Title: College Life 101
1College Life 101
- Stimulating Family/Student
- Dialogue Around Adjustment Issues
Ann H. Wilson Director of Campus
Activities Drexel University Jon
Kapell Associate Director of Campus
Activities Drexel University
2Drexel University
- 11,500 undergraduate students
- Private - 4 or 5 year
- Urban setting of Philadelphia
- Technical/Engineering institution
- Co-op school
3Drexel UniversityOrientation
- Fall 2005 - 2500 Freshmen
- Vast majority traditional aged
- 8 freshmen 2-day orientation sessions
- Approximately 250 students and 250-300 family
members per session - 2 transfer 1-day orientation sessions
4Orientation History
- Pre-2005 - parents/family only session
- Vignettes were conversation starter for common
and possible student issues - Annually parents asked, Is my student seeing
this? - In 2005, family and students viewed the vignettes
and had facilitated discussion, but in different
ways to respond to different needs
5Theoretical Foundation
- Transition Any event, or non-event, that
results in changed relationships, routines,
assumptions, and rolesstress the role of
perception in transitionstransition exists only
if it is so defined by the individual
experiencing it. - (Schlossberg et al., 1995, as cited in
- Evans, Forney, and Gido-DiBrito, 1998, p. 111)
6Theoretical Foundation
- Transformative education instead places the
students reflective processes at the core of the
learning experience and asks the student to
evaluate both new information and the frames of
reference through which the information acquires
meaning. - (Learning Reconsidered, 2004, p. 9, Merizow and
Associates, 2000, Learning as transformation)
7Theoretical Foundation
- Making meaning comprises students efforts to
comprehend the essence and significance of
events, relationships, and learning to gain a
richer understanding of themselves in a larger
context and to experience a sense of wholeness.
Meaning making arises in a reflective connection
between a person or individual and the wider
world - (Learning Reconsidered, 2004, p. 17)
8Vignette Development
- 2003 - all vignettes were reexamined
- Issues to address and approaches were discussed
- Scripts were developed to reflect desired
discussion topics and areas of concern - Student Life staff wrote and edited all scripts
- This phase of the project lasted approximately
2-3 months
9College of Media Arts and Design Filming and
Editing Partnership
- Student Life approached COMAD to assist with
filming and editing - An Assistant Dean and a team of students reviewed
and refined the script - COMAD shot and edited the vignettes
- This phase of the project lasted approximately
4-6 weeks
10Family Facilitation
- Beloit College Mindset List is shared to gain
attention and in seats - Energizer precedes this session which includes
large group karaoke - Dean of Students transitions with questions like
- For how many of you is this your first child
going to school? ..second? ..most? - How many are grandparents?
- Drexel gear is given to the family who has sent
the most students to college
11Family Facilitation
- Dean of Students facilitates discussion to an
audience of 250-300 parents/family members - Student Life departments are represented by a
panel of Deans and Directors - Senior Associate Dean of Students
- Assistant Dean, Counseling and Health Services
- Director of Residential Living
- Assistant Dean of Multicultural Affairs
- University Judicial Officer
- Assistant Dean for Fraternity and Sorority Life
12Family Facilitation
- Families ask many (uncensored) questions
- What time is bed check?
- Is someone going to call me when my child gets
sick? - What do you mean both men and women boys and
girls are on the same floor in the same dorm? - Will my students grades get sent to me?
13Training Para-Professional Facilitators
- Orientation Leaders (OLs) reviewed the
vignettes, discussed responses, were informed
about campus resources, and learned how to
facilitate conversation - Training conducted by Assistant Dean, Counseling
and Health Services - One 90-minute session
- OLs were provided the student resource guide and
a facilitation guide
14Training Professional Facilitators
- Professional Staff reviewed the vignettes,
discussed responses, were refreshed about campus
resources, learned their role, discussed how to
have student facilitate conversations - Training conducted by the Director of Campus
Activities and the Assistant Dean, Counseling and
Health Services - One 120-minute session
- Professionals were provided the student resource
guide and a facilitation guide
15Student Small Group Facilitation
- Groups of 20-25 orientation students
- 2 Orientation Leaders were paired up with 1-2
professional staff - Vignettes were viewed one at a time with the OLs
leading discussion with the staff person as
support following each vignette - OLs were prepped on how to initiate conversation
- Candy was used as an incentive to get people to
contribute
16Resource Guides
- Students receive College Life 101A Student
Resource Guide - Families receive PartnershipsHere, Now and
Beyond - PDF copies of these resources can be found on
www.drexel.edu/oca/professionalresources
17College 101 Vignettes
- A Call Home (5 min)
- Get Connected (6 min 5 sec)
- One Night, Two Stories (5 min 45 sec)
- The Condition of Being Different (3 min 38 sec)
- The order is intentional based on spurring
conversation, delving into issues, and expanding
comfort zones
18A Call Home
- Issues to consider
- Adjustment to campus life
- Moving from dependence to independence
- Academic support
- Academic demands
- Social pressure/peer influences
- Campus culture expectations
- Academic Honesty
- Roommate Conflict
19A Call Home
- Sample discussion questions
- How many of you are the first in your family to
go to college? First child to attend? - Did you sign the FERPA form or have any questions
about the FERPA form? - Can you see yourself or your parents in this
video? - Who would you reach out to if you failed
something? - How would you set some guidelines with your
roommate? - What are some other resources other than your
parents?
20Getting Connected
- Issues to consider
- Getting involved while on campus
- Time management
- Leadership development
- Persistence and retention
- Higher level of student satisfaction
- Over 130 student organizations available to join
21Getting Connected
- Sample discussion points
- OLs share in what organizations they are
involved and why. - In what kinds of organizations were you involved
in high school? - Do you anticipate getting involved in student
organizations? - How do you see getting involved to be a benefit?
- How do you think you can balance your school/work
and involvement on campus? - What type of things do you like to do?
22One Night, Two Stories
- Issues to consider
- Acquaintance rape/date/sexual assault
- What is it and how does Drexel respond?
- Supporting the victim and the perpetrator males
vs. females - Alcohol and other drugs The Universitys
response - Drexel University/Internal adjudication and/or
City of Philadelphia/external adjudication
23One Night, Two Stories
- Sample discussion questions
- How do you just feel about what just happened?
Was it uncomfortable? - What factors did you see play into the scenario?
Could this have been avoided? - What is rape? What is sexual assault?
- If this happened to a friend, how might you
respond? - What are the things to consider when thinking
about your security? - What are some safety precautions that you can
take?
24The Condition of Being Different
- Issues to consider
- Drexel celebrates multiculturalism
- Student Life at Drexel encourages discussions and
activities between students from different ethnic
groups - Philadelphia has a population of over 1.6 million
people - All undergraduate student organizations are open
to all undergraduates regardless of race,
religion, national origin, gender, sexual
orientation, or ability
25The Condition of Being Different
- Sample discussion questions
- How many of you come from a small town? How does
it feel to come to a city? - How can one go about getting to know someone from
a different culture or background? - How might the diverse student body impact your
experience at Drexel? - How do you think you would contribute to
diversity on campus? - Do you foresee any challenges living on a diverse
campus? If so, what? If not, why?
26Year-Long Collaboration
- Determine how these vignettes can be used
year-round - Resident Assistant/Commuter Assistant staff
programming - UNIV 101 course and speakers
- Student Life programming initiatives
- Dont Cancel That Class (DCTC)
27Assessment
- NSO student survey
- NSO family survey
- OL Facilitator Survey
- Professional Staff Facilitator Survey
- results not returned from Institutional Research
28Facilitator Survey
- 1. How did this year go?
- 2. Were any common questions asked or did any
themes emerge over the various sessions? - 3. How did the vignettes go over with the
students? Any recommendations? - 4. Any comments about your specific
co-facilitators Student Life and/or OL's? - 5. How were logistics (e.g. information shared
with you, location, set-up, amount of time,
students, etc.) handled? Any future
recommendations? - 6. What worked well this year?
- 7. What would you improve for next year?
- 8. What recommendations do you have for training
for next year? - 9. What recommendations do you have for joint
facilitation with Student Life professionals and
the OL's? - 10. Any general comments?
29OL Facilitator Feedback
- They let us OL's take over the discussion but
came to our rescue if we got in a jam and didn't
know what to say. Also they used their
experience with their departments (RLO and OCA)
to help elaborate on topics which was very
helpful. - OL's received a sheet of talking points to go
over so that we could stay on focus. This made
it a lot easier for me to be mentally organized
as well as transitioning topics. Also, working
with mainly the same people all the time helped
because you got into a rhythm which made me feel
less nervous.
30OL Facilitator Feedback
- For training, it would be great to have us
practice facilitating, or maybe to go over public
speaking skills. Get people used to talking in
front of a group of students, because I was
nervous at the first session. - College 101 was a great experience for me to be
able to facilitate conversations with the new
students and to hear what they had to say. Even
though the students may not have seen the point
of the films right away, at least they have that
seed planted in their heads if they need the
information presented in the future.
31Professional Staff Facilitator Feedback
- Pairings for the most part worked well. Also
liked working with the same OLs when possible. - Facilitators that struggled a bit more spent
much more of their time teaching rather than
facilitating a discussion. - Students seemed very hesitant to engage with the
topics or acknowledge that they would find
themselves in the scenarios. - OLs name had a lot to say, and sometimes
didn't wait for the students to respond.
32Professional Staff Facilitator Feedback
- It would be great if we could have some time to
develop a rapport with our student facilitators
and create a joint game plan for how we want to
facilitate the sessions. - Better facilitation training for the OL's.
- Add a transfer issues vignette for transfer
students. Train OLs and Student Staff TOGETHER to
avoid inconsistencies in conveying information. - The fact that we did this at all and the
straight up information that OLs gave about some
key issues was great.
33Strategies for Implementing at Orientation
- Have more professional staff than the number of
break-out sessions (conference, vacation, and
other conflicts arise) - Have 2 OLs lead each session so they can bounce
off each other - Match OLs based on strengths and
cross-represented demographics - Match same OLs and professional staff each
session so that they build facilitation rapport
34Strategies continued
- Have After Action Review meetings with all
facilitators after the first few sessions to
address issues, tweak questions, and maintain
consistency between groups - Have one coordinator of all the details (OLs,
facilitators, TV/DVD, books, candy, etc.) to
check on all sessions in progress, coordinate
e-mail communication, and manage the schedule.
This person should not be a facilitator - Coordinate a joint training of OLs and
professional staff so they can get to know each
other and learn the same information together
35Action Plan
- Take 5 minutes and write down some initial
thoughts - Feel free to discuss with others in the room from
your institution or from other institutions
36Presenter Contact Information
- Ann H. Wilson
- Director of Campus Activities
- ahw22_at_drexel.edu
- 215-895-1328
- Jon Kapell
- Associate Director of Campus Activities
- jdk38_at_drexel.edu
- 215-895-1328
- www.drexel.edu/oca/professionalresources.html