Watercolor World Map

High School Membership

Connect to the world of higher education

As a high school member, you'll be connected to more than 11,000 members from institutions around the world. Facilitate your professional development by attending discounted meetings, gaining complimentary subscriptions to our College & University journal and more.

Why should you join? From professional development opportunities to forging connections that will help you in setting down career stones, there's more than one reason. 

Annual Membership Price: $302

Requirements: YOU MUST BE A REGISTRAR, COUNSELOR, OR OTHER PERSONNEL AT A SECONDARY SCHOOL.

Develop Professionally

High School Hallways


Professional Competencies

Work on your skills like leadership and management, technical knowledge, and upping your professional contributions to the field. We have the tools for you.

Online Learning

From free webinars to self-paced on-demand learning, AACRAO's online learning covers a variety of subjects—technology, strategic enrollment management, admissions, FERPA, transfer, credential evaluation, and international education—and allow you to engage with the presenters and instructors.

Take the next step in your career

High School to University Registrar? It can happen. AACRAO's Career Navigator is a wealth of job postings and resources for training.

Gain Recognition

High School Teacher with Student


Get Published

AACRAO's professional journals College & University and SEM Quarterly are always accepting articles and have a wide circulation base.

Research Opportunities

Leverage the expertise of our over 11,000 members and contribute to one of the premier sources of practice related research within the global higher education community. 

Join a committee

Do work you're passionate about, with support and mentoring from fellow members. From Caucuses to specialized topics, it's all one community, no matter where in the world your institution is located. 


AACRAO_Connect_logo_final_transparentbkg

AACRAO's bi-weekly professional development e-newsletter

Field Notes: The moral minefield of making exceptions to policy

Sep 22, 2015, 16:36 PM
legacy id : 560030aa4c15640df09c7fdd
Summary : Registrars and admissions officers are responsible for ensuring policy compliance--and are often asked to make exceptions. A clear process will help navigate these minefields.
Url :

"Field Notes" is an occasional Connect column covering practical and philosophical issues facing admissions and registrar professionals. The columns are authored by various AACRAO members. If you have an idea for a column and would like to contribute, please send an email to the editor at connect@aacrao.org. 

By Michael Santarosa, Associate Registrar, University of Utah

Whether we’re registrars or admissions officers, one of our main responsibilities is often to ensure compliance with policy.  However, it doesn’t take a long time in these positions before we’re being called upon to make exceptions to policy.  During my time as a registrar I’ve felt anxiety myself and I’ve heard reports from many others about the discomfort they feel because of the potential ethical implications of the decisions they’re called upon to make.  The concern isn’t just related to saying “no” in order to uphold the integrity of the policies and procedures of our institutions while seemingly ignoring the plight of students in need.  Unease also surrounds us when we say “yes” when we’ve already said “no” a thousand times before.  There’s also fear that by saying “yes” we’re opening the floodgates of compromise that will slowly erode the quality of our institutions and our reputations as well as setting precedent that will never allow us to say “no” again.  Are we being fair?  Are we advancing social justice?  Are we teaching students to comply with deadlines and policy restrictions?  Can we ever make exceptions to policy without entering a moral minefield?

The big picture

To answer those questions, it helps to take a step back and think about why exceptions to policy might be warranted in the first place and why you or your team have been empowered to decide when exceptions should be made.  We’re not just mechanical bureaucrats and our students are not just cogs in the wheel of progress.  Part of the reason exceptions need to be considered is because we’re dealing with both people and power.  People—our students—are multi-dimensional. Their lives tell a complex story that ultimately brought them to your institution, to your office, and ultimately to you.  The reason that they have come to you is because you hold institutional power. You have the responsibility (within the scope of your job, education, training and empowerment) to interpret both your policies and their situation to determine if the right course of action is to uphold the policy or make an exception that will further their growth and development as well as advance the mission of your institution.  No matter how carefully crafted our polices may be, they cannot fully account for all of the unique situations students may find themselves in that may not correspond to the concerns the policies are intended to address. 

A clear process 

So just how can we successfully navigate the moral issues that are associated with making exceptions to policy?  First, it helps to have a clear process in mind.  The Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University suggests a five-step process for making ethical decisions:  (1) recognize the ethical issue, (2) get the facts, (3) evaluate alternative actions, (4) make a decision and test it, and (5) act and reflect on the outcome.  The first step is usually not a problem.  We know we want to be fair and do right by our students and our institutions.  In the second step, we also typically bring a healthy skepticism.  We don’t simply believe everything a student says.  We take a critical look at the claims being presented and how well the related facts are documented.  It’s in the third step that things can get tricky.  On what basis do we judge the various alternative actions we might take? 

Taking a fresh look at the time-tested approaches to ethical reasoning may be helpful.  Utilitarianism frames an approach that seeks to provide the greatest good for the greatest number.  From this perspective the results are most important and your task is to weigh the possible benefit to the possible harm that can result from your decision.  For example, you may determine it is appropriate to waive a fee because the benefit to the student facing documented hardship outweighs the cost to the institution.  With another approach, known as deontology, the primary concern is to act on the basis of appropriate principles or rules regardless of the outcome.  A principle we may draw upon could be that students should not be penalized when they face extraordinary circumstances beyond their control.  Acting on this principle, you may decide to approve a late withdrawal for a student facing serious illness after the withdrawal deadline.  Similarly you may draw upon deontology to deny requests for exception based on the principle that all students should be treated the same. 

A third approach, known as virtue ethics, attempts to encompass concern for developing the habits that result in wise decisions and actions that further human flourishing. Operating from this perspective, you will be concerned about how your decisions are cultivating virtue within both yourself (your team or institution) and students.  Using this perspective, you might wrestle with questions such as these:  Would making this decision compromise your integrity?  Does it diminish your courage?  Does it deepen your compassion?  However, your concern will also be for the process of cultivating the student’s virtue.  Is the student taking responsibility for her past and future actions?  Does this action result in removing a challenge from a student that will help him grow in character if he faces inevitable consequences?  Will removing this policy barrier free the student to learn and make appropriate progress towards graduation?  By using virtue ethics as a basis for decision, you may approve allowing a student to return after suspension because she demonstrates maturity by taking responsibility for the actions of her younger self and can now communicate a clear plan of action that will ensure future success. 

Space in this article does not allow for an adequate exploration of these and other ethical approaches.  However, grappling with them over time and in various situations will help you become more adept at using them to make decisions (step four) and reflect on their outcomes (step five).  Through reflection and practice your capacity to make good exceptions to policy will grow as will your confidence that the decisions you’re making are avoiding moral minefields. 

 

References/further reading:

Johnson, C. E. (2007). Ethics in the workplace:  Tools and tactics for organizational transformation. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Kant, I. (1785/2005). Groundwork for the metaphysics of morals (T. K. Abbott, Trans.). In L. Denis (Ed.). Toronto, ON: Broadview Editions.

MacIntyre, A. (2007). After virtue (Third ed.). Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.

Categories :
  • AACRAO Connect
  • Leadership and Management
Tags :
Professional photo of Michael Santarosa.
Related people

Build Connections

High School - Build Connections


Attend a event

Our meetings, workshops, and institutes are designed instruct, educate and foster collaboration between professionals and institutions. Find one that works for you.

Learn More

Become an Advocate

Are you more civically minded? Advocate for higher education policies that you're passionate about on Capitol Hill. Meet your Congressional reps and state peers while exercising your political voice.

Learn More

Member Only Benefits

AACCRAO_Transcript-purple

AACRAO's weekly e-newsletter delivering policy and industry news

Member Login Required

Questions? Contact us at membership@aacrao.org or (202) 355-1040