Reframing Campus Conflict/Student Conduct Practice Set
Editat de Jennifer Meyer Schrage, Nancy Geist Giacomini, James M. Lancaster, Diane M. Waryolden Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 oct 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781642672015
ISBN-10: 1642672017
Pagini: 736
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 1.36 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1642672017
Pagini: 736
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 1.36 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and Professional Practice & DevelopmentNotă biografică
Jennifer Meyer Schrage (she/her) is the interim associate vice president for student life at the University of Michigan and is an expert in higher education policy, leadership, and conflict management. She has devoted her career to promoting safe and just campus communities through leading, teaching, developing, and administering innovative institutional policies and practices through a lens of inclusive excellence. Schrage has worked for the University of Michigan since 2006, serving in a variety of senior leadership roles, including as the senior adviser to the vice president and as director for both the International Center and Office of Student Conflict Resolution. Schrage is credited with leading realignment and strategic change on a local and national level, having earned the Association for Student Conduct Administration (ASCA) Award for Excellence for significant contributions to the field for her collaborative work with Monita C. Thompson in developing the nationally recognized spectrum model for campus conduct and conflict management. Interviewed by the Chronicle of Higher Education for innovative practices and restorative justice, she has also been invited to speak about her experience and expertise across the country, including invitations from the Association for American Law Schools, Northwestern University, and the ASCA National Conference and Academy. In addition to coediting the first edition of Reframing Campus Conflict (Stylus, 2009), her work is published in About Campus, the Council on Law in Higher Education Student Affairs Law & Policy Quarterly, and ASCA’s Law & Policy Report. Schrage previously taught at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University’s Lodestar Dispute Resolution Center and served as director of Student Judicial Services at Eastern Michigan University. Schrage came to higher education from the practice of law. She earned her law degree at the University of Arizona.
Nancy Geist Giacomini (she/her) is a groundbreaking educator, mediator, and systems consultant whose teaching, publications and advocacy have transformed student conduct and conflict management practice for over three decades. She provides online adjunct graduate instruction, subject matter expertise and doctoral candidate mentoring for institutions including St. Bonaventure University (NY) and Sullivan University (KY) and is a veteran mediator of special education disputes with the Pennsylvania Office for Dispute Resolution. She earned her doctorate in educational leadership from the University of Delaware while a conflict resolution program associate in the Institute for Public Administration, where she served as a statewide mediator, and graduate practicum instructor for student affairs practice in higher education. Her career includes over a decade as assistant dean of students at the University of Delaware where she managed the Student Conduct office; piloted the Student Government Mediation program; chaired the Appeals Board, Council for Judicial Affairs, and Sexual Assault Awareness Weeks; and was awarded the Institutional Award for Women’s Equity. Giacomini champions integrated conflict and conduct management initiatives in education. She balances an active conflict management and teaching practice with educational consulting, conflict coaching, and interim student affairs roles in higher education, including an appointment as interim student conduct and Title IX respondent case manager and grievance advisor for Swarthmore College (PA). She is a credentialed expert across conflict coaching; group facilitation; mediation; restorative practices; victim-offender conference facilitation; due process; Title IX; and ombudsperson roles. Giacomini is an award-winning leader in the Association for Student Conduct Administration (ASCA) with Board of Director roles culminating in a three-year turn as president. She pioneered the integration of conflict resolution, mediation, restorative justice, and inclusive excellence principles and practices into traditional student conduct professional development programs offered by the association in roles as conference chair, training institute program chair, and faculty. Nancy founded the Community of Practice for Women in Student Conduct, served on the ASCA Foundation Board, was appointed to the Diversity Task Force, and lent expertise at the inaugural Conflict Resolution Strategic Planning Summit. Additional memberships include the International Ombudsman Association, Association for Conflict Resolution, Pennsylvania Council of Mediators, ACPA College Student Educators International, and the Pennsylvania ODR Stakeholder’s Council; she is also on the editorial board of the Journal of Conflict Management (JOCM).
James M. Lancaster is currently an Assistant Professor of Human Development and Psychological Counseling at Appalachian State University. Prior to taking this position, Dr. Lancaster was Associate Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Diane M. Waryold is also an Assistant Professor of Human Development and Psychological Counseling at Appalachian State University. Prior to this position, Dr. Waryold served as the Executive Director for The Center for Academic Integrity and Program Administrator for The Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University in Durham, NC.
Nancy Geist Giacomini (she/her) is a groundbreaking educator, mediator, and systems consultant whose teaching, publications and advocacy have transformed student conduct and conflict management practice for over three decades. She provides online adjunct graduate instruction, subject matter expertise and doctoral candidate mentoring for institutions including St. Bonaventure University (NY) and Sullivan University (KY) and is a veteran mediator of special education disputes with the Pennsylvania Office for Dispute Resolution. She earned her doctorate in educational leadership from the University of Delaware while a conflict resolution program associate in the Institute for Public Administration, where she served as a statewide mediator, and graduate practicum instructor for student affairs practice in higher education. Her career includes over a decade as assistant dean of students at the University of Delaware where she managed the Student Conduct office; piloted the Student Government Mediation program; chaired the Appeals Board, Council for Judicial Affairs, and Sexual Assault Awareness Weeks; and was awarded the Institutional Award for Women’s Equity. Giacomini champions integrated conflict and conduct management initiatives in education. She balances an active conflict management and teaching practice with educational consulting, conflict coaching, and interim student affairs roles in higher education, including an appointment as interim student conduct and Title IX respondent case manager and grievance advisor for Swarthmore College (PA). She is a credentialed expert across conflict coaching; group facilitation; mediation; restorative practices; victim-offender conference facilitation; due process; Title IX; and ombudsperson roles. Giacomini is an award-winning leader in the Association for Student Conduct Administration (ASCA) with Board of Director roles culminating in a three-year turn as president. She pioneered the integration of conflict resolution, mediation, restorative justice, and inclusive excellence principles and practices into traditional student conduct professional development programs offered by the association in roles as conference chair, training institute program chair, and faculty. Nancy founded the Community of Practice for Women in Student Conduct, served on the ASCA Foundation Board, was appointed to the Diversity Task Force, and lent expertise at the inaugural Conflict Resolution Strategic Planning Summit. Additional memberships include the International Ombudsman Association, Association for Conflict Resolution, Pennsylvania Council of Mediators, ACPA College Student Educators International, and the Pennsylvania ODR Stakeholder’s Council; she is also on the editorial board of the Journal of Conflict Management (JOCM).
James M. Lancaster is currently an Assistant Professor of Human Development and Psychological Counseling at Appalachian State University. Prior to taking this position, Dr. Lancaster was Associate Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Diane M. Waryold is also an Assistant Professor of Human Development and Psychological Counseling at Appalachian State University. Prior to this position, Dr. Waryold served as the Executive Director for The Center for Academic Integrity and Program Administrator for The Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University in Durham, NC.
Cuprins
Reframing Campus Conflict: Foreword—Preface—Acknowledgments Introduction—Part One. Responding to Conflict on Campus. Foundations for Student Affairs Educators 1. Transforming the Climate and Culture of Campus Communities Through Inclusive Conflict Excellence—2. Reconciling Legal Obligations with Education Goals. Revisiting Foundations of Student Conflict Work—3. Why Objectivity is Not Nearly Enough. The Critical Role of Social Justice in Campus Conflict and Conduct Work— 4. Creating a Community of Inclusive Excellence Using a Spectrum Model Approach to Campus Conflict—Part Two. Pathways Within the Spectrum Model 5. Reviving Dialogue—6. The Art of Coaching. Transferring Interpersonal and Group Conflict Resolution Skills to a One-on-One Setting—7. Facilitated Dialogue. An Introduction and Overview for Campus Conflict Management—8. Models of Mediation Practice— 9. Restorative Justice from Theory to Practice—10. Negotiating Peace on Campus through Shuttle Diplomacy—11. Off Script. Incorporating Principles of Inclusive Conflict Excellence Into Informal and Formal Adjudication Pathways—Part Three. Sustainable Innovation and Transformation 12. Cultural Responsiveness in Student Conduct and Conflict Resolution Assessment—13. Building Relational and Critical Thinking Skills. The Power of Peer-Led Restorative Justice Circles Among First-Year College Students— 14. Culture, Conflict, and Student Learning. Intercultural Development for Global and Inclusive Graduates— 15. Keeping it Real. Reflections on Inclusive Campus Leadership and Authentic Collaboration—Afterword—Editors and Contributors Index. Student Conduct Practice: Foreword—Acknowledgments Introduction—1. Evolution of the Student Conduct Profession—2. The Philosophy of Student Conduct and the Student Conduct Professional—3. Crafting and Revising Your Student Conduct Code—4. Laws, Policies, and Mandates—5. Types and Forums for Resolution—6. Breaking the Cycle. Embedding Social Justice Into Student Conduct Practice—7. Ethics and Decision Making—8. Assessment and Student Conduct—9. Bias Incidents on Campus—10. Sexual Misconduct—11. The First Amendment on Campus—12. Threat Assessment and Behavioral Interventions—13. Student Organizations Through the Student Conduct Lens—14. Academic Integrity—15. Thoughts on the Future—Conclusion. Challenges and Changes—Contributors Index.
Descriere
Buy the second edition set of Reframing Campus Conflict: Student Conduct Practice Through the Lense of Inclusive Excellence and Student Conduct Practice: The Complete Guide for Student Affairs Professionals for a savings of 20% off the list price.