St. John's Residence Life Team Outshines the Competition

December 14, 2009

Proving that there is no better Residence Life team in the New York metropolitan area, a cohort of St. John’s University’s Resident Assistants and Residence Directors scored two out of three wins in separate competitions at a recent Resident Assistant (RA) conference hosted by SUNY Stony Brook.

In the Case Study competition, one of the conference highlights, teams of students were presented with a particular residence life situation and required to offer solutions to a panel of Residence Directors. This year’s competition focused on student-staff motivation, and assessment and performance issues and how to address them.

Dominic Petruzzelli, Director of Residence Life, reports that “for the third year in a row, the St. John’s University RA delegation won the Case Study competition at Stony Brook. We know that we have a dedicated, caring and very professional team of RAs, but it is immensely satisfying to have other professionals acknowledge that they are tops.” 

“RAs provide an invaluable service to our campus community,” comments Eric Finkelstein, Associate Director of Residence Life.  “The position requires a full-time commitment and a genuine interest in helping others succeed that distinguishes them from their peers—making them a vital arm of the University’s efforts aimed at student outreach, satisfaction, and retention.” 

Experienced, Mature, Responsible
St. John’s 76 RAs are part of a Residence Life team made up of eight full-time Residence Directors (RDs), a Residence Life Coordinator and a Graduate Assistant, all serving approximately 3,500 students in 13 buildings/complexes on and around the University’s campuses.  Experienced students who are selected for their proven maturity, sense of responsibility and interest in people, RAs undergo a highly selective (450 students attended interest sessions this year) application process.

That process consists of the application, essays, recommendations, individual interviews and an eight-week leadership course. They participate in a three-week training module, in which they learn conflict mediation, confrontation skills, team-building, programming, emergency procedures, diversity awareness, ethical decision-making and other critical skills that prepare them to provide assistance to students in their assigned areas—usually a floor or wing of a residence hall.  RAs receive room and board stipends as compensation for their work and provide overnight, weekend, and holiday duty coverage in the halls.

A Valuable Experience
For the past three years a contingent of St. John’s RAs has traveled to the Stony Brook conference, which is a major opportunity to network with other RAs around the region and share some of their successes and concerns. Those attending this year were: Lamees Galal; John Wilson; Khrystal Daniel; Christopher Carriles; Elizabeth Kugler; Rob Cote; Matt Coleman; and
Pierre Lucien

St. John’s RD Jennifer Bonardi explains that while the day-long conference is intended for RAs, many professionals also attend and benefit from the gathering. “It’s always good to see people in your profession and to gather information about best practices,” she points out. “The networking opportunities are great; you can talk about what’s happening at each other’s schools.”

This year, for the first time, the conference committee instituted a Professional Case Study competition for RDs. That competition, judged by two representatives from Stony Brook, addressed RA management, according to Keith Gorman, a St. John’s RD who was on the competition team.

That team too was victorious, according to Mr. Petruzzelli. “The St. John’s University RD delegation won the professional case study competition in its inaugural year at the conference! There are only three awards distributed at this conference and our delegation won two out of those three. I can’t say that I am surprised, because I know they are excellent at what they do, but again, it is so edifying to have their talent and professionalism recognized by others.”