A Faithful Vision

A recent ACSD membership survey asked the question: what do student development professionals most need from their supervisors? Increased professional development and greater work-life balance led the way, with the third highest need being “vision casting and communicating vision.” While the top two highest needs are of critical importance, it leads one to wonder: could strong vision and good communication of that vision within a student development team result in better outcomes related to professional development and work-life balance, as well as team dynamics, fiscal stewardship, staff retention, meaningful student service, and a host of other critical student life needs?

For many student development professionals, there is a tendency to become caught up in the day-to-day responsibilities that fill our schedules. All of this work is meaningful, as our ultimate goal is to serve students and help them thrive and flourish in their educational journeys. However, becoming stuck in the minutiae of logistical processes, policies, procedures, and responsibilities can often lead to jaded feelings towards the work itself and perhaps even the institution. This distorts our work as Christian student development practitioners away from Christ-enlivened purposes.[1] Developing and communicating strong vision that is tied to both institutional and departmental mission represents a profound opportunity for student development leaders to not only avoid harmful pitfalls like those mentioned above, but also to invigorate a healthy team towards common goals and aims to the benefit of the students.

Vision Casting

Every institution of higher education has a mission statement, which describes what that institution does, for whom, and from what philosophical, ethical, social, or religious foundations they operate. Similarly, many student development departments “often have their own mission statements that reflect the larger institutional mission but also describe more specifically the work of the division related to students.”[2] While many employees can recite an institutional mission statement by heart, and many student development staff can parrot theirs, it is becoming increasingly important for student development leaders to take those mission statements and cast vision for their teams in ways that practically informs how to prioritize amongst the multiple competing demands of their work.

The vision of a student development department describes aspirational goals, priorities, and values that not only dictate focal points for the department but also should tie directly to budget needs and staff responsibilities. Taking time to develop a shared vision can lead to a greater sense of unity and understanding between team members, and ultimately, a stronger departmental culture. Solidifying vision is one major step in sustaining a healthy departmental culture and team dynamics. However, achieving shared vision is a process. As a process, vision casting can be even more salient when it is both participatory and iterative.

Participatory

Both new professionals and seasoned veterans can benefit from shared vision casting processes. Seasoned professionals can share their institutional history and knowledge in the formation and shaping of vision, both ensuring that industry best practices are included as well as key institutional values. New professionals can benefit in participating by garnering a clear understanding of both their institution’s goals, as well as their student development department’s core values and priorities. New professionals can also bring fresh ideas to the table, working alongside seasoned professionals in avoiding ruts and the ever-present “we’ve always done it this way” mentality.[3]

Participation and inclusivity from all levels of the student development team is crucial. At the same time ensuring that strong leadership guides the process and helps make firm decisions on vision for the division is also necessary. This balance allows each unique voice a chance to be heard, while also leaning on the student development leaders who have been chosen for their positions to set the tone for success. The Chief Student Development Officer (CSDO) can and should provide a grounding framework, include additional leaders in the formative early processes such as Deans, Associate Deans, and Directors, and ensure that every staff member within the organizational chart engages in vision casting.[4] Participatory processes help create a shared ownership of vision for the division and promote clear, concise expectations of individual and group responsibilities.[5]

Iterative

As an iterative process, vision casting for student development professionals should be continual and ongoing. Casting vision helps leaders create strategic goals, action steps, and ties the division’s work to mission and core values. While some components of any vision may be static, a multitude of elements are dynamic. Ongoing vision casting allows CSDO’s and their teams the ability to set clear and achievable goals and tenets for their departments that also have some fluidity. Every vision-casting process can be responsive to ever-changing student demographics, student needs, fiscal matters, personnel changes, and other institutional dynamics.[6]

Creating vision that helps student development staff understand their roles and goals in serving students gives them a chance to aim their work towards shared aims. Ensuring that the process is iterative acknowledges that the higher education landscape evolves every year. If you achieve goals as a division, change them or set new ones rather than recycling them. If one of your core strategic tenets or values no longer seems applicable to your student body, adjust it, or swap it with something new. A key reminder is to ensure vision casting is a part of your overall strategic planning and assessment processes.[7] Assessment, evaluation, and strategic planning processes will align your vision casting efforts with broader institutional goals, which focuses the work of the division on our key stakeholder: students.

Communicating Vision

Vision casting helps tie the work of student development professionals to the institutional and divisional mission statements. Participatory and iterative approaches help ensure that vision is shared and owned by team members as well as consistently evaluated and assessed. One final consideration is the need for vision to be thoroughly communicated to all stakeholders (both in and out of a given department). Casting and communicating vision can often result in a pithy, catchy vision statement. Vision statements are important messages in succinctly communication vision to stakeholders, but it is important to acknowledge that vision-casting is more than just a singular statement. Vision for a student development team includes core strategic tenets or values, ties to institutional mission and priorities, goals, action steps, assessment and evaluation, and department and individual responsibilities. Communicating the whole package, not just the vision statement, is critical.

If a CSDO has made the effort for vision-casting to be participatory, there should already be distinct understanding and buy-in from internal student development staff. However, don’t assume that every single individual has complete and clear understanding of all aspects of the vision. Larry Moneta speaks of communication for of the overall strategic planning process for student develop leaders, which involves crafting mission and vision: “Communications need to be frequent, informative, and inspirational as the process unfolds and evolves.”[8] Allowing for consistent communication of vision and goals can affect staff retention and overall buy-in to the expectations and responsibilities of any singular position. This also serves as a chance for CDSO’s and other student development leaders to invest in their employees by having regular interactions with team members sharing vision for how they will uniquely serve students at their institution.

Furthermore, communicating vision is also important with other departments within the university and with the students themselves. Ongoing communication helps all internal staff know the direction of the department, and also transparently shares with other staff and students the goals and aspirations of the student development team. Good communication can help foster a culture of shared ownership into the overall institutional mission and unified efforts and educating and serving students holistically.

Conclusion

As you and your teams work together in vision casting, here are a few suggestions:

  1. Pray over the process. Pray individually over your work and role, but also pray corporately for the process, the outcomes, and the ultimate goal of fulfilling mission and serving students. Regardless of whether you are at a Christian or secular institution, where do you see Christ-enlivening this process and your own work?[9]
  2. Develop a strong leadership team within your division to lead vision casting and communication efforts. Depending on the size of your team, this will look different for each institution. But who are the individuals in positions of respect and responsibility (both in title and in stature).
  3. Clearly articulate your division’s strategic tenets or values. What matters most? What specific things do you want to focus on in the coming years as key outcomes of your program?
  4. Tie your tenets/values to clear, achievable goals. Ensure those goals are measurable, and can be assessed and evaluated. Did you achieve a goal(s)? Don’t just copy and paste for future years; aim higher or change things up.
  5. Block time in your calendars to hold regular meetings on vision casting. Don’t make it a part of regular staff meetings, but be intentional about setting aside time at regular intervals.
  6. Communicate, communicate, communicate. Find regular and creative ways, individually and corporately, to communicate the vision of your department with both internal staff and other external stakeholders.

Dougharty, Ellis, and Gordon (2023) explain the need for student development divisions to become healthy, unified entities for the benefit of students and staff.[10] CDSO’s and other student development leaders must:

Strive to create a cohesive leadership team. The team should be strong, united, and committed to a common goal. It must establish real clarity, communicating a common purpose and vision to everyone in the organization and, at the same time, establish just enough structure to reinforce the purpose and vision going forward.[11]

Clear, participatory, and iterative vision casting is a key component of fostering a healthy student development division and retaining staff. When the division is healthy and staff are retained, students are the beneficiaries of greater attention, stronger programming, intentional support, and more meaningful discipleship and development.

References

[1] Glanzer, P. L., Cockle, T. F., Jeong, E. G., & Graber, B. N. (2020). Christ-enlivened student affairs: A guide to Christian thinking and practice in the field. ACU Press.

[2] Amey, M. J., Jessup-Anger, E. R., & Tingson-Gatuz, C. (2015). Unwritten rules: Organizational and political realities. In M. Amey and L. Reesor (Eds.), Beginning your journey: A guide for new professionals in student affairs. Washington, DC: NASPA.

[3] Amey, Jessup-Anger, & Tingson-Gatuz, 2015

[4] Moneta, L. (2021). The business of student affairs: Fundamental skills for student affairs professionals. NASPA-Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education.

[5] Amey, Jessup-Anger, & Tingson-Gatuz, 2015

[6] Moneta, 2021

[7] Moneta, 2021

[8] Moneta, 2021

[9] Glanzer, Cockle, Jeong, and Graber, 2020

[10] Dougharty, W.H., Ellis, S., & Gordon, S.A. (2023). Create a healthy student affairs organization. Leadership Exchange, 20 (4), 28-33.

[11] Dougharty, Ellis, & Gordon, 2023.

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Comfort Olugbuyi

Florida Atlantic University, Associate Director of eSuccess  

Workshop: How to Present Successfully at the ACSD Conference

Dr. Comfort Olugbuyi comes to Florida Atlantic University with a B.A. in Psychology from the University of North Texas, an M.A. in Youth and Family ministries from John Brown University, and a Ed.D in Higher Education Leadership from Bethel University (MN). Comfort’s research and experience focuses on academic support for college students. She looks for opportunities to support students where they are at in the ever-changing world and create partnerships and connections to close gaps and increase retention and overall sense of belonging for students. Comfort joined ACSD June 2008 and has loved the partnership, friendships, mentorships, and overall camaraderie experienced through the years. She has served as a member of the Diversity Leadership Team, New Professional Retreat facilitator (Vice Chair and Chair), and in various table hosting opportunities.

Dr. Comfort Olugbuyi has almost two decades of higher education experience in various positions. She started as a Graduate Assistant Caterer and event coordinator at the University of North Texas, moving on to a Resident Director at John Brown University and Palm Beach Atlantic University (PBA). Comfort then spent over a decade in various student affairs positions at Palm Beach Atlantic University within First Year Advising, Academic Support, and Disability Services. She had additional opportunities to invest and support employee professional development, employee health and wellness, multicultural programming, and NCAA athletics all at PBA. Currently, Comfort serves as the Associate Director of eSuccess at Florida Atlantic University, which is part of the Center for Learning and Student Success (CLASS) where she provides academic support and serves as a liaison to online and hybrid students to all six campuses. When she is not on a college campus you can find Comfort serving at her local church as a welcome host and greeter, volunteering at local community events, or watching local musical theater/play productions.

Why are you excited to be a part of Elevate?
Dr. Olugbuyi is excited and honored to partner with Elevate. There is tremendous value within this professional development opportunity. Comfort is excited to share her ideas through her unique perspectives. She looks forward to collaborating with this group of professionals to share information and offer support in helping to create workshops to enhance ACSD and other conferences.

Shino Simons

Keck Graduate Institute, Dean of Students

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Shino was born in Japan and raised in Hawaii. Shino has served in higher education for the past 27 years, and she felt the call to raise up the next generation of leaders through higher education. She began her career as a resident director but quickly rose to various leadership positions, including associate director of residence life, directorship in various offices, Title IX Coordinator, associate dean of students, Vice President for Student Affairs, and currently the Dean of Students at Keck Graduate Institute.

Shino received her B.A. in Psychology and M.Ed. in College Student Affairs from Azusa Pacific University. She continued her education at Claremont Graduate University and received her Ph.D. in Higher Education, where she learned from scholars such as Dr. Daryl Smith, Dr. Linda Perkins, and Dr. Susan Paik.

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Kevin Villegas

Baylor University, Dean of Intercultural Engagement and Division of Student Life Initiatives

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Dr. Kevin Villegas serves as the Dean of Intercultural Engagement and Division of Student Life Initiatives. In his role, Dr. Villegas is responsible for leading a comprehensive approach to empower all students and Division of Student Life staff in the creation of a more vibrant, inclusive, and supportive campus environment as an expression of the Baylor University mission. He has more than two decades of demonstrated leadership experience in a variety of roles within higher- and secondary-education settings, which includes working in or overseeing areas such as campus ministries, student leadership development, new student orientation, student activities, international student programs, athletics coaching, and public relations. He has also led international service trips, co-led a cross-cultural course, and taught strategic leadership in higher education, and leadership and first-year seminar courses for undergraduate students. Dr. Villegas is an active member of the Association for Christians in Student Development (ACSD) and served for several years on the executive committee as the chair of the Diversity Leadership Team. He was a recipient of ACSD’s Jane Higa Multicultural Advancement Award in recognition of his significant contributions toward increased understanding and promotion of multiculturalism in ACSD and at Messiah University, where he worked for 17 years. 

 Beyond the realm of education, Dr. Villegas also worked in the entertainment industry and in pastoral ministry. 

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I’m excited to be a part of Elevate because equipping our professional members to better serve and develop multicultural student populations on our respective campuses is vital work. In an increasingly diverse society, knowing how to navigate differences of all sorts with conviction and compassion is needed now more than ever.

Leah Fulton

Trinity Christian College – Palos Heights, IL, Vice President of Student Success

Workshop: Development: Institutional Partnerships and Operational Efficiency

Leah comes to Trinity with a B.A. from Ball State University, an M.A. in Intercultural Studies from Wheaton College, and a Ph.D. in Higher Education with a minor in African American Studies from the University of Minnesota. Leah’s research explores the historical and contemporary motivations and barriers facing African Americans in foreign missions, the history of Black women in doctoral education and the experiences of Black mother doctoral students. She also studies the experience of students and adjunct faculty of color in leadership education.

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Dr. Fulton is excited to be part of Elevate because of how important it is to support professionals of color in Christian higher education. She benefited from the wisdom and experience of professionals before her and is eager to invest in other professionals to support their ability to navigate the industry, care for students, be well, and effectively make lasting change.

Eric Fehr

Grove City College, Assistant Dean of Student Life

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Butler University, Director of the First-Year Experience

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MORE FAq's

Elevate is a year-long certification from June 2024 through June 2025. It begins during the June 2024 ACSD Conference and ends during the June 2025 ACSD Conference.

Elevate is geared toward higher education professionals serving in a student-facing, multicultural role and are either (or both) a department of one or are early in their higher education career. Those in positions of directors, coordinators, specialists, or similar titles should consider applying and participating.

ELEVATE is aimed at professionals who are student-facing and oversee programming. We want to equip our student development professionals who are working to make a more welcoming compass experience for students.

To provide an intentional space for cohort participants to foster genuine connections and grow their network, the cohort size is 10 participants.

Participants will have 10 total hours of workshop instruction. Additionally, participants should anticipate 5-8 hours of workshop preparation over the year of the certification. Participants are also required to attend the Elevate retreat which is the weekend before (days before) the 2024 ACSD Conference.

Elevate applications will be reviewed by the ACSD Diversity Leadership Team and participants will be selected based on the following criteria:

  • Applicant is eager for new learning and support (department of one, early career professional in this field)
  • Applicant is interested in learning more about best practices within multicultural (higher ed) work
  • Applicant currently serves in student facing multicultural role (part time or full time)
  • Applicants have the support and institutional backing to participate in 2 ASCD conferences, all Elevate workshops, and to eventually use their learning to strengthen the impact of their department/role/institution.
  • Applicant will document how they will contribute to the cohort and shared learning experience

 

Applicants will be notified of their acceptance status the first week of March 2024.

The Elevate Certification is $300, including all fees for the retreat at the 2024 ACSD Conference and the full-year certification program.

Additional related costs to consider:

    • $100 annual ACSD membership fee
    • $350 (early bird) ACSD Conference registration 
    • Cost of travel to the conference for 2024 and 2025

The Diversity Leadership Team will award 2 Elevate scholarships that cover the cost of the Elevate Certification (value of $300). To be considered for an Elevate Scholarship, indicate your interest in the Elevate application and complete the short answer question about financial need.

Yes, Elevate applicants and/or participants are eligible for both the ACSD Multicultural Scholarship and the Elevate Scholarship. The ACSD Multicultural Conference Scholarship covers the amount of the annual conference registration fee.

Yes, either a supervisor or a senior colleague must complete a professional reference form confirming their support of your participation in Elevate and a desire for you to return with lessons (ideas, practices, policies, programs, etc.) that will positively influence your department and work.

No. A supervisor or senior colleague approval is required to ensure that participants have departmental support to implement what they are learning (ideas, practices, policies, programs, etc.) in their department and/or role as a multicultural practitioner.

Participants will continue networking and fostering relationships with their Elevate cohort members in addition to receiving continued support from the ACSD Multicultural Collaborative and the Diversity Leadership Team. 

Elevate participants will be asked to participate in recruitment videos, photos, and provide written testimonials sharing their experience with Elevate.

Those interested in Elevate should only apply if they are certain they can attend the 2024 and 2025 ACSD Conferences.

The Diversity Leadership Team understands department budgets or personal changes may occur between conferences and will work with you to ensure attendance is possible for both conferences.

Yes. The Diversity Leadership Team understands professional changes happen and they will work with you to continue towards completion of the certification.