Student Affairs

The Journal of Technology in Student Affairs

WINTER 2010

Editor's Note

Building virtual communities and using social networks to reach college students has become a hot topic, and two articles in this issue inform the discussion. We at StudentAffaris On-Line would certainly like to hear from more administrators who are using social networks. Descriptions of how networks are used in programming could be very valuable to our readers, so please send us some article on this important topic.

In this issue, we also take a look at open source software and a case management data base designed at a particular campus.

Gary D. Malaney


Letter to the Editor

Campus Shootings: The Crisis Never Ends - submitted by Quincy Martin III, Dean, Student Services at Triton College


Featured Articles

Adrienne Draper Olson, Liz Rothenberg, and Diana Wardell discuss how some institutions are using technology in general and social media in particular to help campus constituencies to stay informed in Building Community in a Virtual Environment.

In Squeezing the Virtual Turnip, Susan J. Underwood, Christine Austin, and Christopher Giroir introduce the use of open source technologies in student affairs.

Monique N. Colclough writes about the development and implementation of a case management data base which monitors high-risk behaviors of students in UNCW’s Case Management Database.

In Engaging College Students through Online Social Networks, Doug Olson and Quincy Martin III add to the ongoing conversation regarding the use of social networks to engage college students.