How Students Negotiated Power & Authority Issues in a Residential Community Standards Program: Implications for Creating Empowering Educational Settings
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Cathy McHugh Engstrom
, Hilton Hallock und Stacey Riemer
In this qualitative study, researchers describe how 38 students constructed issues of power and authority during a pilot implementation of a residentially based self-governance program: the community Standards Model (Piper, 1997). Students' perceptions illustrated multiple constructions of power in four theme areas: (a) power as a possession versus power as an interrelational act, (b) power with versus power over, (c) content and process dimensions, and (d) staff and student talk. As a result of an enhanced understanding of studentstaff power relations as perceived by students, we propose two interrelated, transformative conditions for promoting shared authority among students and student affairs professionals in ways that foster learning, while also minimizing acts of student resistance.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Article
- A Comparison of Drinking Behaviors of Students in Greek Organizations and Students Active in a Campus Volunteer Organization
- Gender, Ethnicity, and Highest Degree Earned as Salary Determinants for Senior Student Affairs Officers at Public Institutions
- How Students Negotiated Power & Authority Issues in a Residential Community Standards Program: Implications for Creating Empowering Educational Settings
- Lessons from Leaders
- Marginality of Transfer Commuter Students
- Necessary Components for Evaluating Minority Retention Programs
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Article
- A Comparison of Drinking Behaviors of Students in Greek Organizations and Students Active in a Campus Volunteer Organization
- Gender, Ethnicity, and Highest Degree Earned as Salary Determinants for Senior Student Affairs Officers at Public Institutions
- How Students Negotiated Power & Authority Issues in a Residential Community Standards Program: Implications for Creating Empowering Educational Settings
- Lessons from Leaders
- Marginality of Transfer Commuter Students
- Necessary Components for Evaluating Minority Retention Programs