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Reserve SSC 212 & 211C
2010-2011 Student Learning Outcomes
Location: SSC 210 [map]
Main Office Phone: (949) 582-4616
Fax: (949) 347-1997
Audra DiPadova 
Director of Student Development
(949) 582-4213
Erin Long 
Inter-Club Council Advisor
Senior Administrative Assistant
(949) 582-4290
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Location: SSC 211[map]
ASG Office
Office Hours:
Mondays - Thursdays:
9am to 5pm
Fridays:
8am-12pm
Closed Weekends
(Closed during Summer) |
Why Student Development?
The growing body of scholarly research devoted to the relationship between student development and student success clearly demonstrates that the co-curricular is an essential partner with the academic experience.
Vincent Tinto asserts, “students are more likely to persist and graduate in settings that involve them as valued members of the institution. The frequency and quality of contact with faculty, staff, and other students in an important independent predictor of student persistence. This is true for large and small, rural and urban, public and private, and 2-year and 4-year colleges and universities.”
A 1996 report from The American College Personnel Association pushes this argument further, articulating that “institutions want to demonstrate that they are paying attention to instruction that transcends the classroom experience — education that encompasses the whole collegiate experience — and thus articulate institutional learning competencies for all students." To this point, “[t]he concepts of 'learning,' 'personal development,' and 'student development' are inextricably intertwined and inseparable." To make this connection function at the highest level, student affairs departments, such as student development, must articulate student learning outcomes to be a part of this institutional conversation.
Student Development Advisement Philosophy
Student Development staff advise the Associated Student Government (ASG) and provide significant support to all campus student clubs and organizations. Utilizing our articulated student learning outcomes (below), we work with students individually and in group settings to realize their full potential as emerging leaders. To achieve this ultimate goal of supporting student success we’ve articulated a multi-step co-curricular advisement process:
PART I (Fall):
- Orient, educate, and train:
- Presentation of Student Learning Outcomes
- Expectation setting
- Initial leadership training (retreats)
- Introduction to personal development
- Development of personal rapport, mutually learning about personal goals
- Significant support for initial endeavors:
- Guided program and event development/management
- Potential for success and failure, challenges and opportunities (usually all):
- Planned events, programs, and initiatives in execution will fall on the spectrum of “requiring significant improvement” to “requiring minimal improvement”
- Process success and failure, challenges and opportunities:
- Planned events, programs, and initiatives will be assessed and discussed.
- Devise revised plans for future endeavors
- Guided reflection and assessments
PART II (Spring):
- Minimal guidance (with thorough support) for secondary endeavors
- Potential for success and failure, challenges and opportunities (usually all):
- Planned events, programs, and initiatives in execution will fall on the spectrum of “requiring significant improvement” to “requiring minimal improvement”
- Process success and failure, challenges and opportunities:
- Planned events, programs, and initiatives will be assessed and discussed.
- Devise revised plans for future endeavors
- Guided reflection and assessments, some cumulative
Tinto, V. "Classrooms as Communities: Exploring the Educational Character of Student Persistence" Journal of Higher Education. 68, 6 (November/December 1997): 599-623. http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/fsd/c2006/docs/takingretentionseriously.pdf
The American College Personnel Association, "The Student Learning Imperative: Implications for Student Affairs. www.acpa.nche.edu/sli/sli.htm.
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