Carolyn Golz, the new associate vice president for student affairs and dean of students at the 快播导航, has experienced university life from several angles: as a student, dorm leader and campus administrator. It was working as a resident assistant at the 快播导航 of Alaska Fairbanks that helped steer Golz鈥檚 career path to student affairs.
That RA experience, in which she interacted with peers and got to know hall and campus directors who she has remained in touch with, helped to shape and formulate her vision for student affairs, Golz said. She wants all students to experience the type of positive campus life that kept her engaged and informed.
鈥淢y goal is to make this office a hub for students,鈥 Golz said. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 know where else to go, you come here. We will break down barriers; we will get the answers you need.
鈥淲e are here to serve students, that鈥檚 why we have jobs. Students are not an interruption or a disruption, they are our job.鈥
Her focus for her first 90 days is getting to know students and inviting them to get to know her and the rest of the staff, said Golz, who spent her early school life in Alaska and later California while her father was in the military.
She, like many 快播导航 students, is a first-generation college student.
As she walks the campus and attends events, Golz said she wants students to know that she and her staff are accessible.
鈥淟etting them know that I鈥檓 not some scary person with a title, that I鈥檓 a real human being, and I really want to get to know them and I want them to get to know me and my staff,鈥 she said.
Along the getting-to-know-her avenue: Golz is married and has two dogs, Hazel and Forest. She loves coffee, and has perfected what she calls, 鈥淭he Look.鈥 (Parents鈥攁nd wise children鈥攁re familiar with similar countenances.)
It is a no-words-needed look of reproach developed as an RA while assigned to an all-male floor during her undergraduate days at the 快播导航 of Alaska Fairbanks.
鈥淵ou can say a lot with that look!鈥 Golz said with a laugh.
Golz, who arrived on campus in mid-July, has 15 years of experience in student affairs, in areas that include residence life, orientation, leadership development and student conduct. She holds a doctorate in organizational leadership. Her dissertation, 鈥淭he Impact of Student Engagement on Alumni Giving,鈥 explored the relationship between student engagement and alumni giving.
鈥淚 view part of my job as creating alumni. Students now, alumni tomorrow,鈥 Golz said. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have a good student experience, then you鈥檙e not going to want to give back to the institution either financially or with time later. But, if you enjoy the place you feel a sense of loyalty to the place, you feel that you got something really important and transformational out of a place, you鈥檙e more likely to support it for other students in the future.鈥
Golz spent the previous four years at the 快播导航 of California Santa Cruz, serving as the chief student affairs officer for two of its colleges. Prior to Santa Cruz, Golz was an area coordinator at the 快播导航 of Illinois at Chicago, which, like the 快播导航, is a public metropolitan-serving institution, she said.
The 快播导航 appealed to Golz because its mission fit with her philosophy of helping students and she liked the urban location.
鈥淚 was looking to be a dean of students, looking for the opportunity to really make a difference for students across the campus,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanted that urban experience again, and it was really important for me to land in a place that was really focused on serving students, so the mission of the institution was attractive the location, the position, all of that.鈥
So, what exactly is Golz鈥檚 job? Sure, she oversees all of student affairs, such as student conduct, counseling and health services, student involvement and leadership. However, what is the end game?
鈥淢y job really is student engagement and the student experience outside the classroom,鈥 Golz said. 鈥淪o making sure that students enjoy their time here, get connected on campus, feel a sense of belonging and are able to access the resources they need to be successful.鈥
Golz said she is working on the engagement game plan鈥攖rying to find a strategy that entices students to stay on campus between and after classes.
鈥淪o you鈥檝e got to build the momentum,鈥 Golz said. 鈥淏uild the program for a few students, and then scale it up as more students start to engage, so it means providing opportunities for leadership development, providing social opportunities, creating spaces where students can just be between classes so they are not just hanging out in their cars.鈥