Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDamon Underwood Modified over 9 years ago
1
2012 NASPA Annual Conference Phoenix, Arizona March 10–14, 2012 Driving Student Leadership to Shift the Campus Wellness Culture March 12, 2012 Bryan Ashton, Chair, Council on Student Affairs Connie Boehm, Director, Student Wellness
2
Learning Outcomes Participants will: be able to examine and assess the benefits of engaging students throughout their wellness programs, identify areas where they can expand student involvement on their campuses to further address wellness while providing leadership opportunities for their students, leave the session with the beginning of an action plan and guidance to implement from the ground up.
3
Clicker Question How many of you engage students as peer educators for wellness?
4
Clicker Question Do you consult students when you build your educational curriculums?
5
Clicker Question Did you connect students to your service development staff when approached by students to change or enhance services?
6
Clicker Question Do students serve as active members on all of your committees? Policy reviews?
7
Sharing What has been your most rewarding interaction with a student or students in your career?
8
History of OSU Student Wellness 1992 HIV and Alcohol and other Drugs 1996 Student Wellness Center 2002 Financial Wellness added 2004 Independent unit (no longer reported to SHS) 2005 Moved into the new Recreational and Physical Activity Center (RPAC) 2005 Sexual Violence Education and Support 2006 Nutrition Education 2007 Sexual Violence Advocacy 2011 Wellness Coaching and Outreach to regionals 2012 Financial Wellness expanded
9
Wellness at OSU-2012 Chief Wellness Officer Health and wellness discovery theme Nine-dimension wellness model Multicultural wellness emphasis Transformational residential experience Student government involvement Student Life Wellness Collaborative Shift
10
Expansion of SWC Engagement of over 200 student volunteers/year – state of the art knowledge, enthusiasm and peer to peer rapport – single most potent source of influence on undergraduate student affective and cognitive growth and development during college (Astin, 1993; Terenzini, 1999) – Peers feel more comfortable talking with other peers about wellness issues (sex and alcohol)
11
SWC Peer Education HIV Counselors Scarlet and Gray Financial BASICS Facilitators Choices Facilitators Community Ambassadors Sexperts Sexual Violence Student Advocates It’s Abuse. Advisory Board Generation Rx
12
Student Government Leaders Undergraduate Student Government (USG) First Year Intern Program Health and Wellness Committee Members Council on Graduate Students (CGS) InterProfessional Council (IPC) Council on Student Affairs (CSA)
13
Practicum and Interns Grant writing Social media managers Newsletter contributors/creators Marketing Tobacco cessation environmental scan Focus group facilitation IRB proposals BASICS Facilitators Programming assessment
14
Enhancement of Student Involvement 2011-2012 Sexual Violence Committee Student Life Wellness Collaborative Shift Tobacco Initiative Suicide prevention gatekeeper trainers Quarterly orientation for volunteers
15
Shift Student idea and student developed Student management team Agile development model Student organization format Pipeline of students Meeting students where they are
16
Volunteer Assessment Results Worked an average of 4.25 hours/week 3% 1 st year 10% 2 nd year 30% 3 rd year 40% 4 th year 14% grad or professional student 25% male 76% female
17
Greatest Skills Developed Decision Making Listening Skills Flexibility/Adaptability Responsibility Critical Thinking Integrity Oral Communication Creativity Dependability
18
Personal Impact Over 80% very satisfied – Learn from other people – Help other people – Enhance awareness of personal values – Enhance awareness of personal wellness – Can see results of their work – “Be somebody” in the OSU community
19
What Students Tell Us Help students connect experiences with their future careers Need more organization in experiences Too many silos in student wellness, more inter-project collaboration Ongoing involvement most beneficial
20
Victory Think ahead five years and if everything was there for you to move the campus towards a wellness culture: – What would it look like? – What would it smell like? – What would it sound like? – What would it feel like?
21
Can’t be in two places at once? 2012 NASPA Annual Conference DVD-ROM *The data DVD-ROM is meant to be used ONLY on computers with DVD-ROM drives. The product will ship approx. 6-8 weeks after the conference ends. Note – special pricing available for onsite purchases only, price will increase after conference ends. SPECIAL ONSITE PRICE of $89 (plus S&H) Order Now! Price increases to $139 after the conference! Includes 80 sessions * Audio recordings + synchronized slide presentations from a select number of presenters * Mac and PC compatible * Now you can! This exclusive offer is brought to you by
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.