Assistant Director, Rice Emerging Scholars Program
Jewish Federation of Greater Houston
Special Instructions to Applicants:
All interested applicants should attach a resume and cover letter in the Supporting Documents section of the application, preferably in PDF format to avoid any formatting issues.
About Rice:
Boasting a 300-acre tree-lined campus in Houston, Texas, Rice University is ranked among the nation’s top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has a 6-to-1 undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio and a residential college system, which supports students intellectually, emotionally, and culturally through social events, intramural sports, student plays, lecture series, courses, and student government. Developing close-knit, diverse college communities is a strong campus tradition, which is why Rice is highly ranked for best quality of life and best value among private universities.
Rice is also a wonderful place to work. Rice faculty, staff, and students share values that are essential to our success as a healthy community. Those values guide our decisions and behaviors and shape Rice’s culture. They come through in the way we treat each other and the welcome we extend to our visitors. These values can be recalled simply by our name — RICE — Responsibility, Integrity, Community, and Excellence.
Position Summary:
The assistant director of the Rice Emerging Scholars Program (RESP) is responsible for assisting with the planning, execution, and assessment of all components of a comprehensive summer program for incoming first-year STEM students. The assistant director coordinates all elements of the RESP summer program outside of the classroom and provides leadership in the form of advising, training, and supervision to the upperclassmen who serve as RESP Student Fellows. The assistant director is also the primary advisor to RESP Scholars during the academic year and works with the other assistant directors to provide comprehensive academic and student transition support throughout their tenure at Rice.
Ideal Candidate Statement:
Ideal candidates should have strong advising and problem-solving skills, along with experience and interest in working with diverse student populations.
Workplace Requirements:
This position is exclusively on-site, full-time, necessitating all duties to be performed in person at Rice University. Per Rice policy 440, work arrangements may be subject to change.
Hiring Range: $60,000–$65,000 annually, contingent upon qualifications and experience
*Exempt (salaried) positions under FLSA are not eligible for overtime.
Minimum Requirements:
Bachelor’s degree
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2+ years of experience providing student support in a college or university
In lieu of the experience requirement, additional related education beyond what is required may be substituted on an equivalent year-for-year basis
Skills:
Knowledge of theories including student development, learning, and identity development, and experience applying those frameworks professionally
Ability to problem-solve and support/advise students in personal and/or academic crisis
Strong communication and rapport-building skills and experience collaborating with faculty, staff, students, families, and administration
Ability to multitask and manage multiple projects with competing deadlines
Demonstrated understanding of the experiences of students in transition and the strategies necessary to facilitate their success
Experience and comfort working with diverse student populations, including but not limited to first-generation college students, low-income students, and underrepresented student populations
Coaching and instructional skills, organizational abilities, attention to detail, and the ability to quickly assess the effectiveness of an intervention
Preferences:
Master’s degree (preferably in college student personnel, counseling, student affairs, or a related field)
Familiarity with student transition issues, particularly in highly selective academic environments
Experience working with social media platforms and website design
Experience working with new or first-year student populations
Experience working with underrepresented student populations, particularly in STEM disciplines
Experience in event planning and execution
Experience providing academic support, leadership development, and program development
Experience problem-solving and advising students with complex and diverse needs
Experience employing proactive/intrusive advising strategies
Experience supporting student success/undergraduate retention initiatives
Experience working with faculty
Experience working in a fast-paced, results-oriented environment
Strong interpersonal communication skills and ability to build rapport and sustain relationships with students
Essential Functions:
Identify and advise approximately 65 RESP Scholars needing additional support, providing sustained, individualized, holistic, developmentally appropriate coaching to assist in their academic, social, leadership, and interpersonal development
Assist first- and second-year students in developing roadmaps for their success at the university, using varied strategies to facilitate the identification and implementation of their goals
Assist in monitoring student academic performance and persistence toward graduation, preparing reports, and maintaining student files as necessary
Maintain awareness of best practices in proactive/holistic advising, student success coaching, and the higher education/student affairs landscape, integrating these ideas into advising practices
Assist in developing student success interventions, workshops, and other programs aimed at facilitating the transition to college
Develop training aimed at educating student leaders, faculty, and staff about the populations supported by the office and how they can help students transition
Perform all other duties as assigned
Additional Functions:
Communicate and collaborate with residential college Magisters, Wellbeing, academic departments, Campus Life entities, and other campus resources as necessary to ensure students receive comprehensive support
Provide support as needed to other initiatives in the Student Success Office, which could include—but are not limited to—New Families Orientation, Orientation Week (O-Week), office-wide marketing initiatives (social media, website), and programming support for first-generation and low-income students
Rice University HR | Benefits: https://knowledgecafe.rice.edu/benefits
Rice Mission and Values: Mission and Values | Rice University
Rice University is committed to ensuring Equal Employment Opportunity and welcoming the fullness of diversity into our candidate pools. Rice considers qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national or ethnic origin, genetic information, disability, or protected veteran status. Rice also provides reasonable accommodations to qualified persons with disabilities. If an applicant requires a reasonable accommodation for any part of the application or hiring process, please get in touch with Rice University’s Human Resources Office via email at facstaffada@rice.edu for support.
If you have any additional questions, please email us at jobs@rice.edu. Thank you for your interest in employment with Rice University.
The assistant director of the Rice Emerging Scholars Program (RESP) is responsible for assisting with the planning, execution, and assessment of all components of a comprehensive summer program for incoming first-year STEM students. The assistant director coordinates all elements of the RESP summer program outside of the classroom and provides leadership in the form of advising, training, and supervision to the upperclassmen who serve as RESP Student Fellows. The assistant director is also the primary advisor to RESP Scholars during the academic year and works with the other assistant directors to provide comprehensive academic and student transition support throughout their tenure at Rice.