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Menlo News

Empowering Student Voices: A Q&A with Dean Melissa Michelson

Academics General News

As the Dean of Arts & Sciences at Menlo College, Professor Melissa Michelson seeks out new ways to involve students in the administration of Menlo College. Read on to learn more about her recent initiative where students participated on faculty hiring committees, as well as other ways she empowers students on and off campus.

You have an upcoming presentation entitled “Nothing About Us Without Us: Empowering Student Voices” at the 2023 WSCUC Senior College and University Commission Accreditation Resource Conference – ARC2023. What was the inspiration behind your presentation?

When I was a college student, I sometimes got the feeling that campus administrators didn’t care what students thought and that they slowed down decision processes to wait students out. 

In other words, if students were asking for something, administrators could wait until the summer, or for graduation, to avoid giving students more of a voice. 

When I went to the WSCUC meeting last year I was reminded of that sentiment when I heard a student representative use the phrase “Nothing about us, without us.”

I came back to Menlo determined to make sure I was always giving students a voice, even if it was on behalf of future students.

What are some examples of ways that student voices are being incorporated into academic planning in Arts & Sciences and the General Education curricula that fall under your purview?

The major ways in which I’ve incorporated this as Dean of Arts & Sciences include hiring a student assistant who is my liaison to student perspectives, asking students in the classes I teach to weigh in on issues I’m making decisions about as dean, and including students in committees and task forces. 

For example, in the faculty searches conducted this year, I asked faculty to always include a student as a voting member. These students reviewed applications and participated in interviews and decisions of those hiring committees. Most recently, I asked a student (Diana Guardado ‘23) to join a planning meeting for gathering information about our Hispanic students and Asian American/Native American/Pacific Islander students to help determine what might enhance their ability to succeed at Menlo College.

“As a student representative [on the faculty hiring committee], I had the privilege of sharing my perspective and advocating for what we value in a professor. Alongside faculty members, I participated in multiple interview rounds and asked questions about the candidates’ professional background and teaching methodology. Additionally, I was invited to observe a teaching presentation, which provided further insight into the candidates’ instructional approach. 

After thoroughly evaluating each candidate, I provided my individual opinion from a student’s perspective. I am grateful to Menlo College for giving students a way to voice their opinions and contribute to important decisions. I highly recommend that other students take advantage of similar opportunities, such as attending teaching presentations, to ensure that their voices are heard. Ultimately, it is the students who benefit most from quality teaching, and we should take every opportunity to advocate for the best education possible.” – Mali Korn ‘25

In your classroom, how does empowering student voices tie into your political science teachings?

The thing about political science is that, while there are some facts that I want to ensure students take away from my classes, there are also unsettled debates. It’s not like math, for example, where 2+2 is always 4. There are always multiple perspectives and multiple players, and in every instance, there are students who agree with those different perspectives. This semester, I’m teaching Civil Liberties and we’re discussing cases about freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and the Second Amendment.

The diversity of the student body at Menlo College is a huge strength in that it means a diversity of perspectives and opinions are represented in my class. Empowering students to voice their perspectives in discussing these cases makes the classes more vibrant and more effective.  

Students come away with a better understanding of the issues at play because they’ve heard their peers talk about them in their own voices.

You are also active in the public sphere with your research. What are some ways you like to empower students through your research – such as Get out the Vote (GOTV), ALL IN Student Voting, and more? Why do you think it is important that students be involved in the political process?

Doing research means recognizing what you don’t know. I know it’s important for everyone to vote and that many students don’t exercise that right, but I don’t know what it’s like to be a student in 2023, or why so many students don’t participate. Because students vote at lower rates than older Americans, they have less power to influence the issues.

As the Chair of the Student Vote Research Network (SVRN), a national group I helped found, I’m hoping to generate best practices toward the goal of 100% student voting participation. That means putting student perspectives and experiences front and center so that we can find out what barriers they face and how they can be removed.

Those might be logistical barriers like whether students have convenient access to the voting process, or sociocultural barriers such as ensuring that they appreciate the power of their vote and believe that voting will make a difference.

Students should vote because voting is power to shape the future. Local issues like pedestrian and bicycle safety, state issues related to housing affordability and food and housing insecurity, and federal issues such as federal student debt relief, access to reproductive care, gun control, climate change – it’s all decided by elected officials.

In addition, you were also appointed to the Board of the American Council of Academic Deans. What do you hope to accomplish as a member of this board and how do you hope it will benefit Menlo College students?

The American Council of Academic Deans serves multiple roles, but the one that drew me to the group is how it brings deans together to share common challenges and potential solutions. Instead of always reinventing the wheel, members can ask if other deans have had similar challenges, or what their approaches have been. Often these national organizations are dominated by larger schools, and by public institutions. 

I’m hoping as a board member that I can ensure those conversations more often involve small, private colleges like Menlo College. Menlo College can help other similar institutions learn from our experiences, and we can learn from theirs.

Finally, what are some other upcoming projects in your area that you are excited to move forward?

I’m working on a number of projects right now:

  • One is about how college students serve as GOTV knowledge brokers, bringing information about how to register and vote back to their families and communities, especially first-generation students. 
  • Another is about how drag performers can increase voting participation. I’m also going to be leading sessions at the UC Berkeley Executive Leadership Academy Professional Development Retreat this summer on supporting LGBTQIA+ community. 
  • I’ve hosted the second annual SVRN Workshop in Chicago, where we heard updates on the research folks conducted in 2022 and what they have planned for 2023 and 2024. 
  • Finally, I’m  wrapping up the first draft of my latest book about the Party at the Mailbox project and mobilizing Black voters with celebrations of community.

About Menlo College

Menlo College was established in 1927. It is a small, private, non-profit, four-year, accredited, residential college located in Atherton, California. Menlo College’s location in Silicon Valley, one of the world’s most entrepreneurial and innovative geographical areas, has enabled the college to create a valuable market niche for its students locally — as well as globally. Menlo College cultivates in its students the skills, integrity, and passion to make meaningful contributions in an innovation economy.

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