ben datema, student sustainability advisor university of missouri department of student life...

1
Ben Datema, Student Sustainability Advisor University of Missouri Department of Student Life Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education 2011 National Conference Creating a Culture of Firestarters: How to Foster Effective Student Leaders First Steps Go to events where interested students will be and actively recruit them, don’t wait for them to come to you. Watch for passion – who keeps showing up? Treat student recruitment like a professional networking activity. Establish contact with as many students as you can and get your name and your services out there. Pass out business cards and actively make contact after your initial meeting. Put Your Students to Work Foster a Relationship Talk to your students about campus needs and where they may be able to apply their talents. Provide tasks and roles that are appropriate for their abilities, interests, and experience level. Starts with small, general roles that aren’t critical to the large plan and gradually make tasks more specific and important. Let the student set the pace, but push them to be realistically ambitious. Lead by example and set the tone with your own behavior. As a leader, you have enormous power to establish and influence organizational culture, whether that culture is laziness and incompetence or professionalism, efficiency and performance. Don’t preclude tasks just because a student has no experience with them. Let them try new things. Remember: college is supposed to be educational. Allow room for failure. Treat failure as an opportunity to improve rather than a reason to be disappointed. Give students permission to fail sometimes. Get to know the student as a person. Talk to the student about his/her interests – what do they do in their free time? What sets them on fire? Where does their passion lie? Connect them with other students. Begin to create a community, or integrate them into an established community. Social connection is often a huge motivator for students. Prove your value to the student. If they don’t see value in working with you, they’re going to go it alone. Show that you can help them accomplish things more quickly and more effectively without completely taking over their project. Demonstrate that you are a source of useful information and mentorship. Students are an essential part of a robust campus sustainability movement. Their involvement is not only educationally valuable for them, it can also expedite your projects and allow you to overcome barriers that would otherwise bring your efforts to a screeching halt. But how do you spark students’ interest and turn them into valuable allies? Get Out of the Way! If you’re doing your job well, the student should begin to show increasing initiative and independence over time. They should also begin to develop a body of knowledge that will make them more credible to internal and external stakeholders. Give the student more room for autonomy without decreasing your level of support and availability. Students generally have a much greater degree of diplomatic immunity on campus than staff or faculty. Encourage them to strategically put this to use to advance your mutual agenda as they become more influential. Talk about next steps and future career goals. Get them thinking about how the skills they have gained with you can transfer into their career. TRAINING INCREASES INCREA SES IMPACT PRODUCTIVIT Y INCREA SES EFFICIENC Y DECISIVENE SS CONFIDENCE KNOWLEDGE INCREASES INCREASE S INCREAS ES CHANGE INCREA SES EXPERIENCE INCREASES Mentorship Scholarsh ips Free Food Experien ce To Try New Things Good Grades To Have Fun To Have an Impact What do students want? To Develop Their Abilities Graduatio n Profession al Networking To Get Out of the Classroom To Learn New Skills Résumé Builders Social Connections

Upload: sharleen-newman

Post on 26-Dec-2015

212 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Ben Datema, Student Sustainability Advisor University of Missouri Department of Student Life Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher

Ben Datema, Student Sustainability Advisor

University of Missouri Department of Student Life

Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education 2011

National Conference

Creating a Culture of Firestarters: How to Foster Effective

Student Leaders

First Steps• Go to events where interested students will be and actively recruit

them, don’t wait for them to come to you.• Watch for passion – who keeps showing up?• Treat student recruitment like a professional networking activity.

Establish contact with as many students as you can and get your name and your services out there. Pass out business cards and actively make contact after your initial meeting.

Put Your Students to Work

Foster a Relationship

• Talk to your students about campus needs and where they may be able to apply their talents.

• Provide tasks and roles that are appropriate for their abilities, interests, and experience level.

• Starts with small, general roles that aren’t critical to the large plan and gradually make tasks more specific and important.

• Let the student set the pace, but push them to be realistically ambitious.

• Lead by example and set the tone with your own behavior. As a leader, you have enormous power to establish and influence organizational culture, whether that culture is laziness and incompetence or professionalism, efficiency and performance.

• Don’t preclude tasks just because a student has no experience with them. Let them try new things. Remember: college is supposed to be educational.

• Allow room for failure. Treat failure as an opportunity to improve rather than a reason to be disappointed. Give students permission to fail sometimes.

• Get to know the student as a person.• Talk to the student about his/her interests – what do they do in their

free time? What sets them on fire? Where does their passion lie?• Connect them with other students. Begin to create a community, or

integrate them into an established community. Social connection is often a huge motivator for students.

• Prove your value to the student. If they don’t see value in working with you, they’re going to go it alone. Show that you can help them accomplish things more quickly and more effectively without completely taking over their project. Demonstrate that you are a source of useful information and mentorship.

Students are an essential part of a robust campus sustainability movement. Their involvement is not only educationally valuable for them, it can also expedite your projects and allow you to overcome barriers that would otherwise bring your efforts to a screeching halt. But how do you spark students’ interest and turn them into valuable allies?

Get Out of the Way!• If you’re doing your job well, the student should begin to show

increasing initiative and independence over time. They should also begin to develop a body of knowledge that will make them more credible to internal and external stakeholders.

• Give the student more room for autonomy without decreasing your level of support and availability.

• Students generally have a much greater degree of diplomatic immunity on campus than staff or faculty. Encourage them to strategically put this to use to advance your mutual agenda as they become more influential.

• Talk about next steps and future career goals. Get them thinking about how the skills they have gained with you can transfer into their career.

TRAINING

INCREASES

INCREASES

IMPACT

PRODUCTIVITY

INCREASES

EFFICIENCY

DECISIVENESS

CONFIDENCE

KNOWLEDGE

INCREASES

INCREASES

INCREASES

CHANGE

INCREASES

EXPERIENCE

INCREASE

S

Mentorship

Scholarships

Free Food

Experience

To Try New Things

Good Grades

To Have Fun

To Have an Impact

What do students want?

To Develop Their

Abilities

Graduation

Professional Networking

To Get Out of the

ClassroomTo Learn

New Skills

Résumé Builders

Social Connections