Curriculum - The program requires 42 hours of study in counseling, student development and higher education including 9 credits of field experience. The practicum (CNSL 503) occurs early in the student’s program and involves 100 hours of work at a local college or university during one semester as well as individual supervision and a regular seminar. The internship (CNSL 592) occurs at the end of the program and involves a minimum of 300 hours over the course of two semesters and a weekly seminar. The program combines a counseling and a student development orientation. It is designed to integrate counseling, personal and cultural development and program development skills into a professional approach to student affairs in higher education.
Program Philosophy
- With learning at the heart of our
professional work environment, our fundamental responsibility is to
empower students to attain the highest standards of academic
achievement, public service and personal development. We value quality,
intellectual integrity, openness to debate, participation by all members
of the community in governance and respect for the dignity, rights and
aspirations of each member of the community. Preparing students for
enlightened and productive participation in a global society is our
obligation. The mission for the master’s degree program in student
development flows from this philosophical perspective. Graduates are
prepared to function effectively as student development educators in
rapidly changing institutions of higher education. Students are trained
to understand and to meet the developmental needs of college students
taking into account worldviews and expectations which are influenced by
age, faith or religion, ethnicity, national origin, gender, sexual
orientation, disability status and other life-shaping perspectives.
1.
Learn the basic skills of individual counseling
2.
Learn the processes and skills of group facilitation
3.
Learn about the interactions between emotional and intellectual
development among college
students
4.
Learn about the interaction between individual identity development and
cultural context
5.
Learn how
to work effectively with students across a wide range of ages, cultural,
geographic
and socioeconomic backgrounds
6.
Demonstrate proficiency in assessment of student needs and design of
educational programs
that support student intellectual, and social
development
7.
Learn about the role which student development education plays in
students’ college
experience
8.
Develop a personal code of ethics that includes an awareness of Western
and non-Western
ethical perspectives
9.
Develop competence as consumers of research and program evaluators
10.
Develop a personal sense of mission regarding their work with college
students
More about the Student Development in Higher Education program