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Hirschy, Amy S.; Wilson, Maureen E.; Braxton, John M. – Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, 2015
Housing and residence life (HRL) administrators who lack knowledge about accepted professional behaviors risk violating normative boundaries, likely jeopardizing themselves or their clients (e.g., students, parents, colleagues). The purpose of this survey study was to understand if a normative structure exists for the administrative role…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Workers, College Housing, Administrators, Behavior Standards
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Wilson, Maureen E.; Hirschy, Amy S.; Braxton, John M. – Journal of College and University Student Housing, 2016
To protect the welfare of students, staff, and other clients in housing and residence life (HRL), administrators must understand what behaviors are unacceptable. Professionals might make idiosyncratic and unconstrained decisions when there is no conduct code or set of informal rules. Informal rules may become norms comprising normative structures…
Descriptors: Regression (Statistics), College Housing, Program Administration, Resident Advisers
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Bray, Nathaniel J.; Braxton, John M. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2012
Codes of conduct can and should fulfill a critical role in higher education. Codes help overcome some of the challenges inherent in a system predicated on high levels of autonomy and on self-regulation. Codes not only are important indicators of critical topics that are deemed worthy of explicit protection or expectations for behavior; they may…
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Higher Education, College Administration, College Faculty