Hi JoAnne! I think you might be talking about behaviors on campus outside of the classroom.. My work/college affiliations are primarily online, but I pulled some information that talks about behaviors in those environments, just in case it helps. Welcome to the group! :)
Not sure if this is what you are looking for, but Grand Canyon University considers the content in the Student Handbook as policies, and speaks to online etiquette on page 36 of the Handbook (see Class Participation section). As an adjunct instructor, I have found that the university also gives me a lot of support in managing etiquette in my classes, so long as I have posted written guidance of my expectations in the first week. https://www.gcu.edu/Documents/Policies/University%20Policy%20Handbook(0).pdf Even though I adjunct teach for GCU, my full time job is with University of Phoenix. I found their student code of conduct policy for you, which is on page 110 of the University Catalog (Student Code of Conduct). In my opinion, they did a little bit better job of codifying their policy and building robust guardrails around it. http://www.phoenix.edu/content/dam/altcloud/doc/catalog/online.pdf Best, Stacy Nykorchuk On Tue, Feb 14, 2017 at 9:30 AM, Sauermelch, Joanne < [email protected]> wrote: > Good morning! > > > > I am in a newly created policy position at Delaware Valley University > (DelVal). I joined ACUPA in January and I am finding this organization’s > resources to be very helpful as I work toward developing an organized > policy process for DelVal. > > > > DelVal is currently developing an expressive rights policy for the student > body. DelVal is a small, private, teaching institution, guided by a set of > core values that holds respecting all people as paramount. Based on our > institutional core values, the ideal policy would be an expressive rights > policy with no expression limitations, with the exception of narrow > language about fighting words as language that could lead to a > violent/physical reaction. > > > > Any existing policies or resources that you might be able to share that > could assist in the expressive rights policy development at DelVal would be > greatly appreciated. > > > > Thank you in advance for your help! > > > > Best regards, > > Joanne > > > > Joanne Sauermelch > > Director of Policy, Process Review and Analysis > > Delaware Valley University > > 700 E. Butler Avenue > > Doylestown, PA 18901 > > (215) 489-2427 > > > > > > > > > > *Replying to Messages:* Replying (using Reply) to an ACUPA-L e-mail will > distribute your message to the *ENTIRE list of members*. To send a > message privately, reply directly to the individual who sent the message > (their e-mail address appears in the "From" line of their original e-mail). > > *To Unsubscribe or for questions about the ACUPA e-list,* Contact Joshua > Adams at j <[email protected]?subject=ACUPA%20e-list%20assistance> > [email protected] > <[email protected]?subject=Question%20About%20the%20ACUPA%20E-list> or > 607-255-6837 <(607)%20255-6837>. > >
