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Orientation: A Student Affairs or Academic Affairs Function?
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Harrison S. Greenlaw
, Margaret E. Anliker and Stephen J. Barker
Published/Copyright:
June 1, 1997
Although new student orientation programs traditionally have been a function of student affairs divisions, some universities are reconsidering their administrative location. Based on a national survey of large, public institutions across the country, this paper explores the questions of the best administration location for the orientation programs by examining these programs from both a student affairs and an academic affairs perspective.
Published Online: 1997-6-1
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Book Review: Cultural Politics and Education
- Book Review: Shifting Paradigms in Student Affairs: Culture, Context, Teaching, and Learning
- College Students with Attention Deficit Disorder
- Facing a 'New' Challenge: Chief Student Affairs Officers' Responses to Casino Gambling in Mississippi
- Implications of the Growing Visibility of Gay and Bisexual Male Students on Campus
- Orientation: A Student Affairs or Academic Affairs Function?
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