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Promoting progress : a rhetorical analysis of college and university sexual harassment codesPorrovecchio, Mark J. 02 May 1997 (has links)
This thesis is a rhetorical analysis of sexual harassment codes on college and
university campuses. The situational model proposed by Lloyd Bitzer is used to examine
representative artifacts from Rice University in Houston, Texas, and Oregon State
University in Corvallis, Oregon, so as to determine whether they operate as "fitting"
rhetorical responses to the situation generally and the exigence of sexual harassment
specifically. The body of this analysis develops in eight stages: an introductory discussion
of sexual harassment and research conducted thereon; examination of codes as ethical and
situational constructs; explication of the rhetorical framework; the nature of the exigence
as a historical and campus-specific imperfection; examination of the publics that create the
rhetorical audience; the inartistic and artistic constraints operative within the rhetorical
situation; an analysis of the two codes; and summary comments and recommendations.
Within the last two sections the determinations are made that: 1) the codes do not
currently function as a "fitting" response to the situation/exigence, and that 2) revisions
can be made so as to promote a more pragmatic and "fitting" response to sexual
harassment. / Graduation date: 1997
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Attitude of Resident Students and Staff of Selected Public Universities in Texas Toward In Loco ParentisZeagler, Arnold M. 08 1900 (has links)
This study assesses the attitudes of resident college students and staffs toward the concept in loco parents as it pertains to residence hall administration. It also describes relationships between attitudes toward in loco parentis combinations of four demographic variables: university, status (staff or resident) academic level, and sex. The chi-square analysis indicated thirty-one significant relationships between attitudes toward the eleven residence hall situations and the four demographic variables. Major findings indicated that: (a) resident students and staffs were ambiguous toward in loco parents; (b) resident students and staffs were for or against in loco parents depending upon the situation (eleven situations are discussed); (c) attitudes of resident students and staffs were similar in most situations; and (d) the majority of resident students and staff members felt positively toward an objective description of in loco parentis, but this attitude did not prevail when the concept was manifested in university staff behavior in typical residence hall situations.
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