulty Students learn best when they receive frequent feedback Rewards Many colleges recognize student achievement through convocations and honor society memberships, banquets, deans lists, announcements of scholarship and fellowship recipients, etc.
When these three subsystems are operating at a
satisfactory level they can create powerful
conditions for learning.
33Faculty and Student Subcultures
- It is important to determine if faculty and
student cultures foster or discourage student
involvement
Faculty Spend less time with undergraduates outside of the classroom Can be influenced by the size of the institution Face the conflict between research and daily demands of teaching Unspoken agreement between faculty and students seems to be, You leave me alone and Ill leave you alone. Mainly concerned with teaching and research than interacting with students outside of the classroom Students Ones peers exert a nontrivial influence on student learning because they determine the kinds of people with whom one spends time Different student affinity groups develop and perpetuate their own distinctive interaction patterns and norms that influence how their members behave and are to relate to others Most of these groups have set expectations, attitudes, and values that are often incongruent with those of the faculty Concerned with making good grades, friends, taking care of themselves, and managing their time
34Interpretive Frames
- Three perspectives can be used to understand how
a colleges contextual conditions influence
student learning - Ecology
- Climate
- Culture
35Ecology
- Includes institutions size, location,
facilities, open spaces, and other permanent
attributes - The amount, locations, and arrangement of
physical spaces shape behavior, in that they
facilitate or inhibit social interaction and the
development of group cohesiveness - The proximity of academic buildings to permeable
socially catalytic spaces can promote or
discourage interaction between students from
different majors
36Climates
- Refers to how students, faculty, student affairs
staff, and other institutional agents perceive
and experience their institution - Students perceptions of their institution have a
nontrivial influence and directly and indirectly
affect learning and personal development
37Cultures
- The collective, mutually shaping pattern of
institutional history, mission, physical setting,
norms, traditions, values, practices, beliefs,
and assumptions that guide the behavior of
individuals and groups in college or university - Collegiate cultures can be made up of holistic,
complex webs of physical and verbal artifacts,
enduring behavioral patterns, embedded values and
beliefs, and ideologies and assumptions that
represent learned products of group experience - Typically perpetuated through traditions, major
campus events, heroic individuals, and language
38Cultures
- Can change over time through a dynamic interplay
between the institutions structural and cultural
elements - Shifting in demographics
- Destruction of facilities or accidents that take
the lives of administrators or athletic teams - Presence of people
- Can also change due to the mutual shaping of the
cultural properties - Physical attributes of campus
- Established practices
- Symbols and symbolic actions
39References
- Barr, M. J. (2000). The Handbook of Student
Affairs Administration. San Francisco
Jossey-Bass.