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    From Jobs to Career: Rethinking Student Employment

    enJanuary 02, 2021
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    About this Episode

    Topping the list of why students attend college is the desire to successfully enter into a career upon graduation. On-campus employment provides opportunities for students to gain experience in their future careers with academic and professional development opportunities, while at the same time, serving as a source of a financial resource.  

     Higher Ed Rewired spoke with Amelia Parnell, from NASPA, the professional organization for Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education and Debra Hammond, of the California State University, Northridge University Student Union on their research and practice on how higher education should rethink the student employment experience as a student success strategy.  

    If you haven’t already, please review us on Apple Podcasts. It will help bring new listeners to learn more about student success efforts.

    Higher Ed ReWired is produced by California State University.

    Recent Episodes from Higher Ed ReWired

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      co-author-director

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    Weighted Judgments: The Unspoken Bias in Higher Ed

    Weighted Judgments: The Unspoken Bias in Higher Ed

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    ChatGPT: Pushing the Boundaries of Higher Education

    ChatGPT: Pushing the Boundaries of Higher Education

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    Examining The Stop WOKE Act and The Threat to Academic Freedom in Higher Education

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    Refocusing Basic Needs (Part 2): Can Policy Fix the Higher Ed Housing Crisis?

    Refocusing Basic Needs (Part 2): Can Policy Fix the Higher Ed Housing Crisis?

    About This Episode:

    According to the Census Bureau, California’s population grew three times more in the last ten years than available housing units. As enrollment at the University of California and California State University systems increased, the statewide housing shortage has made it challenging for campuses to address the situation. State policies around housing have also made it difficult to fix the widening gap between affordability and student housing. 

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    Featured on This Episode:

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    Steven McKay is an associate professor of Sociology and Director of the UCSC Center for Labor Studies. He earned aPh.D. in Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, an M.A. in Southeast Asian Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and a B.A. in Political Economy of Industrial Societies at the University of California-Berkeley. Runs the project No Place Like Home together with Miriam Greenberg.

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    Refocusing Basic Needs: The Student Housing Crisis in Higher Education

    Refocusing Basic Needs: The Student Housing Crisis in Higher Education

    About This Episode:

    The current housing crisis for students cannot be ignored. A survey conducted in 2019 found on-campus that most students in California have experienced some type of housing insecurity with the highest risk being students from marginalized communities. The traditional on campus basic needs centers are not enough to help the students in this crisis and universities are now trying to adapt their programs to be able to further help students and keep them in college. 

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    • Danielle Munoz is a licensed therapist and case manager who was working on Sacramento State’s behavioral intervention team. She earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology from UC Davis and a Master's of Marriage and Family therapy from CSU Sacramento. 

     

    • Marissa Islas is one of the Basic Needs Housing and Education Coordinators at the UC San Diego Basic Needs Center. She earned a Bachelor in Global Health, Psychology Minor from The University of California, San Diego. 

     

    • Kameo Quenga is a Basic Needs Housing & Education Coordinator at the UC San Diego Basic Needs Center. She earned a Bachelor of psychology from San Jose State University and her Master of Higher education and Student Affairs from the University of San Francisco

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