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Home » Archives for August 2020

New PERC Series: Student Affairs Practice & Planning in the COVID-19 Environment

Archives for August 2020

New PERC Series: Student Affairs Practice & Planning in the COVID-19 Environment

New PERC Series: Student Affairs Practice & Planning in the COVID-19 Environment

August 14, 2020 by Jonah Hall

New PERC Series: Student Affairs Practice & Planning in the COVID-19 Environment

The COVID-19 pandemic has placed major constraints on student engagement, presenting unique challenges for student affairs, where success has traditionally depended on high quality, face-to-face student interactions.

Learn how institutions are adapting in PERC’s newest research series, Student Engagement Practice and Planning in the COVID-19 Environment. This series examines practices and plans in student affairs from across the nation. The series focuses on nine key areas:

• Orientation Programming Practices
• Student Government
• Student Activities and Clubs
• Fraternities and Sororities
• Community Service Programs
• Residence Life Operations & Programming
• Multicultural Engagement
• Student Health & Wellness
• Student Employment

Click here to learn more about the project and access the briefs as they become available.

Filed Under: News, PERC, Publications, Research, Uncategorized Tagged With: Goal 2: Make an Impact, Goal 5: Living our Values, PERC, Postsecondary Education Research Center

Center for Educational Leadership to Facilitate the Tennessee Rural Principal Network

Center for Educational Leadership to Facilitate the Tennessee Rural Principal Network

August 14, 2020 by Jonah Hall

Center for Educational Leadership to Facilitate the Tennessee Rural Principal Network

The Center for Educational Leadership, directed by Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Assistant Professor Practice Dr. Jim McIntyre, was just awarded a grant from the Kern Family Foundation to more explicitly integrate character development into all leadership programming over the next three years. The award will allow Dr. McIntyre and his team, in collaboration with the American Institutes for Research, to facilitate an intensive, yearlong collaborative professional learning experience for 54 rural school principals from across the state of Tennessee.

“The power of this network is the principals,” said McIntyre. “The participants will learn with and from each other and tackle tough issues around public education in the rural context. We plan to very intentionally build a professional support network for these remarkable school leaders that will help enhance and strengthen rural schooling across the state.”

The mission of the Kern Family Foundation is to empower the rising generation of Americans to build flourishing lives anchored in strong character, inspired by quality education, driven by an entrepreneurial mindset, and guided by the desire to create value for others. They focus on initiatives that have long-term, systemic impact,

For more information on the award, see this news release from the College of Education, Health, and Human Sciences. For more information on the Center for Educational Leadership, click here.

Filed Under: Accolades, CEL, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: CEL, Goal 1: Prepare and Develop Leaders and Scholars, Goal 2: Make an Impact, Goal 5: Living our Values, Jim McIntyre

HEAM PhD Candidate Steve Syoen’s Virtual Writing Retreats Create Global Community

HEAM PhD Candidate Steve Syoen’s Virtual Writing Retreats Create Global Community

August 6, 2020 by Jonah Hall

HEAM PhD Candidate Steve Syoen’s Virtual Writing Retreats Create Global Community

Steve Syoen

Steve Syoen, Organizer of Virtual Writing Retreats

How do extroverts and social learners cope with the loss of community during a pandemic, which only intensifies the oftentimes lonely dissertation stage?

Well, if you’re ELPS PhD candidate Steve Syoen, you don’t struggle with the loss of community, you just create a new one.

Syoen began organizing his Virtual Writing Retreats in the spring of 2020 after passing comps and entering the dissertation phase of his degree: “I do best with others around me pursuing similar goals. COVID-19 struck, they closed libraries on campus, and I started working from home. My other go-to used to be McDonald’s for free WiFi, but then restaurant dining rooms closed. I needed SOMETHING… so when your natural community isn’t available, I decided to make one.”

Syoen builds community with guided chat between writing sessions.

Most of Steve’s Virtual Writing Retreat attendees are “working folks” with full lives outside their PhD pursuits, so each event usually runs from 9:15am-3:30pm EST. Syoen describes what to expect: “We start with people getting settled in, we write for 75 or 90 minutes, we take 15 minute breaks (30 for lunch), and then we write more. Before each writing session starts, participants are offered an opportunity to either speak or chat their goals for the next work period into existence. At the end of a session, participants are invited to share what they accomplished. The goal is progress, and whether that is one paragraph, one article, or an entire chapter – we celebrate it all.” Between sessions, participants chat with questions guided by Syoen about everything from favorite snacks for focus to favorite productivity tools and writing implements. “I was able to complete my detailed outline for my section! This was terrific, Steve!” one attendee reports during a break.

The goal is progress, and whether that is one paragraph, one article, or an entire chapter – we celebrate it all.

Steve Syoen HEAM PhD Candidate and Organizer of global Virtual Writing Retreats

Since beginning his Virtual Writing Retreats, Syoen’s new community has gone global. “We have people from India, China, and the Netherlands who’ve joined each of the last two sessions. The person in India has asked me to help start coordinating these for her program so she can do them in her time zone (they are 8.5 hours ahead of us) instead of attending ours in Eastern time.”

Students interested in joining one Syoen’s Virtual Writing Retreats can either send him an email or stay in the know of future events by joining the Working Folks Guide to a PhD Facebook group.

Filed Under: Accolades, HEAM, News, Research, Uncategorized Tagged With: Goal 1: Prepare and Develop Leaders and Scholars, Goal 3: Communicate and Collaborate, Goal 5: Living our Values, HEAM

New Works Explore Challenges and Future of Fraternities and Sororities

New Works Explore Challenges and Future of Fraternities and Sororities

August 4, 2020 by Jonah Hall

New Works Explore Challenges and Future of Fraternities and Sororities

ELPS Professor Patrick Biddix’s latest co-edited volumes explore conversations about the challenges and future of fraternities and sororities.

Book cover for "Foundations, Research, and Assessment of Fraternities and Sororities"Foundations, Research, and Assessment of Fraternities and Sororities (2019) features continuing conversations about the challenges facing fraternities and sororities on campuses across the country. Faculty, administrators, and alumni/ae will find inspiration as higher education scholars and practitioners that examine the past and future constructs of fraternity and sorority institutions. The volume opens with a historical section on the origins of fraternities and sororities, then moves to examine values, legal issues, and research before concluding with an overview of fraternity/sorority scholarship that includes profiles of large, national benchmark surveys.

“As higher education professionals seek to build leaders and programs that align with institutional values, this text provides thoughtful study and practical assessment of the fraternity and sorority experience.”

-Kathryn Cavins-Tull, Texas Christian University Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs

Book cover for "Supporting Fraternities and Sororities in the Contemporary Era"Biddix’s second volume, Supporting Fraternities and Sororities in the Contemporary Era (2019), follows conversations and scholarship suggesting that not just change is necessary, but that there ought to be a fundamental reconceptualization of the fraternity and sorority construct.

“The authors’ focus on collaboration between campus based and Headquarters based fraternity and sorority professionals adds an important new perspective to the administration of fraternity and sorority affairs.”

Charles G. Eberly, PhD, Emeritus Professor of Counseling and Higher Education, Eastern Illinois University

Including summaries of national organizations from authentic, represented voices, chapters in Supporting Fraternities and Sororities in the Contemporary Era focus on solutions to support the fraternity and sorority experience and provide strategies and emerging explanations for the issues described in this text.

Both titles are available online via Myers Education Press.

Filed Under: Accolades, HEAM, News, Publications, Uncategorized Tagged With: Biddix, fraternities, Goal 1: Prepare and Develop Leaders and Scholars, Goal 2: Make an Impact, HEAM, Research in Higher Education, sororities

Spotlight on Olga M. Welch

Spotlight on Olga M. Welch

August 4, 2020 by Jonah Hall

Spotlight on Olga M. Welch

EdD, Educational Administration and Supervision

Class of 1977

Dean Olga Welch speaks on teaching responsible citizenry in a 90.5 WESA Life of Learning Forum

Olga M. Welch is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Howard University and EdD graduate of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville’s Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies. After time as a Professor in the College of Education at UT, Dr. Welch accepted a position at Duquesne University where she went on to spend over a decade as Dean in the Duquesne University School of Education.

In an article co-authored with University of Tennessee Vice-Provost Emerita Carolyn Hodges, Welch remarks on the importance of balance in leadership: “Learning how to lead is also about learning how to balance the need for action with deliberative and deliberate approaches.”

“The real challenge for a new leader is to learn your context and not assume what worked in another context will work in a new one.”

Olga Welch, Dean Emeritus, Duquesne University

Author several publications, chapters, and books, most recently in 2011 the released of Turnaround Leadership: Deans of Color as Change Agents that focuses attention on deans as agents of change by presenting case studies of six deans of color. This volume’s emphasis on how particular leaders thought about and implemented change initiatives reflects Dr. Welch’s commitment to engaging in critical problem-solving as leaders. 

For more on Dr. Olga M. Welch:

  • 2016 Feature Article & Recording on Dr. Welch’s career as Duquesne University School of Education
  • 2018 Inside Higher Ed opinion piece, “African American deans share lessons in leadership,” co-authored with Vice-Provost Emerita Carolyn Hodges

 

About the Series

The ELPS Where are They Now? series inspires current and future students by spotlighting the career paths and accomplishments of graduates from the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies. Continue your own leadership journey and learn more about our programs today.

Filed Under: Accolades, EDAM, Graduate Spotlights Tagged With: Goal 1: Prepare and Develop Leaders and Scholars, Goal 2: Make an Impact, Goal 5: Living our Values

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