Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

Widget HTML #1

[Download] "Debunking the Myth of Job Fit in Higher Education and Student Affairs" by Brian J. Reece " Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

Debunking the Myth of Job Fit in Higher Education and Student Affairs

📘 Read Now     đŸ“„ Download


eBook details

  • Title: Debunking the Myth of Job Fit in Higher Education and Student Affairs
  • Author : Brian J. Reece
  • Release Date : January 25, 2019
  • Genre: Education,Books,Professional & Technical,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 2404 KB

Description

This book is co-published with the ACPA


This groundbreaking book examines a concept that has gone unexamined for too long: The concept of “job fit” in the student affairs profession. Fit is a term used by nearly everyone in student affairs throughout the hiring process, from search committees and hiring managers to supervisors and HR professionals. This book opens a conversation about the use of “job fit” as a tool for exclusion that needs to be critically investigated from multiple standpoints.


This edited collection brings together a number of voices to look at the issues involved through various lenses to explore the ways policies, procedures, environments, and cultural norms provide inequitable job search experiences for individuals from various marginalized groups. These include looking at the legal aspects, employer definitions, communication barriers, as well as scholarly personal narratives looking at the concept from the perspective of class, race, gender and sexual orientation.


Emerging from the Commission for Social Justice of ACPA, the personal narratives and critical explorations in this book are an attempt to provide graduate students and professionals with a resource that is relevant to the job search in an increasingly competitive job market, while taking into account the complex realities of their identities. The normative assumptions of “fit” are analyzed by the authors to make visible the barriers those assumptions create for those with non-dominant identities.


The student affairs profession strives for inclusion and acceptance as a core value, and an essential competency. The profession has made progress in the way it serves students, but there is a disconnect between the conversation about students and the way those same values play out in the treatment of practitioners and scholars in the field. This book aims to help job seekers looking to evaluate fit in their current and possible future positions, as well as hiring managers who face challenges in creating equitable hiring processes.


Challenging the norms and rhetoric about job fit in student affairs means that scholars and practitioners alike must be able to incorporate this topic explicitly into various aspects of the profession.


Figures and Tables

Foreword–Stephen John Quaye

Acknowledgments



1) From Fit to Belonging: New Dialogues on the Student Affairs Job Search—Brian J. Reece, Vu T. Tran, Elliott N. DeVore, Gabby Porcaro

2) Innocent Until Proven Guilty: A Critical Interrogation of the Legal Aspects of Job Fit in Higher Education—David Hoa Khoa. K. Nguyen, LaWanda W.M. Ward

3) Employer Definitions of and Reflections on Fit in Hiring Processes—LĂ©na Kavaliauskas Crain, Mathew J.L. Shepard

4) Holograms, Misfits, and Authentic Selves: Fit as Narrative Agency through Inequality Regimes—Jessica Bennett, Travis York, Van Bailey, Marshall Habermann-Guthrie, Luis Jimenez Inoa, Meghan Gaffney Wells, Akiko Yamaguchi

5) No, I Can’t Meet You for an $8 Coffee: How Class Shows Up in Workspaces—Sonja Ardoin, becky martinez

6) Finding Fit as an “Outsider Within”: A Critical Exploration of Black Women Navigating the Workplace in Higher Education—Stacey D. Garrett, Natasha T. Turman

7) Code Word FIT: Exploring the Systematic Exclusion of Professionals of Color in Predominantly White Institutions—Heather O. Browning, Patrice M. Palmer

8) Negotiating Fit While “Misfit”: Three Ways Trans Professionals Navigate Student Affairs—C.J. Venable, Kyle Inselman, Nick Thuot 

9) “You’ll Fit Right In”: Fit as a Euphemism for Whiteness in Higher Education Hiring Practices—Kyle C. Ashlee

10) (Re)Viewing and (Re)Moving the Mystique Surrounding "Fit" in Student Affairs: A Challenge to Our Field—Walter P. Parrish, III


Editors and Contributors

Index


Download Books "Debunking the Myth of Job Fit in Higher Education and Student Affairs" PDF ePub Kindle