NUHelp Faculty and Staff Resource Guide

Page 1

www.northwestern.edu/nuhelp

Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) FERPA limits the disclosure of information from students’ “education records.” Education records include virtually all records maintained by an educational institution, in any format. Staff and faculty may share information with “school officials” who have “legitimate educational interests” in the information.

Common questions and answers: “May I disclose personal knowledge and impressions about a student based on my personal interactions with a student?” Yes. FERPA applies only to information derived from student education records, and not to personal knowledge derived from direct, personal experience with a student.

“May information from a student’s education record be disclosed to protect health or safety?” Yes. FERPA permits the disclosure of information from student education records to appropriate parties inside or outside of Northwestern in connection with an emergency if knowledge of the information is necessary to protect the health or safety of the student or other individuals.

Employee Assistance Program information: NU Life Matters NU Life Matters is a network of services, including short-term counseling, to help staff, faculty and household family members cope with everyday life issues. NU Life Matters provides staff and faculty with counseling sessions with a local, licensed counselor and unlimited 24/7 telephonic counseling.

For assistance contact 855.547.1851, and go to northwestern.edu/hr/work-life/nu-life-matters for username and password information for online assistance.

Illness Policy / Missed Class

Students who miss class or exams for reasons of illness (other than a final examinations) should:

• Notify their instructor(s) at the time of the illness and arrange for make-up work. • Call 847.491.2204 for an appointment at the Health Service at the time of the illness. • If students are seen for medical care outside the Health Service, they should contact the Health Service and submit records of care provided (not just a doctor’s “excuse note”) for submission into their university health record. • Students will sign a Release of Confidential Information form which permits the Health Service to share information about their illness to NU academic and Dean of Students Office staff. • Professors will make a final determination about absences in their classes.

Health Service does not write “excuse notes,” but will verify that students have been seen for a medical problem if students have signed a Release of Confidential Information form for Student Affairs and academic staff can then contact the Health Service at 847.491.2204. For missed final exam policy please see the Health Service website, Medical Excuse Policy: northwestern.edu/healthservice-evanston/ administrative-services/medical-excuse-policy

DIVISION OF

STUDENT AFFAIRS

Education and Training Resources Question Persuade Refer (QPR) for suicide prevention Call CAPS Training on crisis intervention with distressed students Call CAPS Active Shooter Call NUPD

Step Up Bystander Intervention Training Please email inclusion@northwestern.edu Consultation Call Dean of Students Office, CAPS, AccessibleNU, academic programs, or NUPD/Director of Threat Assessment

Bienen: 847.491 .3818 SESP: 847.491 .4663 Communications: 847.491 .7214 Medill: 847.491 .2060 TGS: 847.491 .5279 McCormick: 847. 491 . 7379 WCAS:

847.491.8430

Call Student Assistance & Support Services (SASS)

WCAS Dean’s office: 847.491.7560

Late drop, withdrawal, incomplete or academic standing matters Advising office: 847.491.8916

Academic performance concerns, lack of response, excessive classes missed

Call Academic deans or advisers

Personal tragedy or significant health or mental health concern that impacts a student’s ability to be successful at NU. Multiple or particularly complex issues that impede a student’s success and may require contact with multiple campus offices. Possible safety check needed.

Personal Crisis or Community Distress 847.491.4582

Call Office of Student Conduct Disruptive behavior that endangers the peace of the class, residence hall or other campus locations. Any behavior that is in violation of the Student Code of Conduct.

Disruptive or Inappropriate Behavior

Missing multiple classes or assignments, poor academic performance, lack of response to emails or other forms of outreach, student is seeking to withdraw or has academic questions/concerns.

Academic Difficulty

Call Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS)

NUhelp

847.491.2151 daytime and after hours

northwestern.edu/nuhelp

847.491. 8430 daytime and after hours

Call Dean of Students

A student who appears sad, anxious, irritable, lacks motivation, appears hopeless or possibly suicidal.

Mental Health Concern

Other or Not Sure

FOR NON-EMERGENCY CRITICAL SITUATIONS Health Services: 847.491.8100 (Daytime and after hours) CARE: 847.491.2054 NUhelp Report a concern: northwestern.edu/nuhelp

CALL 911 CALL NUPD 847.491.3456

or bit.ly/NUReportSexualMisconduct

Conduct Office: 847.491.4582 (8:30AM to 5:00PM M-F) Report Sexual Misconduct: 847.491.4582 (Deputy Title IX Coordinator)

Student in a crisis/urgent situation. A person whose conduct is markedly bizarre, disruptive, and dangerous. A person issues, verbal or physical, threats or active threats of suicide, and a lack of immediate intervention could result in harm.

weekends and holidays)

Dean on Call: 847.467.3022 (After 5:00PM on business days,

GUIDE RESOURCE NUhelp FACULTY/ STAFF

Dean of Students Office: 847.491.8430 (8:30AM to 5:00PM M-F) CAPS: 847.491.2151 (Daytime and after hours) NUPD: 847.491.3456

Phone Numbers

FOR EMERGENCIES

Important


Signs of Distress When students display multiple indicators of distress over time, it is indication that student likely needs intervention or support.

Key Programs

Safety Risk Indicators:

AccessibleNU (ANU)

CARE

CARE provides free, confidential support and advocacy services to survivors, and friends of survivors, of sexual violence, relationship violence and stalking. CARE also offers prevention programs and trainings, as well as sexual health consultations; contact CARE to get help, get involved, and get information. See how to report sexual assault through Title IX in the section that follows, and guidelines on how to talk with survivors of sexual assault below:

633 Emerson, 3rd Floor 847.491 .2054

ANU coordinates testing and other accommodations for students at all stages of their academic career who have long-term disabilities and related conditions such as learning disabilities, diagnosed psychological conditions, and chronic health conditions. If a student about whom you are concerned is registered with ANU, please contact ANU at 847.467.5530, as staff can provide preliminary assistance and support. ANU is not staffed to assist when students are in an acute state of crisis or sustain a short-term injury or illness (such situations would likely include a referral to CAPS, Health Service, or SASS).

2122 Sheridan, Suite 130 847.467.5530

How to talk to survivors of sexual assault: • Listen. Give the survivor your complete attention. Try not to interrupt or discuss your personal history. • Support. Survivors are often met with skepticism or disbelief. Offering nonjudgmental support and acknowledging the feelings of the survivor can help create a safe space for them to process the next steps. • Refer. You do not have to have all of the answers, and it is not your responsibility to fix the problem or determine if an assault occurred. An important part of being helpful to a survivor is to provide them with information about options and resources.

Common concerns managed by ANU include: • Individualized work with students on academic strategies, self-advocacy skills, and implementation of assistive technology • Guidance regarding implementation of accommodations as they apply to a specific course, extracurricular activity, or campus event (including activity relocation if needed) • Exam proctoring for Evanston Campus professors with fewer than 4 ANU students in their courses and for students with more complex testing accommodations (e.g., use of a computer) • Outreach, training, and guidance on making courses (especially online), activities, and websites more universally designed and accessible

Title IX

See a full list of Coordinators, office locations, and contact info at bit.ly/TITLEIX

Student Assistance and Support Services (SASS)

SASS works individually with students who are experiencing significant life events or crises that require a coordinated intervention and plan to overcome obstacles to success at Northwestern. SASS helps students navigate Northwestern by working with individually with students, partnering with families, academic programs, financial aid, community providers and other NU offices to support students through crises. You can refer students to the SASS program or consult with one of the Deans in the SASS program by calling the Dean of Students Office.

Scott Hall, lower level 847.491.8430

CAPS

CAPS serves as the primary mental health service for students at Northwestern University with offices on both the Evanston and Chicago campuses. CAPS provides a set of core services, including clinical services, educational workshops, and consultation with faculty, staff, and parents. CAPS offers brief mental health services to full-time matriculated students, and there is no charge for services. To make an appointment or to consult with a CAPS professional, call 847.491.2151. CAPS also has mental health professionals on-call after business hours and on weekends to provide consultation via telephone. CAPS’s hours are 8:30AM to 5:00PM, Monday through Friday.

633 Emerson, 2nd Floor 847.491 .2151

Office of Student Conduct

The Office of Student Conduct is responsible for maintaining the Northwestern Student Code of Conduct and for resolving all nonacademic student conduct matters. The Student Code of Conduct is the primary policy document for students at Northwestern. A copy can be found in the Student Handbook: bit.ly/NUStudentHandbook. If you experience student behavior that you believe is a violation of the Student Code of Conduct, please report the concern to the Office of Student Conduct online at bit.ly/NUStudentConductReports or by contacting the Conduct Office.

Scott Hall, Room 035 847.491 .4582

Common concerns managed by SASS include: • • • • •

Medical leave of absence and reinstatement Significant health or mental health crisis Personal crisis or loss Safety checks for students of concern Post hospitalization care and treatment plans

Behavioral Consultation Team (BCT)

NU does not tolerate acts or threats of violence committed by or against employees, faculty, students, visitors or other third parties on University owned, controlled, or leased properties in connection with University events or programs. If you are in receipt of information about any potential threats or acts of violence, or are concerned about any potential person whose behavior seems threatening, please make a referral to the BCT. Call NUPD at 847.491.3456 and indicate that you need to make a report to the Director of Threat Assessment. You can also submit a concern at bit.ly/wildcatsaware, and more information can be found at www.northwestern.edu/up/bct. You should expect follow up within one business day. If there is an imminent safety concern, please contact NUPD.

NUPD at 847.491.3456

• Direct statements indicating distress • Angry or hostile outbursts, yelling or aggressive comments • More withdrawn OR more animate than usual • Expressions of hopelessness or worthlessness; crying or tearfulness • Expressions of severe anxiety or irritability

or behaviors

Physical Indicators:

• Deterioration in physical appearance or personal hygiene • Excessive fatigue, exhaustion; falling asleep in class repeatedly • Visible weight changes • Noticeable cuts, bruises or burns • Disorganized speech, rapid or slurred speech, mental confusion • Unusual inability to make eye contact • Appears drunk or high

Academic Indicators:

• Repeated absences/missed meetings • Missing assignments • Deterioration in quality of work • Extreme disorganization/erratic performance • Disturbing writing or references to violence or suicide • Continual seeking of academic flexibility (extensions, make-up exams) • Patterns of perfectionism • Overblown or disproportionate response to grades

How to Help Responding to Students in Distress - Action Steps

First determine if your concern is an EMERGENCY, if URGENT intervention is needed, or if the concern is NOT URGENT

STEP 1 | IF NOT URGENT, CONSULT The front page of this folder as well as the wallet insert provides numbers for consultation depending on concern. When in doubt, consult!

STEP 2 | MAKE CONTACT. EMERGENCY: If you believe that you and or someone else may be in any kind of immediate physical danger at any time, call 911 or NUPD at 847.491.3456

URGENT: Call CAPS (ask to speak to the crisis worker) or the Dean of Students office for consultation if you believe a student has a serious need for help now but no one is in immediate danger. If the student is present, tell the student you would like to help and need to get guidance from someone more knowledgeable. Note: You may choose to walk a student to CAPS for a crisis appointment during business hours. NUPD can assist with transportation if needed.

MAKE A REPORT

You are not expected to take on the role of counselor. You need only listen, care and offer referral information.

STEP 3 | REFER. Explain the limitations of your knowledge and experience. You can be clear that referral does not mean that you are not interested and don’t care, rather that you want to get the student help/support they need.

STEP 4 | REPORT. Depending on the nature of the concern, consider making a report to the Dean of Students office, CAPS or the Title IX office in case of mandatory sexual misconduct reports. −− NUhelp Community Concerns Report Form −− Hate and Bias Report Form −− Sexual Misconduct Reporting Form

THINGS TO CONSIDER

• Point out specifics you • • •

have observed, (“I’ve noticed lately…”) Listen attentively and encourage the student to talk, (“Tell me more about that…”) Ask the student if they are seeking any help currently or what they believe might be helpful to them. Avoid making promises of confidentiality. Confidentiality cannot be kept when a student is making threatening statements about themselves or others or in instances of mandatory Title IX reporting. You can tell a student you will respect their privacy to the extent possible.

HELPING STUDENTS IN DISTRESS

Every employee (including all faculty and staff) is required to report all allegations/concerns of sexual misconduct of which they become aware. This includes sexual assault, stalking, dating and domestic violence, sexual harassment, and sexual exploitation. Any time a student discloses to you that they have been the victim of sexual misconduct, or that they are aware of sexual misconduct that other Northwestern students have experienced, you are required to immediately make a Deputy Title IX Coordinator aware. You can report information by contacting a Deputy Title IX Coordinator in the Office of Student Conduct at 847.467.6571 or by reporting the information through EthicsPoint or through the online report form: bit.ly/NUReportSexualMisconduct.

Behavioral and Emotional Indicators:

• Written or verbal statements that mention despair, suicide or death • Severe hopelessness, depression, isolation and withdrawal • Aggressive and threatening statements


Signs of Distress When students display multiple indicators of distress over time, it is indication that student likely needs intervention or support.

Key Programs

Safety Risk Indicators:

AccessibleNU (ANU)

CARE

CARE provides free, confidential support and advocacy services to survivors, and friends of survivors, of sexual violence, relationship violence and stalking. CARE also offers prevention programs and trainings, as well as sexual health consultations; contact CARE to get help, get involved, and get information. See how to report sexual assault through Title IX in the section that follows, and guidelines on how to talk with survivors of sexual assault below:

633 Emerson, 3rd Floor 847.491 .2054

ANU coordinates testing and other accommodations for students at all stages of their academic career who have long-term disabilities and related conditions such as learning disabilities, diagnosed psychological conditions, and chronic health conditions. If a student about whom you are concerned is registered with ANU, please contact ANU at 847.467.5530, as staff can provide preliminary assistance and support. ANU is not staffed to assist when students are in an acute state of crisis or sustain a short-term injury or illness (such situations would likely include a referral to CAPS, Health Service, or SASS).

2122 Sheridan, Suite 130 847.467.5530

How to talk to survivors of sexual assault: • Listen. Give the survivor your complete attention. Try not to interrupt or discuss your personal history. • Support. Survivors are often met with skepticism or disbelief. Offering nonjudgmental support and acknowledging the feelings of the survivor can help create a safe space for them to process the next steps. • Refer. You do not have to have all of the answers, and it is not your responsibility to fix the problem or determine if an assault occurred. An important part of being helpful to a survivor is to provide them with information about options and resources.

Common concerns managed by ANU include: • Individualized work with students on academic strategies, self-advocacy skills, and implementation of assistive technology • Guidance regarding implementation of accommodations as they apply to a specific course, extracurricular activity, or campus event (including activity relocation if needed) • Exam proctoring for Evanston Campus professors with fewer than 4 ANU students in their courses and for students with more complex testing accommodations (e.g., use of a computer) • Outreach, training, and guidance on making courses (especially online), activities, and websites more universally designed and accessible

Title IX

See a full list of Coordinators, office locations, and contact info at bit.ly/TITLEIX

Student Assistance and Support Services (SASS)

SASS works individually with students who are experiencing significant life events or crises that require a coordinated intervention and plan to overcome obstacles to success at Northwestern. SASS helps students navigate Northwestern by working with individually with students, partnering with families, academic programs, financial aid, community providers and other NU offices to support students through crises. You can refer students to the SASS program or consult with one of the Deans in the SASS program by calling the Dean of Students Office.

Scott Hall, lower level 847.491.8430

CAPS

CAPS serves as the primary mental health service for students at Northwestern University with offices on both the Evanston and Chicago campuses. CAPS provides a set of core services, including clinical services, educational workshops, and consultation with faculty, staff, and parents. CAPS offers brief mental health services to full-time matriculated students, and there is no charge for services. To make an appointment or to consult with a CAPS professional, call 847.491.2151. CAPS also has mental health professionals on-call after business hours and on weekends to provide consultation via telephone. CAPS’s hours are 8:30AM to 5:00PM, Monday through Friday.

633 Emerson, 2nd Floor 847.491 .2151

Office of Student Conduct

The Office of Student Conduct is responsible for maintaining the Northwestern Student Code of Conduct and for resolving all nonacademic student conduct matters. The Student Code of Conduct is the primary policy document for students at Northwestern. A copy can be found in the Student Handbook: bit.ly/NUStudentHandbook. If you experience student behavior that you believe is a violation of the Student Code of Conduct, please report the concern to the Office of Student Conduct online at bit.ly/NUStudentConductReports or by contacting the Conduct Office.

Scott Hall, Room 035 847.491 .4582

Common concerns managed by SASS include: • • • • •

Medical leave of absence and reinstatement Significant health or mental health crisis Personal crisis or loss Safety checks for students of concern Post hospitalization care and treatment plans

Behavioral Consultation Team (BCT)

NU does not tolerate acts or threats of violence committed by or against employees, faculty, students, visitors or other third parties on University owned, controlled, or leased properties in connection with University events or programs. If you are in receipt of information about any potential threats or acts of violence, or are concerned about any potential person whose behavior seems threatening, please make a referral to the BCT. Call NUPD at 847.491.3456 and indicate that you need to make a report to the Director of Threat Assessment. You can also submit a concern at bit.ly/wildcatsaware, and more information can be found at www.northwestern.edu/up/bct. You should expect follow up within one business day. If there is an imminent safety concern, please contact NUPD.

NUPD at 847.491.3456

• Direct statements indicating distress • Angry or hostile outbursts, yelling or aggressive comments • More withdrawn OR more animate than usual • Expressions of hopelessness or worthlessness; crying or tearfulness • Expressions of severe anxiety or irritability

or behaviors

Physical Indicators:

• Deterioration in physical appearance or personal hygiene • Excessive fatigue, exhaustion; falling asleep in class repeatedly • Visible weight changes • Noticeable cuts, bruises or burns • Disorganized speech, rapid or slurred speech, mental confusion • Unusual inability to make eye contact • Appears drunk or high

Academic Indicators:

• Repeated absences/missed meetings • Missing assignments • Deterioration in quality of work • Extreme disorganization/erratic performance • Disturbing writing or references to violence or suicide • Continual seeking of academic flexibility (extensions, make-up exams) • Patterns of perfectionism • Overblown or disproportionate response to grades

How to Help Responding to Students in Distress - Action Steps

First determine if your concern is an EMERGENCY, if URGENT intervention is needed, or if the concern is NOT URGENT

STEP 1 | IF NOT URGENT, CONSULT The front page of this folder as well as the wallet insert provides numbers for consultation depending on concern. When in doubt, consult!

STEP 2 | MAKE CONTACT. EMERGENCY: If you believe that you and or someone else may be in any kind of immediate physical danger at any time, call 911 or NUPD at 847.491.3456

URGENT: Call CAPS (ask to speak to the crisis worker) or the Dean of Students office for consultation if you believe a student has a serious need for help now but no one is in immediate danger. If the student is present, tell the student you would like to help and need to get guidance from someone more knowledgeable. Note: You may choose to walk a student to CAPS for a crisis appointment during business hours. NUPD can assist with transportation if needed.

MAKE A REPORT

You are not expected to take on the role of counselor. You need only listen, care and offer referral information.

STEP 3 | REFER. Explain the limitations of your knowledge and experience. You can be clear that referral does not mean that you are not interested and don’t care, rather that you want to get the student help/support they need.

STEP 4 | REPORT. Depending on the nature of the concern, consider making a report to the Dean of Students office, CAPS or the Title IX office in case of mandatory sexual misconduct reports. −− NUhelp Community Concerns Report Form −− Hate and Bias Report Form −− Sexual Misconduct Reporting Form

THINGS TO CONSIDER

• Point out specifics you • • •

have observed, (“I’ve noticed lately…”) Listen attentively and encourage the student to talk, (“Tell me more about that…”) Ask the student if they are seeking any help currently or what they believe might be helpful to them. Avoid making promises of confidentiality. Confidentiality cannot be kept when a student is making threatening statements about themselves or others or in instances of mandatory Title IX reporting. You can tell a student you will respect their privacy to the extent possible.

HELPING STUDENTS IN DISTRESS

Every employee (including all faculty and staff) is required to report all allegations/concerns of sexual misconduct of which they become aware. This includes sexual assault, stalking, dating and domestic violence, sexual harassment, and sexual exploitation. Any time a student discloses to you that they have been the victim of sexual misconduct, or that they are aware of sexual misconduct that other Northwestern students have experienced, you are required to immediately make a Deputy Title IX Coordinator aware. You can report information by contacting a Deputy Title IX Coordinator in the Office of Student Conduct at 847.467.6571 or by reporting the information through EthicsPoint or through the online report form: bit.ly/NUReportSexualMisconduct.

Behavioral and Emotional Indicators:

• Written or verbal statements that mention despair, suicide or death • Severe hopelessness, depression, isolation and withdrawal • Aggressive and threatening statements


www.northwestern.edu/nuhelp

Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) FERPA limits the disclosure of information from students’ “education records.” Education records include virtually all records maintained by an educational institution, in any format. Staff and faculty may share information with “school officials” who have “legitimate educational interests” in the information.

Common questions and answers:

Students who miss class or exams for reasons of illness (other than a final examinations) should:

Yes. FERPA applies only to information derived from student education records, and not to personal knowledge derived from direct, personal experience with a student.

Yes. FERPA permits the disclosure of information from student education records to appropriate parties inside or outside of Northwestern in connection with an emergency if knowledge of the information is necessary to protect the health or safety of the student or other individuals.

For assistance contact 855.547.1851, and go to northwestern.edu/hr/work-life/nu-life-matters for username and password information for online assistance.

NU Life Matters is a network of services, including short-term counseling, to help staff, faculty and household family members cope with everyday life issues. NU Life Matters provides staff and faculty with counseling sessions with a local, licensed counselor and unlimited 24/7 telephonic counseling.

Illness Policy / Missed Class

“May I disclose personal knowledge and impressions about a student based on my personal interactions with a student?”

“May information from a student’s education record be disclosed to protect health or safety?”

Employee Assistance Program information: NU Life Matters

• Notify their instructor(s) at the time of the illness and arrange for make-up work. • Call 847.491.2204 for an appointment at the Health Service at the time of the illness. • If students are seen for medical care outside the Health Service, they should contact the Health Service and submit records of care provided (not just a doctor’s “excuse note”) for submission into their university health record. • Students will sign a Release of Confidential Information form which permits the Health Service to share information about their illness to NU academic and Dean of Students Office staff. • Professors will make a final determination about absences in their classes.

Health Service does not write “excuse notes,” but will verify that students have been seen for a medical problem if students have signed a Release of Confidential Information form for Student Affairs and academic staff can then contact the Health Service at 847.491.2204. For missed final exam policy please see the Health Service website, Medical Excuse Policy: northwestern.edu/healthservice-evanston/ administrative-services/medical-excuse-policy

DIVISION OF

STUDENT AFFAIRS

Education and Training Resources Question Persuade Refer (QPR) for suicide prevention Call CAPS Training on crisis intervention with distressed students Call CAPS Active Shooter Call NUPD

Step Up Bystander Intervention Training Please email inclusion@northwestern.edu Consultation Call Dean of Students Office, CAPS, AccessibleNU, academic programs, or NUPD/Director of Threat Assessment

WCAS Dean’s office: 847.491.7560

Bienen: 847.491 .3818 SESP: 847.491 .4663 Communications: 847.491 .7214 Medill: 847.491 .2060 TGS: 847.491 .5279 McCormick: 847. 491 . 7379 WCAS:

847.491.8430

Call Student Assistance & Support Services (SASS)

Late drop, withdrawal, incomplete or academic standing matters Advising office: 847.491.8916

Academic performance concerns, lack of response, excessive classes missed

Call Academic deans or advisers

Personal tragedy or significant health or mental health concern that impacts a student’s ability to be successful at NU. Multiple or particularly complex issues that impede a student’s success and may require contact with multiple campus offices. Possible safety check needed.

Missing multiple classes or assignments, poor academic performance, lack of response to emails or other forms of outreach, student is seeking to withdraw or has academic questions/concerns.

Academic Difficulty

Personal Crisis or Community Distress 847.491.4582

Call Office of Student Conduct Disruptive behavior that endangers the peace of the class, residence hall or other campus locations. Any behavior that is in violation of the Student Code of Conduct.

northwestern.edu/nuhelp

847.491.2151 daytime and after hours

NUhelp

Call Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) A student who appears sad, anxious, irritable, lacks motivation, appears hopeless or possibly suicidal.

Disruptive or Inappropriate Behavior

Mental Health Concern

847.491. 8430 daytime and after hours

Call Dean of Students

Other or Not Sure

FOR NON-EMERGENCY CRITICAL SITUATIONS Health Services: 847.491.8100 (Daytime and after hours) CARE: 847.491.2054 NUhelp Report a concern: northwestern.edu/nuhelp or bit.ly/NUReportSexualMisconduct

Conduct Office: 847.491.4582 (8:30AM to 5:00PM M-F) Report Sexual Misconduct: 847.491.4582 (Deputy Title IX Coordinator) weekends and holidays)

Dean on Call: 847.467.3022 (After 5:00PM on business days,

GUIDE RESOURCE NUhelp FACULTY/ STAFF

Dean of Students Office: 847.491.8430 (8:30AM to 5:00PM M-F) CAPS: 847.491.2151 (Daytime and after hours) NUPD: 847.491.3456

Phone Numbers Important

CALL 911 CALL NUPD 847.491.3456

Student in a crisis/urgent situation. A person whose conduct is markedly bizarre, disruptive, and dangerous. A person issues, verbal or physical, threats or active threats of suicide, and a lack of immediate intervention could result in harm.

FOR EMERGENCIES


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