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Book Review
Issue 25(2)
Developing
Effective Programs and Services for College Men
(New Directions for Student Services, No. 107, Fall 2004 ).
(2004). Gar Kellom, Ed. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 112 pp.
Price $27.00. ISBN # 0-7879-7772-1.
Review
By: Shannon
L. Young
Academic
Advisory
Center
, College
of Humanities
and Social Sciences
Carnegie
Mellon
University
The generation of student development
models that account for historically excluded minorities has become
a priority during recent decades. Therefore a text that seeks to
carve out a particular space for men's issues may seem surprising
in this climate. Yet Kellom's anthology, Developing Effective
Programs and Services for College, explores the unique needs
of this majority population.
Here article authors successfully establish
that even students who may be part of a majority experience the
world through a specific framework of identity factors such as race,
ethnicity, class, and sexual orientation. Further, colleges notice
a growing "problem with enrollment, retention, and academic performance
of college men [. . . which] is most acute among [minority] men"
(p. 1). Statistics suggest that men are less likely to matriculate
and are less likely to utilize support services. Capraro asserts,
"It [is] conceded that objectively men as a group may
still have power over women as a group, but subjectively
it [is] observed that many individual men do not feel powerful
" (p. 26). Mindful of these points, volume authors maintain
that higher education professionals can not effectively design services
unless we address questions of gender in our work.
This book first explores theory with
topics that include gender identity development, men's studies as
an academic discipline, and the economic, cultural, and political
factors men confront. Early essays contextualize the issues at
stake for young men in higher education. Later the book focuses
on practice as authors provide perspectives from student activities
and health services to campus judicial systems. These latter articles
examine how student affairs professionals can use gender studies
to rethink how we deliver services to men.
A reader with little exposure to gender
studies will find that the theory section elicits questions and
contributes to an understanding perception of students' gendered
experience. I found the practice portion to be especially helpful
with its concrete ideas for creating comfortable and effective professional
interactions with young men.
This book
requires the reader to think outside the box to clarify how ideas
presented relate to advising since no chapters specifically focus
on the advisor/advisee relationship or the role of academic services.
Yet the absence of such information does not limit the usefulness
of the text. Several chapters offer practical suggestions for the
establishment of a trusting relationship with male students. One
particularly helpful example included being conscious of word choices
and how we phrase questions to gather information. Something as
simple as saying, "How do you experience that? What's that like
for you?" (66) rather than "How do you feel about that?" may have
made a difference with advisees who dislike discussing emotion.
An appropriate next step for researchers in advising would include
examining the experiences of young men as advisees and building
a list of best practices for advising young male students. In the
meantime, the book is a useful start for advisors who want suggestions
for improving their services for young men.
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