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Student Affairs NOW

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Feb 14, 2024 • 55min

ACPA’s Roots in the Counseling Profession

Join this important conversation among ACPA scholars and leaders, Drs. Leila Moore, Amy Reynolds, and Heidi Levine as they reflect on the roots of the counseling profession in ACPA and the vital role that mental health providers have played in ACPA, student affairs and higher education historically and today. This rich discussion also address the current mental health challenges facing college students today and the important role of student affairs professionals and campuses in addressing these issues.
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Feb 7, 2024 • 48min

NIL, Transfer Portal, Equity & Student Success in Athletics

Three scholars and close observers discuss major shifts in college athletics and their implications. Join Ron Wade, Dr. Susan Shaw, and Dr. George McClellan as they discuss name, image, and likeness (NIL), the transfer portal, equity, and the implications for student success across institutions, sports, gender, and more.
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Jan 31, 2024 • 48min

Appreciative Frameworks in Student Affairs

Drs. Symphony Oxendine and Brian Gano discuss how appreciative inquiry can be used in student affairs work, including examples in student conduct, graduate supervision, and administration. They highlight the transformative impact of adopting an appreciative mindset and share standout learnings from their volume on appreciative frameworks. The hosts thank the guests and sponsors and encourage listeners to explore the topic further.
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Jan 24, 2024 • 1h 6min

Democracy Re/Designed: Advancing Democratic Engagement in Higher Education

As we near the 2024 election, there’s a fair amount of talk about the apparent risks to democracy in the U.S.. As student affairs educators seek to engage students in discussing, dissecting, reinventing, and adopting principles of civic engagement, the Institute for Democracy and Higher Education (IDHE) is unveiling “Democracy Re/Designed” a more aspirational version of democracy that we need today and into the future. Joining this episode are Drs. Adam Gismondi and Demetri Morgan to talk about democratic engagement in higher education.
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Jan 17, 2024 • 52min

Towards Professionalization of Student Affairs Across the Globe

Join the editors of a new book as they discuss student affairs and student services around the globe. They explore the assets and cautions around professionalization, including local voices in their context, and the future of student affairs and services globally.
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Jan 10, 2024 • 52min

ACPA’s Contributions to Research & Scholarship

Join these scholars and ACPA leaders, Drs. Z Nicolazzo, Antonio Duran, and Vasti Torres as they discuss ACPA’s contributions to research and scholarship. They reflect on what is included with research and scholarship and ACPA's historical, current, and future contributions. They also offer thoughts for those interested in contributing scholarship on why, how, and where to do so. This is part of a 13-episode series for ACPA’s 100th Anniversary and a partnership between ACPA and Student Affairs Now.
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Jan 3, 2024 • 1h 6min

Sex Work on Campus

Episode Description Dr. TJ Stewart talks about his groundbreaking new book, “Sex Work on Campus” – recently recognized as the Association for the Study of Higher Education (ASHE) Outstanding Book of the Year. Drawing on a study involving seven college student sex workers, Dr. Stewart delves into the experiences, motivations, and the impact of social identity on their engagement in college and university contexts.  This previously absent conversation also unveils the complex intersections of education, equity, and justice, providing suggestions of what educators and university leaders can do to better support students engaged in erotic labor. Suggested APA Citation Shea. H (Host). (2024, Jan 3). Sex Work on Campus (No. 185) [Audio podcast episode]. In Student Affairs NOW. https://studentaffairsnow.com/sex-work-on-campus/ Episode Transcript TJ StewartOkay, people are entitled to their perceptions of virtually anything, then the question becomes is, why does your opinion of the thing mean that you get to develop law policy and discourse around it, in the sense that it would then impact that person's or that things in life experience existence. And so what I kept coming back to is this notion that people are uncomfortable, broadly, generally, with sex work, because they think it's unsafe. And there's this prevalent frame that they are selling their body, right, one of the things I push back on in the book is that they don't, you know, sell their body, particularly those that engage in direct forms of sex work or direct services, they sell a service. Heather SheaWelcome to Student Affairs NOW the online learning community for Student Affairs educators. I'm your host, Heather Shea. Today on the podcast. I'm sitting down with an author, scholar, faculty member, and also a colleague and friend from ACPA. Dr. TJ Stewart. We're talking about his new book Sex Work on Campus, which happened to be the Association for the Study of Higher Education outstanding book of the year. I got to hear TJ talk about his book at ASHE last month, and I cannot wait to get into this topic this complex, nuanced and before now, I think absent conversation today on the podcast. Student Affairs NOW is the premier podcast and learning community for 1000s of us who work in alongside or adjacent to the field of higher education and student affairs. We hope you find these conversations make a contribution to the field and are restorative to the profession. We release new episodes every week on Wednesdays, and you can find us at studentaffairsnow.com on YouTube or anywhere you listen to podcast. This episode would not be possible without the support of our new sponsor, Routledge, Taylor and Francis publishers happens to be the same publisher of this book. And you can view their complete catalogue of authoritative education titles@www.routledge.com/education As I mentioned, my name is Heather Shea, my pronouns are she and her and I am broadcasting from the ancestral traditional and contemporary lands of the Nish Novick, three fires confederacy of Ojibwe, Odawa and Potawatomi peoples otherwise known as East Lansing, Michigan, home of Michigan State University where I work in our gender equity center. So let's get to the conversation. TJ, thank you so much for being here today. Welcome back to Student Affairs NOW. You were on a previous conversation about labor relations, which I think like dovetail to the today's call. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. So you are currently assistant professor of higher ed and Student Affairs at Iowa State University. I, as I as I said, as we were prepping today, I just finished reading your book on my Kindle. I brought it today as a little visual aid downloaded from for free. So thank you to that as well. But I'd love to just begin with a bit of your journey that brought you to your current role, and then how you're entering the conversation today. TJ StewartYeah so thanks so much for that, Heather.
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Dec 27, 2023 • 54min

Voices of Campus Sexual Violence Activists

Drs. Ana Martinez-Aleman and Susan Marine discuss their new book, Voices of Campus Based Sexual Violence Activists, based on their research with more than 22 activists at 14 institutions. They highlight a broadening view of activism, institutional complicity, deep intersectional analysis, generational characteristics, and a love of the campus community and wanting it to improve. They offer how practitioners can shift from adversarial or indifference to seeing, hearing, including, and engaging these activists as resources.
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Dec 20, 2023 • 52min

Integrating Mindfulness into Anti-Oppression Pedagogy

Dr. Beth Berila, author of a new fully revised book, discusses integrating mindfulness into anti-oppression pedagogy. They explore cultural appropriation, healing, radical imagination, and more. The podcast also highlights the importance of consent, resistance in justice work, and finding renewal in embracing winter.
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Dec 13, 2023 • 51min

COVID-19, Racial Inequity, and Basic Needs Insecurity

Dr. Frank Harris, III, Rjaa Ahmed, and Bryce McKibben discuss racial inequities and basic needs insecurity among college students during COVID-19. They emphasize the need for higher education reform, supporting students through advocacy, and creating an inclusive environment. They also discuss concerns about racism, transphobia, homophobia, and the importance of ongoing data collection for policy decisions.

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