Job opening: Assistant Division Director
Salary: $140 074 - 175 093 per year
Published at: Jun 26 2024
Employment Type: Full-time
The Federal Judicial Center is the federal courts' agency for research and continuing education. Congress established the Center in 1967 as a separate organization within the federal judicial system at the request of the Judicial Conference of the United States. A nine-member board, chaired by the Chief Justice of the United States, determines its basic policies.
Duties
Within the Education Division, the FJC has an opening for an Assistant Division Director (ADD) to lead the Probation and Pretrial Services Education (PPSE) group. This group provides educational programs and resources for U.S. probation and pretrial services officers and their federal court system stakeholders. The Assistant Division Director reports to the Deputy Director for the Education Division. This position requires occasional overnight travel (approximately 15-20 days per year), and advance notice is given when travel is required. The Center does not pay for relocation expenses; however, Center employees receive reimbursement for all official business travel.
Who We Are
The PPSE group is composed of six people (including the ADD) and is one of five groups within the FJC Education Division (the others are Executive Education, Judicial & Legal Education, Multimedia Production, and Management and Professional Development Education). We are a mix of education specialists and attorneys, who serve as program managers responsible for program planning, design, development, and delivery, and program coordinators, who handle the administrative, financial, and logistical aspects of our programs. We develop, deliver, and evaluate professional education programs for U.S. probation and pretrial services officers and their federal court system stakeholders. Our program managers serve as trainers and facilitators alongside other faculty, such as U.S. probation and pretrial services officers, judges and court staff, and professors and other subject matter experts.
Our mission guides our work: We believe transformative education and training are essential to the administration of justice. We use proven instructional methods to inform, engage, and inspire the people we serve to reach individual and organizational excellence.
We consult with a probation and pretrial services education advisory committee comprised of U.S. probation and pretrial services officers in various roles. The committee suggests education needs and relevant topics, advises on priorities, assists with program execution, and helps to guide our efforts. Our programs include virtual workshops and webinars, multi-day in-person skill-building sessions, and regular coaching calls and follow-up, often over a year-long period. Last year, for example, we delivered 19 educational programs (9 national and 10 in-district) for a total of 832 participants. We also reached approximately 3,400 listeners with each episode of Off Paper: The FJC's Criminal Justice Podcast. PPSE members respond to training requests from courts, probation offices, and other related organizations.
Our strengths as a group include
A passion to serve U.S. probation and pretrial services officers with relevant and meaningful education and resources
A commitment to following the evidence to identify and meet our learners' needs, including understanding the nuances of their roles, the impact on the clients they serve, and the evolution of their professional development and growth
Dedication to providing holistic programs tailored for our clients that lead to meaningful and lasting behavior change
A strong sense of internal motivation and a bias toward action
Adaptability
Creativity
Collectively, we are a group of experienced professionals. Individually, we represent diverse backgrounds and viewpoints. The Center's current average employee tenure is almost 14 years. We believe people come here and stay because the mission is vital to our nation, the work is challenging and meaningful, the clients are engaged and supportive, and the culture is positive.
Who You Are
We are looking for a visionary leader and exemplary manager to guide us into the future with a continued emphasis on excellence, innovation, and impartiality in our competency-based programming. The ideal candidate is comfortable in the roles of leader, manager, advocate, diplomat, coach, mentor, advisor, and problem-solver.
We seek a leader who can
Support us in achieving our mission
Assess how effectively we are meeting the educational needs of our constituents
Collaborate with us to maintain our high standards for quality
Enhance our operations to run as smoothly as possible
Juggle responsibilities and help the group (individually and collectively) do the same
Value and grow our skills and capacity (individually and collectively)
Engage and exchange ideas with the team and amplify good ideas
Collaborate with others in the FJC, the Administrative Office of the United States Courts, the United States Sentencing Commission, the Courts, and various academic institutions
Qualifications
Mandatory Qualifications
Education:
An advanced degree in law, criminal justice, or a closely-related social science or experience at a level that would substitute for such a degree is required.
Experience:
Some combination of 7 years of teaching, designing, and hosting educational programming
Knowledge, regular use, and a commitment to applying the principles of adult education to create engaging, useful, lasting learning experiences
Minimum of 3 years in a supervisory capacity
Skills:
Excellent skills managing projects, people, and resources
Exceptional emotional intelligence, collaboration, and interpersonal skills
Strong technical, writing, and public speaking skills
Values:
Integrity, honesty, impartiality, discretion
Respect, diversity in its many forms, fairness, inclusion, collaboration, and collegiality
Growth, feedback, clarity, openness, and transparency
Excellence, curiosity, and innovation
Wellness and resilience at the organizational and individual levels
Desirable Qualifications
In addition to the mandatory qualifications, you're a strong candidate for this position if you possess a collection of some of the knowledge, skills, experience, and characteristics listed below. The list represents a range of possible qualifications, not a checklist that must be met. A strong candidate for this position can demonstrate proficiency in some combination of these areas:
Management Ability:
Ability to work cooperatively, collaboratively, and respectfully with people inside and outside the organization
Experience recruiting, hiring, onboarding, and providing training and professional development opportunities
Experience managing a team with multiple direct reports in on-site and remote environments
Experience developing, mentoring, and coaching group members
Experience assessing and improving the quality and utility of educational programs and resources, the processes for creating them, and the performance of faculty and staff who deliver them
Experience accomplishing goals within budget constraints and/or budget uncertainty
Ability to set clear goals and guide the team to excel
Experience building collaboration to boost productivity and success
Diplomatic skills to successfully navigate internal and external relationships
Organizational Culture:
Experience working in the courts or familiarity with the workings of the judiciary, preferably at the federal level doing probation and pretrial services work
Experience working in law, the courts, or law enforcement (e.g., as a U.S. probation or pretrial services officer, defender, prosecutor, investigator, law enforcement agent/officer, etc.), preferably at the federal level
Success working in a hierarchical environment where smart, talented high achievers serve other smart, talented high achievers
Experience organizing and facilitating problem-solving and decision-making meetings
Education Acumen:
A degree or certificate in adult education, instructional design, or similar
Substantial experience developing and implementing training needs assessments using a variety of methods
Skill in using a competency-based curriculum to design and deliver education
Experience with and commitment to applying the principles of adult education to create engaging, useful, lasting learning in both in-person and virtual environments
Experience measuring learning transfer for training programs in both the short and long term
Proficiency with educational technology used to design, develop, deliver, and assess training
Experience combining high- and low-tech tools to enhance and streamline processes, services, and programs
Ability to balance pedagogical needs, financial and staff constraints, and other relevant considerations to determine the optimal delivery method for content
Ability to think creatively about adult education in the judiciary context and support experimentation with new approaches
Experience with performing the logistics, planning, execution, and project management aspects of in-person and online training
Education
An advanced degree in law, criminal justice, or a closely-related social science or experience at a level that would substitute for such a degree is required.
Contacts
- Address Federal Judicial Center
Thurgood Marshall Federal Judiciary Building
One Columbus Circle, N.E.
Washington, DC 20002-8003
US
- Name: Elia Bendavid
- Email: [email protected]
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