by John N. McDaniel, Ph.D
A recent informal poll conducted by Magna
Publications electronic newsletters Faculty Focus and Eye on Students asked,
Would you like to see student affairs work more closely with academic affairs
on your campus? What is preventingor encouragingcollaboration on your
campus?
The replies from the academic affairs and
student affairs respondents might be summarized with one big Yes, but ... But
what? While some campuses are apparently making progress in building bridges
between these two organizational units, the impediments cited fall into three
main categories: (1) lack of communication, willful or not, (2) local politics,
with a power imbalance that favors academic affairs, and (3) faculty
indifference to student development because of lack of incentives.
While the survey does not account for
institutional types, a fair guess here is that private institutions and elite
publics that are heavily dependent on tuition for funding (but in some cases
well endowed with scholarship dollars) are more motivated to ensure that
academic affairs and student affairs work hand-in-glove in recruiting,
nurturing, retaining, and graduating students, with follow-ups on career
placement, student satisfaction surveys, and alumni/donor tie-ins. Larger public
comprehensive institutions, on the other hand, are perhaps less likely to have
the motivation, resources, and inclination to embrace bridge building in light
of burgeoning enrollments, increasing pressure for research productivity and
service, and such academic initiatives as outcomes assessment to satisfy
regional accreditation requirements (the cause du jour). Community colleges and
two-year private schools are perhaps on both sides of the aisle.
Sweeping generalizations, to be sure. My own
take, however, is that we are witnessing at work the old adage that where you
stand depends on where you sit. Presidents would like to think that
institutionally we are all in this togetherand are in a position, with
leadership from provosts and academic deans, to set the tone and the imperative
for cohesive bridge building between academic affairs and student affairs.
Student affairs would like to think that in selling a caring faculty in the
recruitment process and delivering a good crop of students ready for a
productive college life in the classroom (as well as out), it has played a part
that surely will be acknowledged, indeed appreciated, by academic affairs in
general and faculty in particular. Some faculty, however, would like to think
that, with heavy teaching workloads and heightened research and service
expectations for tenure and promotion, extracurricular nourishing is not my
job. The flashpoint is advising, especially career advising, where many faculty
see little reason to invest time in an essentially unrewarded enterprisemany,
but by no means all.
I began this rumination with a title asking
whether the college student is a customer deserving consumer treatment and
satisfaction. How this question is answered is a good barometer of how closeor
how distanta campus connect there is between academic affairs and student
affairs. Ask that question and watch the electricity spark up and down the
faculty lines, arcing and flattening in telling ways indeed. Can student affairs
and academic affairs be brought closer together? Should they? Yes, but
On many
campuses, it seems, there is still much work to do.
Send your comments to mailto:%20partingshot@magnapubs.com.
John N. McDaniel is dean of the College of
Liberal Arts at Middle Tennessee State University. He can be contacted at mailto:%20%20mcdaniel@mtsu.edu
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This article first
appeared in Magna Publications' newsletter Academic Leader. If you are
an academic dean, provost, academic vice-president, department chair/head or
have any role in academic leadership, then Academic Leader is for you!
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it free for 3-months and make the decision for
yourself!
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