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Sheets, Rick A."Learning Assistance Center Director
as Manager," in Mioduski, Sylvia and Gwyn Enright (editors),
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 15th and 16th ANNUAL INSTITUTES FOR LEARNING
ASSISTANCE PROFESSIONALS: 1996 AND 1997. Tucson, AZ: University
Learning Center, University of Arizona, 1994. Pp. 82-84.
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Learning Assistance Center Director
as Manager
Rick A. Sheets, Ed.D., Paradise Valley
Community College
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C
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ompassion
ommitment
onnections
redibility
atalyst |
Show Compassion (Care &
value of self, staff, students, and others)
Staff
Use a team-building approach
to listen, encourage ideas and brainstorming
Care about each member on
your team birthdays, lunches, etc.
Take time to be real and show
friendship
Honor diversity in differing
needs, skills, learning preferences, and attitudes
Value input and feedback from
every team member
Clarify how decisions are
made
Encourage honesty and frankness
Model problem-solving vs.
Blaming
Encourage and support professional
growth and development opportunities--i.e.,
journals, workshops, classes, degrees, new
careers, conferences, visits to other centers,
internships, retraining
Self:
Value yourself too (Analogy
presented as a Keynote for NADE in San Antonio:
In an emergency situation on an airplane the
tendency is to help others find their oxygen
mask first--BUT in order to help others, it
is imperative to "Put your own oxygen
mask on first!"
Have Commitment
To students, to life, to college,
to goals, to others through striving for excellence,
quality, and innovation
Keep your visions as a direction,
but live in the here and now, not in a dreamland
(when this...), nor in the past (what if... or
if only...)
Provide for LAC staff (for personal,
professional, and educational goals and opportunities):
support (modeling, encouragement,
and listening)
training (in-house and external)
resources (appropriate, e.g.,
financial, time, physical)
Provide for students:
services (e.g., tutoring,
materials, study skill workshops, testing,
and special need services) and other resources
strategies for independence
in learning
a safe zone in which to learn
and grow
Provide support for faculty:
tours or orientations of LSC
in LSC, if possible (brief or expanded)
in-class presentations tailored
to specific request or needs (e.g. test-taking
skills using the faculty member's input regarding
student needs, type of test)
flyer showing ways faculty
can help you help them
Tools:
Quality Management (TQM -
Total Quality Management)
Employee Development (support
employee professional, educational, and personal
growth and development)
Commitment to Excellence (book
by Peters and Waterman)
Management By Objective (MBO)
(Frank Christ model presented later in the
week at this institute)
(Use the best of the models
above)
Build Credibility
Program
Supports students' needs
Should be certified through
CRLA's
(College Reading and Learning Association)
International
Tutor Certification Program (ITCP)
Has success documentation
(e.g., use statistics, retention numbers,
perception surveys)
Director - may come in the back
door--no LAC, Adult Ed., Dev. Ed., etc.
Background: Training/Experience
Developmental Education (National
Center for Developmental Education, Kellogg
Institute, Appalachian State University (704)
262-3057
Teaching methodologies (i.e.
Andragogy vs. Pedagogy) Contact: Andragogy
Associates, Dr. Gene Kerstiens, (310) 541-7626
Learning Styles (4MAT,
Canfield, Kolb)
Instructional Design (4MAT,
Contact Excel, Inc.
(800) 822-4MAT
Counseling (Confronting techniques,
Listening and Referral Techniques)
Basic Skills Methods Training/Certification
(Reading, Writing, Mathematics, Computers)
Awareness of LAC history (tutoring
support is not new to education)
Reference materials available
for self, staff, faculty (e.g., New Directions
for College Learning Assistance, books by Martha
Maxwell)
Keeping up to date in field:
Learning Assistance Research,
Journals, & Articles
Attending National and Regional
Conferences (e.g., CRLA
(College Reading and Learning Assistance),
NADE
(National Association for Developmental Education),
WI (Winter
Institute, SWADE (Southwest Association for
Developmental Education), MCLCA
(Midwest College Learning Center Association)
NOTE: WI
Resources has more than 50 linked associations
for you.
LRNASST
- Winter Institute's own listserv, a discussion
group free to anyone focusing on Learning
Assistance Center issues (Contact Sylvia Mioduski
at The University of Arizona (520 621-1206).
With Administration
Statistics, Usage reports
Tracking, testimonials
In-house research, surveys
Do projections, go for grants
or collaborations
If not generating FTE's, show
retention of existing FTE's
With faculty
Have faculty give content
tips for tutors
Have faculty recruit tutors
for future semesters with current students
Faculty liaisons or advisory
group (e.g. in place of committee)
For Tutors
CRLA's - ITC (mentioned above)
Tutor's Guide (a videotape
series of 14 brief sessions for tutoring students
in a University setting - available through
Great Plains National (GPN P.O. Box 80669
Lincoln, NE 68501-0669 Phone: (402) 472-2007
or Toll Free: 800-228-4630 Fax: 800-306-2330
Email: gpn@unl.edu,
website: http://gpn.unl.edu/))
Encourage tutors to prepare
for own enterprise--private tutoring
Develop Connections (collaboration
and networking or breaking down barriers)
Build a support network (internally
and externally)
Develop Faculty, Administrative,
and User buy-in to the LAC Program and Services
For faculty:
Have faculty give content
tips for tutors
Have faculty recruit tutors
for future semesters with current students
Faculty liaisons or advisory
group (e.g. in place of committee)
For Administration:
BE A SHOWCASE OF STUDENT
SUCCESS for tours or dignitaries
Develop guest packets
for visitors
Attitude--positive and directed
with a focus on serving students
Approach--to problem solve not
blame
Atmosphere--inviting, safe, and
Listen to all--LAC tutors and
staff, students, faculty, others (including custodians,
groundskeepers, visitors, etc.)
Providing all with a chance to
buy-in
Be a Catalyst (Change agent)
Change as a constant:
Change is the only constant in
our mortal universe (as mentioned in movie, Jurassic
Park as Chaos Theory, also known as a Systems
Approach
Change as a process:
Change has both negative and positive
aspects and is a process
Change as innovation:
Leaders or followers
Innovators--gives buy-in to all
Change as an opportunity for
leadership, such as in technology or trends:
When dealing with change--WATCH
OUT!
Technology i.e., CAI (Computer-Assisted
Instruction), VC (Video Conferencing) Nets (Networks),
Listservs, WWW (World Wide Web), small computer
labs support for Instructional design, CBI (Computer-based
Instruction), Hypercard, and Presentations (such
as others you will see later this week by Brad
Hughes and Lucy MacDonald)
Expansion at my college, PVCC--analogous
to Eastern Indian Folktale of Six Blind Men and
an Elephant (each department was designing the
expansion of our college from the point of view
of their area and needs and was blind to the reality
of the big picture.)
This Winter Institute will provide
a special opportunity for everyone to gain in
any of the above areas in a safe environment of
new friends and colleagues who will understand,
encourage, mentor, and support your efforts for
SUCCESS!
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"1996-97
Proceedings - Sheets "
© 1998 - This
page last modified:
2008-05-29
Questions and comments to: Dr. Rick A. Sheets at rick.sheets@pvmail.maricopa.edu
http://www.pvc.maricopa.edu/~lsche/
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