The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model

<p> Student affairs professionals work directly with university students in various programs that provide services to these students. From these experiences, they collect daily valuable insights about how to serve students successfully. Yet, in general, they are not publishing about their work...

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Main Author: Hatfield, Lisa J.
Language:EN
Published: Portland State University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3712402
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-37124022015-08-28T04:00:36Z The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model Hatfield, Lisa J. Higher education <p> Student affairs professionals work directly with university students in various programs that provide services to these students. From these experiences, they collect daily valuable insights about how to serve students successfully. Yet, in general, they are not publishing about their work even though dissemination of such knowledge through publication could positively impact programs and services across many institutions. My dissertation explored what happens when mid-level student affairs professionals pursue scholarly writing during a structured program intended to help participants produce manuscripts for publication. In working with five professionals in student services at a large urban institution in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States, I learned about participants' identities as scholars as well as which writing strategies they found effective. I worked with participants using case study and action research methodologies and used writing coaching as an intervention to support the tenets of autonomy, competence, and relatedness as defined by Self-Determination Theory. Participants viewed strategies that created a habit of practice that fostered writing to be the most effective. Participants varied in how they viewed themselves professionally along the scholar-practitioner continuum. Leadership can create environments to foster scholarship among student affairs professionals. I give recommendations not only for senior student affairs officers but also for graduate programs in higher education as well as national student affairs organizations to promote research and writing in the profession. Lastly, I share recommendations for further research.</p> Portland State University 2015-08-27 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3712402 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Higher education
spellingShingle Higher education
Hatfield, Lisa J.
The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model
description <p> Student affairs professionals work directly with university students in various programs that provide services to these students. From these experiences, they collect daily valuable insights about how to serve students successfully. Yet, in general, they are not publishing about their work even though dissemination of such knowledge through publication could positively impact programs and services across many institutions. My dissertation explored what happens when mid-level student affairs professionals pursue scholarly writing during a structured program intended to help participants produce manuscripts for publication. In working with five professionals in student services at a large urban institution in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States, I learned about participants' identities as scholars as well as which writing strategies they found effective. I worked with participants using case study and action research methodologies and used writing coaching as an intervention to support the tenets of autonomy, competence, and relatedness as defined by Self-Determination Theory. Participants viewed strategies that created a habit of practice that fostered writing to be the most effective. Participants varied in how they viewed themselves professionally along the scholar-practitioner continuum. Leadership can create environments to foster scholarship among student affairs professionals. I give recommendations not only for senior student affairs officers but also for graduate programs in higher education as well as national student affairs organizations to promote research and writing in the profession. Lastly, I share recommendations for further research.</p>
author Hatfield, Lisa J.
author_facet Hatfield, Lisa J.
author_sort Hatfield, Lisa J.
title The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model
title_short The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model
title_full The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model
title_fullStr The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model
title_full_unstemmed The Scholarship of Student Affairs Professionals| Effective Writing Strategies and Scholarly Identity Formation Explored through a Coaching Model
title_sort scholarship of student affairs professionals| effective writing strategies and scholarly identity formation explored through a coaching model
publisher Portland State University
publishDate 2015
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3712402
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