Showing posts with label Campus Service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Campus Service. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Practical Matters: Advising Student Clubs and Activities

by Sarah Kain Gutowski, Chair, New Member Mentoring Program
 
Later this morning, during common hour, faculty and students here at the Eastern campus will gather inside the Peconic building for Student Activities Day, a kind of open house for student clubs and organizations -- and the second of this academic year. Each semester, club officers and advisors make themselves available for an hour to answer questions from students seeking to participate in extracurricular campus activities, and to gain new members in the process. You may have seen something similar occurring on your own campus.

For years now, I've been a faculty advisor to a student organization. For several years while I worked on the Ammerman Campus, I co-advised a student writing group that workshopped their poetry, short stories, and plays outside of a classroom setting on a weekly basis. Then, when I transferred to the Eastern Campus, I began advising the campus literary magazine. From my time as an adjunct to the present, I've always been involved with student activities, and this involvement has kept me engaged and invested in a way that's much different from my experience in the classroom. In fact, I'd say that if anything, it's enhanced my ability to connect with students in a meaningful and productive manner.
The Summer 2016 issue of East End Elements.

I encourage all of you to consider being a student activities advisor as well, and if you’re presented with the opportunity to do so – well, jump at it. All three of our campuses offer our student body a richer, more diverse college experience by providing numerous activities throughout the semester – and by facilitating and supporting a number of different student clubs and organizations. Being an advisor can help you learn so much more about our students than time in the classroom can – and I say this after receiving lots of really personal personal essays in Freshman Comp.

PAs, Specialists, Counselors, Librarians and faculty can become more involved with student life by being an advisor to a student club or organization. Not only is this a wonderful way to mentor students, it’s also a good way to garner some campus-wide service you can cite on your application for promotion.

As an advisor, you’ll need to assist the club officers when necessary (you aren’t required to attend all the meetings, although the presence of an advisor is necessary for any off-campus excursions the club may make). Depending on the campus, you might attend an Officer and Advisor meeting during Common Hour once a month or once a semester. You’ll sign some forms. You’ll be invited to a lovely, catered Student Awards Ceremony at the end of the year. And that’s about all the heavy-lifting that’s involved, unless you’d like to be more active. 

The Ammerman Campus in particular has a large number of student clubs, and new ones are always cropping up in need of faculty advisors, so if you’re located on the Ammerman campus and you’re interested in becoming involved, contact Frank Vino at x4814. If you are located on the Eastern campus and would like to become involved, call x2531 and let Denny Teason know you’re available to advise; likewise, if you’re on Grant, call Lisa Hamilton at x6260.

Lastly, I’ll say this: Because the college is changing constantly to accommodate the needs of our students and community, our roles and requirements as faculty and staff are changing constantly, too. You may find that you’ll join some committees your first year or second year and that by your seventh year, you’ll either be chairing those committees or you’ll find yourself on entirely different committees.

Well, I began co-advising The Society of Writers back when I was an adjunct faculty member. Over the years – after being hired as full time faculty and going through the process of two promotion cycles – the one item that’s never changed on my promotion applications is my role as an advisor. I love mentoring students, and I’ve found the experience extremely rewarding, particularly with clubs that are educational in focus, like the honors societies or STEM clubs. It’s a fantastic way for us -- new and “senior” members alike – to connect with our students, and remind ourselves that while academics are (and should be) the primary focus of our energies, student activities further solidify a feeling of solidarity between faculty and students at our school.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

On Service (With Purpose)

By Sarah Kain Gutowski, Chair, New Member Program

I hope that this post finds all of us well: avoiding those change-of-season-plagues-disguised-as-innocuous-colds, surviving the cramped schedule and MYSCCC/Banner problems that come with Priority Registration, and withstanding the sudden rush of student concerns about grades (midterms will do that to them).

(By the by, if you need to access Blackboard without going through MYSCCC, visit suffolkonline.open.suny.edu. And yes, sadly, a student just brought that to my attention earlier this week.)

November's finally here, y'all.
ANYWAY, one of the things you may have found by this point in the semester is that there's a lot of activity going on at the college regarding assessment, ILOs, and Middle States. Workshops are being hosted via the Office for Faculty and Professional Advancement, deans are making house calls to departments and governance bodies, committees are being formed, subcommittees are being formed, and calls for faculty to chair these committees and subcommittees are becoming more and more regular.

If you've found your role to play in one or more of these processes, congratulations! (And wow -- that was fast, huh?) And if you haven't yet, you might take a welcome break from teaching and grading to consider whether or not now would be a good time to become more involved.

General advice to our first year faculty is always along the lines of, "Focus on your teaching; worry about committee work next year." And this is good advice -- but not always practical, particularly if you're a member of a small department or a small campus (*cough*) that requires representation on a committee. Additionally, you may find that joining one of these committees now will give you a better, broader sense of how the college works, and how faculty and administration work together to accomplish the Herculean tasks beset us by SUNY and/or Middle States (the association from which we receive accreditation) -- and that you'll be able to participate in some new initiatives from the ground up, instead of coming in later when processes are in full swing.

Nevertheless, there are questions you should ask and points to reflect on if you're considering committee work:
  1. What's the purpose of the committee? 
  2. Do I have expertise or knowledge that will make me a good fit for the committee? 
  3. What will be my role on the committee? (What will be expected of me?)
  4. What's the makeup of the committee? (Who are its members, and who is chairing?) 
  5. Who does this committee report to? (Which administrator or part of the college infrastructure?)
  6. What kind of meeting schedule am I committing to? (Weekly, biweekly, monthly?)
  7. Do I have to travel to another campus to attend these meetings? (Can I make this fit with my current schedule?)
  8. What kind of workload will this committee carry? (Will it involve research? Will it involve writing? How much will be added to my current workload?)
  9. Is this considered department, campus, or college-wide service? (Do I understand where this will "fit" on my form for promotion?)
Also, I recommend asking for week or so -- if you have that opportunity -- to think seriously about the commitment you're being asked to undertake. Use that time to talk to fellow faculty, and your mentor, about the committee. They may have insight or perspective that will surprise you, and make it easier for you to say yes or no.

Service to one's department, campus, and college is incredibly important -- aside from being the basis for promotion, it's how a lot of the necessary work at our institution is accomplished. And there's a lot of work -- a lot of different opportunities to become involved -- so it makes sense that you should be deliberate and careful in your choice of committees and projects. No one should (or would, I suspect) fault you for wanting to be more informed when making decisions. Be clear that you're willing to serve, but that you want to serve with purpose.


Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Practical Matters: Student Activities and Clubs

by Sarah Kain Gutowski, Chair, New Member Mentoring Program
 
On Wednesday of last week, faculty and students here at the Eastern campus gathered on the patio outside the Peconic building for Student Activities Day, a kind of open house for student clubs and organizations. Club officers and advisors were generally on hand to answer questions from students seeking to participate in extracurricular campus activities, and to gain new members in the process. You may have seen something similar occurring on your own campus.

For years now, I've been a faculty advisor to a student organization. For several years while I worked on the Ammerman Campus, I co-advised a student writing group that met to workshop their poetry, short stories, and plays outside of a classroom setting. Then, when I transferred to the Eastern Campus, I began advising the campus literary magazine. From my time as an adjunct to the present, I've always been involved with student activities, and this involvement has kept me engaged and invested in a way that's much different from my experience in the classroom. In fact, I'd say that if anything, it's enhanced my ability to connect with students in a meaningful and productive manner.

I encourage all of you to consider being a student activities advisor as well, and if you’re presented with the opportunity to do so – well, jump at it. All three of our campuses offer our student body a richer, more diverse college experience by providing numerous activities throughout the semester – and by facilitating and supporting a number of different student clubs and organizations. Being an advisor can help you learn so much more about our students than time in the classroom
The super-sophisticated display for the club I advise.
can – and I say this after receiving lots of really personal personal essays in Freshman Comp.

PAs, Specialists, Counselors, Librarians and faculty can become more involved with student life by being an advisor to a student club or organization. Not only is this a wonderful way to mentor students, it’s also a good way to garner some campus-wide service you can cite on your application for promotion.

As an advisor, you’ll need to assist the club officers when necessary (you aren’t required to attend all the meetings, although the presence of an advisor is necessary for any off-campus excursions the club may make). Depending on the campus, you might attend an Officer and Advisor meeting during Common Hour once a month or once a semester. You’ll sign some forms. You’ll be invited to a lovely, catered Student Awards Ceremony at the end of the year. And that’s about all the heavy-lifting that’s involved, unless you’d like to be more active. 
 
The Ammerman Campus in particular needs faculty and staff advisors for student clubs, so if you’re located on the Ammerman campus and you’re interested in becoming involved, contact Frank Vino at x4814. If you are located on the Eastern campus and would like to become involved, call x2531 and let Denny Teason know you’re available to advise; likewise, if you’re on Grant, call Lisa Hamilton at x6260.
 
Lastly, I’ll say this: Because the college is changing constantly to accommodate the needs of our students and community, our roles and requirements as faculty and staff are changing constantly, too. You may find that you’ll join some committees your first year or second year and that by your seventh year, you’ll either be chairing those committees or you’ll find yourself on entirely different committees.
 
Well, I began co-advising The Society of Writers back when I was an adjunct faculty member. Over the years – after being hired as full time faculty and going through the process of two promotion cycles – the one item that’s never changed on my promotion applications is my role as an advisor. I love mentoring students, and I’ve found the experience extremely rewarding, particularly with clubs that are educational in focus, like the honors societies or STEM clubs. It’s a fantastic way for us -- new and “senior” members alike – to connect with our students, and remind ourselves that while academics are (and should be) the primary focus of our energies, student activities further solidify a feeling of solidarity between faculty and students at our school.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

The NMDS Archive: Anticipating and Planning Your Career at SCCC, Part I



Editor’s Note:  This following is the first of the presentations from the second FA New Member Discussion Series event, hosted in cooperation with the Office of Faculty and Professional Advancement (and written by yours truly), titled "The Long View: Anticipating and Planning Your Career at SCCC," on November 14, 2014. Over the next few weeks, I'll be posting the text and talking points from the other presenters, too, so that even if you weren't able to attend the session, you'll still have access to some of the insight and advice offered at this professional development workshop. -- SKG

The Long View: Anticipating and Planning Your Career at SCCC

by Sarah Kain Gutowski, Associate Professor of English, Eastern Campus, Department of Humanities

I’m good at dreaming and planning. I come up with marvelous ideas. Putting these ideas into action, however, is another less-easy and more-challenging feat.

That’s really the impetus for this workshop today. It’s one thing to anticipate a career: to hold its opportunity, to hope, to imagine the depth and breadth of its possibility. It’s another to plan a career, which requires action in the form of decisions. Choices must be made.

One thing my career at Suffolk has made clear is the connection between choice and perspective. There’s a lot of literature out there about higher education, and about being part of the machine of higher education: it’s easy to become lost in it. A link to one article leads to another leads to a rabbit-hole of research and opinion about “shaping our nation.” But it’s almost impossible to sincerely, whole-heartedly subscribe to a belief in the system of higher education and its role in the lives of our fellow citizens unless one feels real satisfaction with, and honest acceptance for, the choices one has made within that system.
Plotting, I mean, preparing, before the presentation.

I’m a poet by trade. I write from a visceral, intuitive place inside my psyche. But systems – inorganic, exterior constructs -- are what I’m here to praise. They are not, by any means, intuitive; but the best ones allow for intuition, for choices based on gut-feelings, and for forgiveness if that intuition proves false.

Today, I’d like to help you come up with your own system, or plan, for your career at SCCC.

Your Ten Year-Plan (Or, A Letter to Yourself in Ten Years’ Time)

When you were younger, you may have been asked to write a letter to your future self. You were encouraged to ask questions of this future self, all along imagining this person and their likes, dislikes, and accomplishments.

Because no one – ever – is likely to ask you to do this again during your time here, please take a few minutes to pause and do something similar to that elementary school project. Before you groan, remember that I said similar, not the same. Ditch the “Dear Future Self” greeting. Don’t waste time with the questions about your predilections and peccadilloes. Instead, pick up one of the pens at the table, and a notepad, and with your most concise and no-nonsense words, create a verbal sketch of where you see yourself, in terms of your career, in ten years time. What is it that you want to do with your next decade?

Congratulations on what you’ve just done. It takes imagination and critical thinking skills to conceptualize one’s projected career. To use your imagination and critical thinking skills after the semester has beaten all your working brain cells into a fine pulp is no small accomplishment. You should feel a tiny sense of pride. Good job by you!

What you hold in your hand or lap, or on the table before you, however, isn’t a plan. It’s anticipation. Planning requires steps. Tiers of action. So now, let’s talk about those.

Tiers of Action (Or, Buckets of Service)

Years ago, a rather hapless administrator stumbled into a department meeting with thirty faculty members who trade in metaphor and symbols for a living, and reduced our promotion process to a series of “buckets” into which one could drop the ephemera of one’s job here. Imagine, he said, that each area of service to the college (Department, Campus, and College) was a bucket. When it came time for promotion, no one bucket should be more full than another. You could win a Nobel Prize, he said, and if your “campus” bucket was empty, there wasn’t much he could do to promote you.

You are right to laugh. Said hapless administrator was rightly mocked (not to his face, of course) for his oversimplification, which was devoid of lyricism and nuance and akin to that other elementary-school preoccupation with do-goodery, “Bucket-Filling.” Also, his allusion to buckets and a balance between them had the misfortune of producing the image of a yoke, reducing faculty to peasants – or worse – servants – or even worse -- oxen.

Sadly, the clumsiness of his words masked a more-or-less realistic view of our promotion process here. He was, in fact, on to something. Balance. (And by the way, he eventually took back what he said about the Nobel Prize. I’m not sure anyone on the Board could argue with giving that person promotion.)

Go to the FA’s website, and visit the “Professional Life” tab and scroll down to the “Promotion Information” link. Download the “A” form, which you’ll need to fill out in order to be promoted, and scroll through it. Note that on this form you’ll be describing yourself – and evaluating your own performance -- in the following areas:

  • Teaching and Other Duties (Other duties being the rather poor term to describe the daily lives of those who don’t teach)
  • Service to the College and Community (which is described, in the paragraph that follows, as encompassing your department/area, campus, college and community. We often forget this last one. Community Service isn’t widely stressed, but it’s important!)
  • Personal and Professional Growth (Or, in other words, Research and Scholarship)

Now hold up that “Future Self” sketch. Compare it to the form here. Do they look anything alike?

Probably not. But they probably should.
Sharing (hopefully) useful tips for creating balance

Practicing What We Preach: Revision and Reflection

First, Revision: 

Be patient with me, please, and take another sheet of paper out. Now, revise that original “Future Self” sketch by breaking it down into the following categories:

Daily Duties (Teaching/Non-Teaching)
Departmental Service
Campus Service
College Service
Community Service
Professional Development

Six areas. Our jobs here at SCCC are not simple – they are multi-faceted and complex, sometimes overlapping and working in tandem and sometimes in opposition to one another.

We’ll talk more about the latter in a moment. For now, let’s be positive: What – and try to be as concrete as possible – do you see yourself doing ten years from now? Think truly “big picture.” Be ambitious and idealistic. You have room to do that right now, and it will not serve you to think small.

Hint One: if you entered at the rank of Instructor, and you do everything “right” and “on time,” you will be nearing – but not quite at -- the end of your promotion cycle. If you enter at the rank of PA or Specialist, around 7 years from now you’ll be applying for your final promotion.

Hint Two: Under the “service” categories, you may find yourself a little stumped. You may not know what kind of service you CAN provide. You have lots of options, and this is also your chance to think bigger and better. Sure, most of us participate and contribute by being on committees. But you can contribute also by starting a department or campus newsletter or blog. You can contribute by leading a TLC presentation on your campus. You can contribute by organizing a professional development workshop for the college.  You can work with community partners inside and outside your classroom on unique, meaningful, and curricula-related projects. This is your moment to imagine lots and lots of options, so that you don’t feel limited when it comes to making a choice.

Now, Reflection, Part I:

After you’ve maybe taken that “Future Self” and divided him or her six different ways in this revision, sit back and reflect on what you’ve imagined. And take note – what area holds the most challenging or ambitious “Future Self”?

That most challenging or ambitious part should not be, necessarily, your highest priority – but it’s the area you want to be most conscious of and careful about. This is the area that will, most likely, lead to the highest amount of job satisfaction if you meet your goals.

And frankly, your highest goal should be to come out of this process without bitterness and resentment, or feeling cheated or roadblocked. How does one do that? Through a careful plan. Through pragmatic choices.

Then, Reflection, Part II:

This next part is not intended to be stressful or panic-inducing. Simply answer the question, where – in each of these areas – do I stand now?

I know you just arrived here. You may believe that you haven’t done more than attend department meetings and lead your classes competently, at best. But you may have done a tiny bit more than you realize. For instance: You’re attending this Professional Development Workshop. You know where that goes? Under Professional Development.  You may be a pack leader for your local boy scout troop. That’s Community Service, which really means demonstrating you’re an active and positive part of the local community.

If, after these past two months, you’ve got about two items to divide across this list – good. You’re right where you need to be. If you don’t have anything other than this workshop, you’re still right where you need to be, because where you need to be at this point is at the beginning -- but at the beginning with open eyes, with an awareness of where you’re headed.

Remember, too, that your timeline is your own timeline. You’re not racing anyone but yourself to that final promotion – and if you arrive at that finish line exhausted and depleted, feeling bitter and used, it will diminish your victory.  

Your Action Plan: Tips

1.    Make Rules for Yourself. Follow Them. Try Again if You Mess Up.

You are going to be asked to do lots of things. My advice, particularly if you’re enthusiastic about almost everything like someone else I know **cough ** . . .  is to give yourself a rule like: I must take a week to consider before beginning any new projects or commitments. If someone asks you to join a committee, say thanks, ask questions about the time commitment and the charges and tasks of the committee, and then take a few days to reflect. Answer only after you’ve taken stock of your other commitments and surveyed whether or not, realistically, you could handle the responsibility. If you can, great. If not, don’t feel bad saying no. There are lots of us at this college. They will find someone to do the work.

2.    Maybe You Have Two Careers, Not One. Plan Accordingly.

At a community college, research, publication, conference presentations, and other professional development is not the primary focus of faculty. In fact, in that list of six categories, taken directly from the A form, Personal and Professional Growth comes in last.

Some of us are just fine with that, and don’t feel a need to perform in this area beyond what’s required for our promotions. Most of us, though, came to higher education because we were interested in learning, and we specialized in very particular subject areas, and as scholars and true academics, we would like to continue to specialize, and publish, and excel, in our particular areas or fields.

For years now, I’ve answered the riddle of being a Teaching Artist at a community college by thinking of myself as having Two Careers. Two callings, intermingled at points, but that require their own separate focus. If I want to get anywhere with my writing, I need to give it time. And I have to give it time that is sacred, and set apart from my grading, my committee work, my email correspondence, office hours, and meetings.

For years now, it’s been in the mornings. Alternately – and ideally – I wake before my children and use the dark, quiet hours to write, read OR do the boring,  painful, necessary work of submitting to journals and book publishers. Since I began this practice of compartmentalizing my “twin careers,” I’ve seen a drastic increase in my productivity, as well as in my publications and presentations. Also, I’m just happier, because I’m one of those annoying people who’s happiest when I feel useful.

I try – emphasis on try – to keep these hours separate from everything else in my life, and sometimes it’s possible. Sometimes it isn’t possible. And sometimes it’s possible, but the other areas of my life suffer; I fall behind in my committee work, perhaps, or with my grading.

Generally, I forgive myself if this happens. It’s a necessary evil. If you perform perfectly in one of these areas, chances are you’re going to be failing (or flailing) in some or all of the others. There’s just too much to do, and too many demands on our time to do everything perfectly 100%, or even 25% of the time, frankly.

But as most therapists would agree – this is a good problem. There’s too much good stuff! Having a career as an academic, after all, is not a bad lot in life. What matters is that you’re being pulled in different directions by aspects of your life that you care about genuinely, and that you see the good and positive effects of your work on a regular basis, despite the chaos and stress of a fully-packed schedule.

This is, I hope, the key to a long and happy career at this college, or any college: ambition, a pragmatic approach, a willingness to forgive yourself for missteps, and the awareness that you can and will choose the direction and momentum of the events in your career. A career isn’t something that just happens to us. We build it.