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STEM

Leadership and Culture Course, Book in Classroom Field-Testing

Wednesday, November 20, 2013, By Diane Stirling
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School of Information Studies
Martha Garcia-Murillo

Martha Garcia-Murillo

Good grades, a polished resume and the requisite degree aren’t the only things students need to land a great job after college. However, many college students don’t recognize until too late that employers also require demonstrated leadership qualities in those they hire.

For that reason, Professor Martha Garcia-Murillo took the lessons she and others were teaching face to face in a leadership seminar at the School of Information Studies (iSchool) and turned them into an easily digestible book, “.”

Published this fall, the book is now available on Amazon.com. An accompanying teacher’s guide is under way, and course content is being field-tested this semester to gauge how the live-classroom teachings can be successfully translated into an online format.

Garcia-Murillo has enlisted associates from SU’s psychology, sociology and education units to conduct research and surveys, and a control group is being used to assess the validity of moving the course online. Doing so would mean that the lessons could be brought to larger numbers of students, presented more frequently and offered throughout the University and perhaps beyond, she says.

Demonstrating Leadership

While all students need to demonstrate leadership skills and experience to potential employers, the task is typically more daunting for international students, according to Garcia-Murillo. Many of them must overcome ingrained cultural mores that may prevent them from being more outgoing in the classroom, interacting more openly with their professors and taking opportunities to lead in the college community, she says. That is why it is crucial for such students to get a good start understanding American culture and becoming active in the communities they inhabit from the start of their college years. That situation also is why the course is designed to be a first-semester offering.

Garcia-Murillo says the need for formalizing the teaching of leadership awareness grew from her years directing the iSchool’s t program. She saw that “a lot of international students come here with the expectation that once they get a degree, they will get a job,” a situation that may not always match reality, she says.

Getting Engaged

“Students really need to get engaged. By the end of the second year, you have to have your ducks lined up, be contributing to the classroom to the extent that the professor wants to help you or have had the experience of volunteering or working in the community. If you rely on just your friends and just your ethnic friends, it’s very difficult if your cohort is your only circle,” she notes.

Assuming leadership positions and volunteer roles are signals that demonstrate leadership to employers and help students stand out among other job applicants, she says. However, the professor also tells students that while those types of opportunities differentiate them from others, students may have to work hard to attain and keep managing such achievements.

“We can’t just accept international students here and expect that they will figure things out and be happy. It really is a disservice, I believe, to not give them the support they need. I want to help them get the courage they need to transform themselves a little, so at the end, they can be happier and academically, professionally and personally successful,” the professor says.

  • Author

Diane Stirling

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