Many higher education institutions
around the world have come to realize that classroom education and education
outside the classroom should complement each other, that both professional
expertise (hard skills) and liberal arts general education (soft skills) are
indispensable in nurturing university students in this new era, and that a new
mode of education requires the perfect balance.
That’s why renowned universities attach great importance to student affairs via
living and learning experiences. The educational function of student affairs is
continuously expanding as the University of Macau (UM) attaches great
importance to education outside the classroom. In 2008 after Prof. Wei Zhao
took office as the rector, UM launched a new “4-in-1” education model, which
aims to implement whole person education through the combination of
discipline-specific education, general education, research and internship
education, and community and peer education. Such an education model not only
strengthens students’ hard skills, but also helps students to develop – through
community and peer education anchored in a residential college (RC) system –
soft skills such as optimism, team spirit, effective communication, sense of
responsibility, empathy, ability to exercise sound moral judgment, and lifelong
learning, etc..
The rapid development of UM is placing higher demands on student affairs work.
After the new campus on Hengqin Island is put into use, an RC system will be
fully implemented. This inevitably requires the training of a large number of
outstanding student affairs professionals. Therefore, UM recently created two senior positions responsible
for student affairs: Vice Rector for Student Affairs, and Dean of Students. The
former is held by Prof. Haydn Chen, who has rich experience in higher education
management, and the latter is held by Dr. Peter Yu, who has over twenty years
of experience in student affairs. Additionally, in May 2012 UM established
Asia’s first-ever Macau Student Affairs Institute, and invited top-notch
student affairs and education experts from across the globe to provide an
advanced training course. In this issue of umagazine,
we invited Prof. Haydn Chen and Dr. Peter Yu to discuss from different
perspectives how UM plans to help students acquire and improve soft skills, as
well as how UM will enhance student management. We also interviewed some
participants of the training course to learn what new understanding of student
affairs they have gained from the course.
Haydn Chen: Character Is More Important
Conventional classroom education, which
focuses on imparting specialty knowledge, tends to be valued more readily,
partly because knowledge is quantifiable and is aimed at educating students in
specific skills. Education outside the classroom in the domain of general or
whole person education, however, is a totally different matter, in that it is
open-ended, requires more time and space, deals with a diverse range of issues,
and has no fixed teaching methods or textbooks. The lack of a textbook and
examinations makes it difficult to quantify and measure the outcome of this
kind of education. But the tricky thing is that skills which normally can only
be acquired through such education are greatly valued by society. For instance,
many multinational companies hiring interns look for communication skills,
analytical and problem-solving ability, interpersonal effectiveness, team
spirit, a global mindset, self-education and motivation, mood management, and
leadership potential.
After the new campus is put into use next year, between eight and twelve RCs
will be established, forming the largest RC system in Asia. When that happens,
students will be able to enjoy a richer campus life. The RC system will be a
perfect complement to the faculty system. Each RC will be inhabited by
approximately five hundred people. Students of different majors, years of study
and ethnicity will live and learn together and from one another. Living and
dining together in the same RCs will give staff and students ample
opportunities to interact and make each RC into a multi-disciplinary learning
community. What’s Prof. Haydn Chen’s opinion on soft skills acquisition and the
RC system to be implemented on the new UM campus in the near future? And what
plans does he have in these two areas?
J:
Journalist
C: Prof. Haydn Chen
J:
What kinds of people are most needed in the twenty-first century? How
can UM meet the needs of the developing society?
C: People most needed by the
twenty-first century should possess the following skills and traits: (1)
excellent learning ability, (2) passion for service, (3) a global mindset, (4)
practical ability, (5) multifaceted intelligence, (6) internalised liberal arts
knowledge and caring about humanity, and (7) a positive outlook on life.
Nowadays we often hear complaints about university students’ poor attitude as
well as their lack of passion, action, cooperativeness and stress-handling
skills. These actually have little to do with which major subject they chose to
study at college. These are personality traits, and the development of these
traits is exactly the purpose of liberal arts education. In the last century,
universities tended to focus on imparting professional expertise, with greater
emphasis on science subjects than on the humanities, with priority on training
specialists instead of generalists. But liberal arts education aims to help
every student become an independent agent of free will rather than a slave to
his knowledge, because a person full of knowledge in his head without
independent analysis of the knowledge is nothing more than a robot. Towards the
end of the twentieth century, universities came to realise that education
should be learning-outcome-based, and so they began to attach more importance
to multi-disciplinary education that stresses a balance between science
subjects and the humanities. This is at the core of education in the
twenty-first century. The “4-in-1” education model implemented at UM aims,
first and foremost, to help students become people of action, people with good
character traits and values and compassion, and people who can contribute to a
team. Only then can they truly make valuable contributions to society.
J: What role does student affairs work
play in helping students develop soft skills?
C: The modern view of higher education
stresses integrated, multi-disciplinary education, which includes liberal arts
education (or soft skills education) in addition to discipline-specific (hard
skills) education. And in this respect, the Student Affairs Office (SAO) can
and should play an important role. SAO should go beyond its service function
and become a teaching unit or even a platform for soft skills acquisition. All
SAO colleagues have a responsibility to educate students. We have set our goals
in terms of helping students develop soft skills, and with that goal in mind,
we will design some core capability indices. By way of various courses and
activities, UM will help students reach those core indices.
J: Why is character education important
for students?
C: People with professional expertise
but without good character can cause great disasters to the world. For example,
a lawyer who flouts laws, a businessman with no moral scruples. Although
expertise and character are both very important, I think the latter is more
important from the point of view of bringing benefits to humankind. Character
traits have to do with internalised liberal arts knowledge and caring about
humanity, and this is beyond the realm of specialty knowledge acquisition. So
how do we cultivate these character traits? The answer is through education
that starts at an early age. A person who likes to explore and experiment is
bound to have a broader perspective. Therefore, it is very important for
universities to help students to develop initiative to learn, and equip them
with various soft skills. We need to
help students develop various skills and traits, including endurance,
cooperation, observance of rules, honesty, resilience against setbacks, a
caring heart, communication skills, good values, team spirit, and
self-discipline. These soft skills — and character education that is essential
for developing these skills — are almost impossible to obtain purely from
classroom education. They have to be slowly acquired from multi-disciplinary
learning outside the classroom.
J: What role does the RC system play in
helping students internalise liberal arts knowledge and foster caring about humanity?
C: Experience of Western universities,
whether colleges at Oxford and Cambridge or colleges of liberal arts education
in the United States, shows that learning through living is at the core of
their education philosophy. After the new campus is put into use, UM will fully
implement an RC system, which will embody the philosophy of liberal arts
education — respect for academic freedom and encouragement of mutually
beneficial teacher-student interaction through living together. This kind of RC
life is a vehicle for instilling in students the right set of attitudes towards
life and studies. It helps students to internalise liberal arts knowledge and
to foster a caring heart. It also teaches students to use their initiative to
learn, to solve problems proactively, to communicate effectively, and to be
kind to others. Only through implementing RC-based learning through living and
practice can we truly realise the goal of whole person education.
J:
How does UM help students to make full use of their time outside the
classroom to strengthen soft skills?
C: Let’s say students attend classes
five days a week, if we minus the time they spend preparing for and attending
classes, sleeping and eating, they’ve only got about sixty-eight hours left at
their disposal. And students may not use these hours in a well-planned way;
they may spend it net-surfing, doing part-time jobs and sports, hanging out
with friends, etc. The education philosophy of UM’s “4-in-1” education model is
to let SAO and each RC use these ten hours or so per week to organise
well-designed courses, lectures and other activities to help students improve
soft skills. The essence of liberal arts education is not the “chalk and talk”
way of teaching, but rather lies in interaction. RCs are a pioneering move for
UM. We will create more opportunities for students and make them truly want to
participate. Living in an RC is different from living in a traditional
dormitory. It’s a wonderful place to learn. It is also a good vehicle for
implementing the “4-in-1” education model and for advancing whole person
education.
(The
English is a translation of the interview conducted in Chinese)
Prof. Haydn Chen is a
world-renowned expert on materials science. He received his PhD degree in
Materials Science and Engineering from Northwestern University. He then taught
in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) and became a tenured full professor there.
He was administrative fellow of the Office of the Vice President for Academic
Affairs at UIUC, and head of the Department of Physics and Materials Science
and chair professor of materials science at the City University of Hong Kong.
In 2004 he took office as president of Tunghai University, Taiwan. During his
tenure as the president of Tunghai University, he actively promoted liberal
arts education. He founded a liberal arts college to implement character
education, which allowed Tunghai University to achieve extraordinary results in
various areas, including student recruitment, teaching and research. In August
2012 he assumed office as the first vice rector for student affairs at UM.
Peter
Yu: Every moment is a teachable moment
In terms of division of work, classroom education is mainly the responsibility
of academic staff from various faculties, and education outside the classroom
is mainly led by student affairs colleagues. In the West, student affairs
professionals are referred to as “student affairs educators”, which Dr. Yu
thinks is very reasonable. He often says to his co-workers: “Every moment is a
teachable moment, that’s why we must turn every student activity and every
interaction with students into a chance for education. Our first job is to
assist teaching, and our second job is to carry out our own teaching outside the
classroom to help students develop extracurricular skills.”
Only three months into his new job at UM, Dr. Yu has already noticed many good
things about student affairs work at UM. “Many UM students have part-time jobs.
Different people have different opinions about that. But personally I think
it’s a good opportunity for students to learn more about society, to increase
work experience, and to realise their individual value,” comments Dr. Yu. “SAO colleagues are young, energetic,
down-to-earth and willing to workhard. They have organised many great
activities, such as the recent Tea with Professors, which aimed to help bring
teachers and students closer. The Peer Support Programme is another successful
example. It has been going on for ten years now. This programme boosts
students’ self-confidence, improves their interpersonal skills, helps them to
cultivate a positive attitude, teaches them to support each other, and creates
a caring atmosphere on campus.”
When asked what kind of role student affairs work should play in a university,
Dr. Yu pointed out that SAO is mainly responsible for handling three kinds of
relationships. The first is the relationship between the university and the
students, in which SAO helps to establish an interaction mechanism and to
create a concerted, harmonious campus culture. The second kind is the
relationship between students, in which SAO helps to promote mutual support and
trust. The third is establishing rules and regulations and handling individual
cases on behalf of the university – management of students, in other words.
Dr. Yu stresses that management of students should follow the principle of
“learning from past lessons to avoid future mistakes with the aim of
educating”. He cites a recent case of a student who was considered a
“troublemaker” and who has had many unpleasant exchanges with SAO colleagues.
Dr. Yu sat the student down for a long talk to understand the cause, and he
objectively walked the student through his feelings. After the talk, the
student realised the excitable and impulsive side of his personality, and sent
a letter of apology to Dr. Yu. Dr. Yu stresses that when handling student
cases, one should refrain from just handing a letter notifying the student
concerned of the disciplinary sanction, without any follow-up actions. “We
should always bear in mind that a university is an educational institution, so
we should talk to the student face to face and help him or her to understand
the seriousness and consequences of the action,” says Dr. Yu. “We should also
explain how the disciplinary sanction is really just a means of educating. Only
then will the student be willing to accept the punishment, and only then will
the purpose of educating be achieved.” Dr. Yu says he plans to propose adding
“community service” as a form of disciplinary sanction. “Our purpose is to
educate, not to punish,” he says. SAO hopes to encourage UM students to
participate more in community service, because community service helps
cultivate benevolence, and can also improve their leadership skills through
event organisation.
Top universities overseas have long regarded student affairs as an area of
expertise, and have invested considerable energy and resources in this area. In
comparison, UM is a late starter and still has room to improve in terms of
staff experience and professional training. Dr. Yu says that the more than
thirty SAO colleagues have an average of three years of experience in student
affairs, which is less than their counterparts at top universities overseas.
But Dr. Yu also points out UM enjoys the advantage of top-down support for
student affairs. “Many universities in
the West began to slash funding, especially after the U.S. entered an economic
recession, and student affairs took a hard hit,” remarks Dr. Yu. “But UM is
still very generous in funding, which should make UM the envy of many overseas
universities.”
Given the increased size and facilities on the new campus, it’s foreseeable
that student affairs work will have greater room for development. Therefore, SAO
will carry out internal staff training to prepare for new challenges that may
arise in the future.
Dr.
Peter Yu completed his undergraduate studies in English Literature at Shanghai
Normal University. He received his master’s degree in linguistics from the University
of Exeter, United Kingdom, and his PhD degree in International and Comparative
Education from the University of Virginia, United States. After graduation he
successively served as assistant dean of students and associate dean of
students at the University of Virginia. Dr. Yu has worked in student affairs
management positions for more than ten years in the United States. He also has
rich experience in international higher education development and student
affairs. He has ten years of teaching experience in both China and the U.S. In
July 2012 he assumed office as the first dean of students at UM.
Participants:
Student affairs work should help students achieve well-rounded development
It won’t be long before UM moves to the new campus and fully implements the RC
system. It is foreseeable that a large number of outstanding student affairs
professionals will be needed. So how should UM get ready for that? This May UM
established the Macau Student Affairs Institute to offer an advanced course in
student affairs, carefully designed by Prof. Susan Komives at the University of
Maryland. The course was Asia’s most comprehensive and systematic course in
student affairs in recent years. It consisted of five parts, covering all key
aspects of student affairs. It was taught by seven experts and scholars invited
from the U.S.. They were Dr. Gregory S. Blimling, vice president for student
affairs at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; Dr. Gwendolyn Dungy,
executive director of NASPA – Student Affairs Administrators in Higher
Education; Prof. Robert Reason from Iowa State University; Dr. Larry Roper,
vice provost for student affairs at Oregon State University; Prof. Karen
Inkelas from the University of Virginia; Dr. John Schuh, distinguished
professor of educational leadership and policy studies at Iowa State
University; and Prof. Marilee Bresciani from San Diego State University. Prof.
Haydn Chen, who was then president of Tunghai University, Taiwan; Dr. Zhang
Yan, vice president of Peking University; Dr. Jonathan Holloway, professor of
history and master of Calhoun College at Yale University; and Dr. Qi Xiaoping,
head of the student affairs office at Sun Yat-sen University were also invited
to share their experience in student affairs and residential colleges with
participants.
The fifty-nine participants of the training course came from higher education
institutions from Macao, Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland China. Most of them are
currently working in student-affairs-related positions. Elvo Sou, head of the
Student Counselling and Development Section at UM, was one of the participants.
He thinks the ten-day course has helped him lay a solid theoretical and
practical foundation. Elvo especially identifies with the concept of “Positive
Restlessness” learned from the course. “We face many challenges in organising
student activities,” says Elvo. “And if we don’t have ‘Positive Restlessness’,
it would be very difficult to meet the needs of the students and the developing
university. Not only does ‘Positive Restlessness’ apply to our work at Student
Affairs, it also applies to our students. We expect them to learn and develop,
especially in terms of soft skills such as team spirit and caring about
humanity. We tell them our expectations and provide the necessary support to
make their learning and development possible. Student Affairs has become a very
strategic avenue to cultivate students’ whole person development.”
Another participant, Claire Ouyang, is a PhD candidate of the Faculty of
Education. She says that the course has helped her to further integrate
theories of student development as well as to better understand the role of student
affairs in higher education institutions, and more importantly, it has
reinforced her determination to pursue a career related to student development
after graduation. “In order to help
students to establish themselves in society, it’s important for student affairs
professionals to help them know more about themselves and achieve well-rounded
development. In this process, teachers and student affairs staff should both
play a role,” says Ouyang.
Kevin, a resident fellow at UM’s East
Asia College, also participated. He says what left the deepest impression on
him was the concept introduced by one course instructor that all student
affairs staff, including administrative staff, are educators. “This concept is
very encouraging,” says Kevin. “It changes the way many UM colleagues perceive
their jobs and helps them realise that working in student affairs is actually
very meaningful.” Kevin says that every UM colleague has the chance to deal
with students, regardless of their positions, and one simply can’t predict how
today’s interaction is going to affect the students in the future. “You never
know. Your one encounter with the student could have the biggest impact on him
or her twenty or thirty years after graduation, and that’s what UM hopes could
happen with the RC system.” says Kevin.
Today’s world is fast-changing and complicated. Long gone are the days when
people could rely on the education they received in the classroom to sustain
and nourish them for the rest of their lives. University education has ceased
to simply fulfill the function of vocational education or skills training, and
it is becoming increasingly common for university graduates to work in
professions not related to their major area of study. In addition to imparting
knowledge, both in and outside the students’ chosen fields of study, and
teaching them to discover and create knowledge, modern higher education also
attaches great importance to helping students cultivate a full range of
qualities, such as initiative to pursue lifelong learning, willingness to
explore and innovate, a noble character, and passion for life. This is also the
most important core value of modern higher education.
With UM soon to move to a new campus that is twenty times larger than the
current one, we find ourselves at a new beginning. We believe that the better
facilities on the new campus and the advanced systems and education philosophy
will accelerate the implementation of the “4-in-1” education model, which will
in turn help the students to cultivate soft and hard skills. The RCs, in
particular, will play a tremendous role in helping students to cultivate good
character, personality and team spirit. The new mode of teaching and students
management will certainly spur other higher education institutions in Macao and
the neighboring regions to contemplate on their own development.