Quality
Staff Involvement and the Role of the Resident Director
By Jason Hanson,
Senior Resident Director, CCHM at the University of Texas at San Antonio
After
getting the basics down, the role of a Resident Director tends to allow
ample room for your personal touch. Regardless of where you start off,
you’re bound to change throughout the course of an academic year.
And each year brings about different staff, new opportunities, and evolving
priorities. In the same way you’d take responsibility for your
group’s mistake(s), take responsibility for their success. Plan
it out, monitor progress, and adjust as necessary. I suggest regularly
taking time to reflect and realign your approach. Your focus on quality
involvement will help your staff get more out of their RA experience
and will keep them invested in the group. Some of these questions may
also be helpful for your staff to consider.
Reviewing
and Personalizing Your Approach
-
What
inspires you?
-
What
are the traits of leaders you’ve enjoyed following?
-
What
are the keys to your previous successes?
-
What
are your goals for your time there?
-
Ideally,
what would you like to see changed/improved?
-
What
norms would you like to establish?
-
What
goals do you have for your staff?
-
Where
are they at? (your staff)
-
Where
do you want them to be?
-
How
are you going to get them there?
-
Are
your expectations realistic?
-
Have
you set the bar high enough?
-
What
is their incentive?
-
What
do they want to get out of this experience?
-
What
do you want them to take away from this experience?
-
What
do you want to accomplish together?
-
How
do you want to be remembered?
Ask
Yourself the Following:
The goal
of these questions is for you to identify components of your leadership
and the staff culture. It may be helpful to think of the parallels of
you/your supervisors & your leadership/your staff. There are no
“right” answers, these are just questions to consider as
you assess and plan.
- Do you
have a staff mission? Does your staff have their own or know yours?
How do they know if they’ve met or missed their target?
-
What
opportunities do you provide for them to have a say in things?
- How do they know?
(Not understand or believe, but know!)
- Do you reinforce that
message on a weekly basis?
- What creative challenges do you present for them to guide
them through?
- Do they know you trust them? How do you show them or prove
it to them?
-
Do
you constantly share praise publicly? Have you given them ways to
recognize each other? Is the recognition format something they created
or something you gave to them?
-
What
example do you set for them? (All aspects: health, work, personal,
recreational, etc)
-
Do
you share things you learned this week or recently? If you’re
not learning new things all the time, you’re probably not exploring
or reflecting enough. You set the example.
-
Does
your life speak louder than your words? Your actions need to demonstrate
your expectations for them (and truthfully, you should be performing
at a higher level).
-
How
are you building “community” for them?
-
Are
you setting them up for success? Have you given them a long range
plan? Do you keep things new and innovative? Are you willing to try
new things?
-
How
well are things working as they are? If you keep doing the same thing(s),
are things likely to get better or worse? What’s around the
corner? (personally, work, academically)
Action
-> Message/Result
It seems
that RAs get the hang of things just in time to move onto something
else. By Accepting, Approving, and Appreciating where they’re
at you can give them the personalized attention they deserve. Every
task is meaningful at some level. Think about ways you can cross-train
them and/or help them get ready for their next step. You have the chance
to build them up, improve staff cohesiveness, offer professional development,
and get to know them better in the process. With the items below, think
about the result of or the message sent by the following actions?
| |
Action
|
Message/Result? |
| • |
Involving
them in the planning/problem solving |
|
| • |
Privately
asking them for their opinion (and using it) |
|
| • |
Attending
their program or personal event |
|
| • |
Hand
written notes to them |
|
| • |
Knowing
their interests, accomplishments, etc. |
|
| • |
Use
of the word “team” |
|
| • |
Citing
something you learned off of a website |
|
| • |
Leading
by example |
|
| • |
Guiding
them through a reflection exercise |
|
| • |
Creating
learning moments by delegating |
|
| • |
Using
a quote in your meeting/on your agenda |
|
| • |
Following through on what you say |
|
| • |
Going
public with some of your goals |
|
| • |
Freeing
up meeting time by using weekly reports |
|
| • |
Having
them lead weekly in-service or team builders |
|
| • |
Asking
how many compliments they gave during the week |
|
| • |
Keeping
the workload consistent and reasonable |
|
| • |
Volunteering |
|
| • |
Discussing
a rule of the week or new opportunity each week |
|
| • |
Having
a meeting at your place |
|
| • |
Joining
them for a meal, game, movie, etc. |
|
| • |
Creating
door decorations for them |
|
| • |
Sharing
one of your proudest moments/accomplishments |
|
| • |
Giving
them ownership of the outcome |
|
| • |
Working
along side them (hopefully doing the tough stuff) |
|
The Quality Staff Involvement focus can be a corner stone to your program
or it can simply be a way to keep your staff invested in their team.
The use of questions is a great approach for both you and your staff’s
progression. You may find that your staff will have more faith in you
and greater belief in themselves with initiatives such as this.
About the
Author
Jason
Hanson has been with Century Campus Housing Management (CCHM) since
July 2001. He is currently the Senior Resident Director at the University
of Texas at San Antonio. He started his career at Weber State University
in Ogden, UT and has attended ACUHO-I and ACPA, among others. Through
CCHM, Jason has participated in training and professional development
activities at other properties including Houston Baptist University
and George Mason University in Fairfax, VA. Jason received his bachelor’s
degree from Northern Michigan University. You can contact Jason at jbhanson@utsa.edu
if you care to comment on this article.
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