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| Cultural Solutions for Cultural Problems: Students Affairs and Popular Culture Part
II: Counter Cultural Strategies By Christopher
Rodgers, Director of Residential Life for Judicial Affairs at Fordham
University's Rose Hill Campus Cultural
problems, as William Bennett has remarked, require cultural solutions.
Cultural problems exterior to campus have direct effects inside it. As
the first half of this article tried to show, the popular culture is impelled
by the search for profit. As a result, it has developed a tendency to
approach its selection of material on purely economic grounds. In turn
the cultural supermarket has been taken over by the junk food. Work in
Student Affairs, the effort to create responsible cultures on campus,
is threatened by this fact. Understandably,
institutions of Higher Education can be counted on to be very careful
in their response to cultural issues, wrapped as they are, often legitimately,
in freedom of speech and expression concerns. Raw censorship, at least
the generally understood methods of censorship, is contradictory to the
espoused values of American higher education. These methods are also politically
infeasible, either on campus or in the larger culture. A bell jar cannot
simply be lowered over schools. As, however, conditions in the larger
culture become worse, the effect on students may be counted upon to increase.
It is also likely that colleges and universities will still be called
upon to take their vital place in the moral and social education of students.
(Hoekema, 1994) All institutions claim to be seriously concerned with
addressing the issues of sexual behavior, violence, and lack of responsibility
described previously. Simple legalistic responses are not an effective
answer, as rules are not a substitute for a rich culture (Lowery, 1998).
This concern must translate into other forms of active resistance that
are consonant with the values of education. To be effective, concern must
translate into direct efforts that elicit, from within the student population
itself, renewed involvement and a strong sense of the responsibility each
member has for the community (Hernandez, Hogan, Hathaway, and Lovell,
1999). The path
of resistance for Higher Education and Student Affairs, then, consists
in being aware of and posing an unapologetic counterpoint to the unhealthy
messages of the popular culture. Some simple and preliminary ideas are
proposed in this article. Competing
Leadership Culture: Establish high conduct standards for student
leadership positions and promote such positions as elite, counter-cultural
opportunities. The case
for peer education through traditional role models such as the Orientation
Advisor, Student Organization Officer, or Resident Assistant/Advisor is
well-established. (Posner and Rosenberger, 1997) These bodies of students
are tremendously useful to the task of the institution in communicating
its counter-cultural messages of responsibility, tolerance, and restraint.
These leadership positions should have high expectations for conduct matched
with real and vital responsibilities that benefit the community, fellow
students, and institution. These jobs should not merely be titular or
counseling roles. Of those to whom much is given, much will be expected. Resident
Assistants, for example, should be employed expressly to become involved
themselves in situations where their experience as upperclassmen and their
moral authority as consistent ethical role models can have the greatest
lasting effect. Such students choose to conduct themselves in ways that
are different from their peers and are, as a result, far more influential
in these real-life situations than administrators, faculty, and other
"adults" on the campus. Relegating them to a narrow counseling
or "helper" role is counter-productive as well as insulting
to students who often clamor for more responsibility on campus. Relieving
these jobs of their more stressful and challenging tasks (such as confronting
peers) is an unfortunate trend at some institutions. It places the onus
of community once more at the "top" of the institution, where
it is bound to be the least persuasive and the most grating. Properly
recruited, educated, and led, students in such positions are the carriers
of the rarest and strongest counter-cultural messages. The very subtlety
of the message they carry is the key to its effectiveness. These students
thrive on responsibilities rather than rights and should be afforded the
privilege of service to their institutions, not worried over as if they
were still children. They construct, through the power of their quiet
workaday examples, the institution's first and strongest bulwark against
the unhealthy impulses students cull from sources such as the popular
culture. They form the core of any competing leadership culture. Competing
Participation Culture: More educational structure for college students. It is becoming
more and more clear that the offer of the opportunity for participation
in governance, student government, policy-making, and activities is not
enough. As students without the inclination to participate in these activities
arrive at our gates in ever-increasing numbers, it is clear that the out-of-classroom
experience so important to our work is something out of which many students
simply choose to opt. Currently, level of student engagement is almost
wholly the purview of the students themselves. This is the equivalent,
in the in-classroom arena, of self-created curriculum. In such an environment,
a few of our students will choose for themselves a rich and challenging
curriculum. Far too many will instead skip class. It seems clear that
the all-voluntary structures upon which we have relied to create the culture
on campus are only moderately effective at best. One strategy, that which
seems to be pursued by most institutions, is to change the fabric of the
hoped-for campus culture and reduce expectations to a dangerous ebb. These
measures are familiar, as they mimic the attractions of an unhealthy but
enticing popular culture. Cable television as a new right in residence
halls, the turning of a blind eye to quiet student alcohol consumption
(sometimes in public), and tolerance of crass-but-popular mass entertainment
products like Eminem or Marilyn Manson are symptoms of some schools' surrender
in the face of what they have declared a lost war for a more healthy campus
culture. The proliferation of such expensive and spectacular diversions
(how much does a concert cost?) has a strong dual effect. First, these
events drain resources from direct efforts to build a richer framework
in which students may play out the lessons they learn inside the classroom.
Second, these entertainment products often carry with them the very messages
and values that corrode the educational community framework we work so
hard to assemble. Clearly, it will be up to individual institutions to
decide if these contradictions are tolerable to their communities. Censorship
doesn't enter into it-- the university has a responsibility to use care
in deciding who is and who is not allowed into its home. Most of
our students need more work, not less. Most of our students need more
class hours, not fewer. Strong, culture-based expectations that students
participate in the academic and extracurricular life of the campus, and
not merely in a panoply of trivial entertainments, put the weight of institutional
sanction behind the responsibilities of life at a residential campus.
If "what we do here" is obvious and palpable for newly-arrived
students on a campus, participation in the culture will be irresistible. Competing
Recruiting Culture: Educate students about the higher expectations
of the campus culture beginning with marketing, admissions, and web-based
literature. Societal notions of the independence of college-age youth combine with stereotypical images of college life to give graduating seniors startlingly inaccurate impressions of campus. Too many of our students arrive without an iota of realistic information about what college life is about, the skills it will require of them, and the structures that institutions have in place to dampen unhealthy conduct. (Lowery, 1998, Lipset, 1968) Institutions serious about their educational missions should risk losing students (and revenue) by being straightforward about the responsibilities of life on campus, not merely its attractive entitlements. In this way, they attract students who are prepared for such a life and not resentful of intrusion and unfulfilled expectations. The conversion
process, as students learn what college is as opposed to what it appeared
to be from the outside, is a visible phenomenon among each year's
freshman class. We see this each time a heavy partier moves out of our
halls in December with a barely registered GPA or when a defiant student
offer up the now-familiar "but this is what college is supposed to
be" defense in an alcohol-related judicial proceeding. Clearly, the
gulf between the institution's understanding of life on campus and the
students needs to be narrowed. One important way to do this is to educate
students before they arrive on campus. This could affect the bottom line,
especially among those institutions whose sports or social reputations
precede their academic enticements in the minds of high school seniors.
That doesn't make this measure any less necessary. Competing
Campus Culture: Social Norms Strategies Colleges
and universities have, in the past, sometimes surrendered the field and
abandoned the task of strongly asserting social norms. Many students seem
to understand, at least intellectually, that many of the popular culture's
messages are unhealthy. Without competing norms, the pathological behaviors
and environments often closely identified with campus life (things like
drinking and drugging) are reinforced by the enormous scale, ubiquity,
and social norming power of the popular culture. The messages and values
in which the media bathe students are at odds, often directly, with the
messages and values the college or university seeks to instill in students.
There is a strong David versus Goliath feeling associated with this problem.
Increasingly,
however, schools are pursuing what has been called social norms strategies,
boldly asserting a differing set of values. A number of such programs
are at work across the country at institutions such as the University
of Arizona, and to great apparent effect. (Johannesen, 1999, Zernike,
2000) Through no fault of our own, Student Affairs professionals are often
too busy managing emergencies on the typical campus to stop and develop
a coherent strategy to counteract the unhealthy social norms that are
often their root causes. Putting out the fires can become the job. But,
as Jean Bethke Elshtain describes, the core job of the educator is to
introduce children to the adult world. We must be emphatic and unapologetic
in our introduction lest others do the introducing for us. The fires will
always be there, but they will get worse if nothing is done to address
their fuel. We need to emphasize that the well-publicized pathologies
of the stereotypical college campus are not the adult world, at
least not the adult world in which we would hope our children will live.
It is left to us to assemble a realistic and healthy picture for students.
This is what social norms strategies appear to do so well. Rather than
simply and reflexively react to unhealthy messages and values, troubling
behavior, and antisocial conduct, social norms strategies work in the
realm of ideas to create a set of counter-assumptions and competing narratives
about the college experience. From something as direct as Arizona's assertion
that 68% of students do not binge drink (instead of merely reacting
to repeating the fact that 42% perhaps do) to an institution's
emphasis on the intentional community present in special interest housing,
early indicators have shown that such messages have an effect. (Johannesen,
1999, Zernike, 2000) Social norming takes a leaf from the book of popular
culture, ironically counteracting its less desirable effects. Its goal
is the creation of a competing campus culture for students. In an age
that has seen the power of positive traditional cultural structures diminish,
Student Affairs professionals find themselves in the business of creating
new ones for their institutions. The Future It is hoped that this two part exploration provokes some thought as to the changing role of the Student Affairs professional in relation to culture off as well as on the campus. There are seemingly endless intersections between our work and culture, and this article explores only a few and only briefly. This article also only touches upon a selection of the measures educators can take to address the problem of culture on campus. Significantly, it also does not explore those aspects of the popular culture that are positive for the campus, and the uses we may make of these important resources. It also does not explore the problem of what might be called a "creeping" consumerist attitude toward higher education among students and parents, impelled possibly by the skyrocketing costs of tuition and fees. With this in mind, it is the author's hope that this subject will continue to be revisited, researched, debated, and expanded in the future by all of us concerned with students and their education. That said, it remains clear that Student Affairs professionals must be engaged in and aware of the larger culture's influence and changes in order to make the messages we are charged by our institutions to send more effective. The curriculum that is comprised by life and experience on a campus depends on this awareness. Further, we must be acutely observant of the possible negative effects trends and changes in popular culture-- some obvious and some not-- have on students and on campus life. We have direct concern with the messages media are currently sending about alcohol use, college life, violence, sexuality, responsibility, and a host of other things not mentioned in this article. This is simply the case because these messages often contradict our own in ways we would be naïve to assume have no effect on the decisions and behaviors of our students. This societal contradiction, a failure of the market to serve the larger interests of the public, is a larger topic than this paper can fully address, but one that should also concern educators as citizens. Finally, we must resist the impulse to acquiesce in the face of such a strong trend. To give up is to cede the campus and its culture to interests that have things other than the student, their education, and their development as priorities. We do not have the luxury of an "if you can't beat them, join them" attitude toward these issues. As has been the theme of the second half of this article, our challenge is to resist and to translate engagement and awareness of the popular culture into strategies that will counteract its unhealthy values and messages. Such strategies are necessary if we are to preserve the campus as a place for the education of good citizens. References Lipset,
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5, 6-7. About the Author Christopher Rodgers is the Director of Residential Life for Judicial Affairs at Fordham University's Rose Hill campus in New York City, where he began his career as a Resident Director in 1992. As Associate Director of Residential Life for Staff and Student Development for the last six years, Chris has, among other responsibilities, supervised Resident Directors, Resident Assistants, and overseen programming in the residence halls at Rose Hill. He earned a Bachelor's degree from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., holds a Master's Degree in Political Science from Fordham, and is a doctoral candidate in the Administration, Policy, and Urban Education Division of Fordham's Graduate Education Department. He and his wife, Regina Dougherty Rodgers, live just outside the university's gates in the Belmont section of the Bronx. |
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