Title: Online Academic Advising
1Online Academic Advising
- Mel Chastain, Ph.D.
- Director, Kansas Regents Educational
Communications Center - Interim Associate Vice Provost for Information
Technology - chastain_at_ksu.edu
2Kansas State University Synopsis
- K-State State of Kansas background facts
- Why academic advising?
- All academic advising is NOT the same
- Hastening the evolutionary process
- In search of common ground
- Flow diagram development
- Scenario development
- Finally a working model
3Kansas State University Brief Profile
- Land Grant Institution (founded 1863)
- 9 colleges 22,000 students 1,170 faculty
- 300 distance courses (200 with web-based
components) offered each semester - 5 bachelors degrees 9 masters 3 certificate
programs - 20,000 enrollments in off-campus credit courses
(5,000 head count, both resident distant
enrollees) - 750-800 faculty use KSOL. 85 of KSOL use is for
on-campus courses - Most annual growth figures are 25
4Higher Education in Kansas
Board of Regents - authority over all public
higher education
- Governance over
- 3 graduate level research universities
- 3 regional 4-year universities
- 1 municipal university
- 11 vocational/technical schools
- Coordination responsibilities for
- 19 community colleges
5Academic Advising at K-State
- KSU focus for LAAP Project
- At the heart of the advising process
- Provided diversity among LAAP Partners
- Seemed to be our strength
- However, you cant isolate one type of advising
- They each relate to the other
- Decisions made in one arena affect the others
6At K-State, All Academic Advising is NOT the Same
- There are differences based upon
- Discipline
- Requirements, sequence, performance, time, etc.
- Culture
- Expectations about reliability, maturity,
self-direction, motivation, etc. - Advisor type
- Full-time staff or faculty/researcher/advisor
7Full-time Staff / Faculty Advisor Differences
- Full-time staff advisor
- Process oriented
- Time restricted
- More circumspect for the uncertain advisee
- Faculty/researcher/advisor
- Discipline/application oriented
- Time enhanced
- Bimodal for the uncertain advisee
8However, this project has led us to (at least)
one universal truth
There is no real difference between academic
advising for the resident student and the distant
learner, because, increasingly, there is no real
difference between the resident student and the
distant learner.
9Hastening the Evolutionary Development of Online
Services
- Partnerships
- Matriculation agreements
- Grants
- Consultants
- Deadlines
We would have done it anyway, but this put a
fuse on it.
10In Search of Solutions
- Respect the differences, but concentrate on the
similarities - Attack the data base fiefdoms ()
- Use pictures to describe processes
- Select a small group of diverse but respected
advisors - Do the work, then let them correct it
11The Flow Diagram(Academic Advising at Kansas
State University)
12Unified Modeling Language
UML helps bridge the gap between subject matter
experts (SMEs) and software/hardware computer
professionals (geeks) Burnie Blakeley, IBM,
January, 2001
- Uses three components
- Context diagrams (people/system interfaces)
- Use Case Lists
- Scenarios
13Sample Scenario
14Modeling an Approach(Creating a do-able Model)
- Find the DATA SET common to most meaningful
advisor/student scenarios - At K-State, its the transcript
- Model a do-able electronic transcript that
answers 80 of the common questions posed to
academic advisors
15A Solution by the Numbers
- Does the desired information exist?
- If so, where is it? Will those who own the data
permit access? - Is it in a user-friendly format?
- How much data is needed for 80 of the decisions?
16A Solution by the Numbers
- Can we agree on that 80?
- Can the programmers create the software to
retrieve and present the desired report? - Is the end result simple and easy enough for ALL
to use?
17The Answers by the Numbers
- Student data exists in 17 distinct locations
many different administrators. - Most is in DARS (Degree Audit Reporting System)
- proprietary concerns about program access or
modification - extremely comprehensive, but text-only
(DOS-appearing) format - Administrators authorized middleware
interrogation of data base systems to produce a
consolidated, user-friendly report.
18The Answers by the Numbers
- Academic Advisors agreed on common core of
information to answer 80 of the most common
academic questions. - K-State Online programmers created the software
to retrieve and present the desired report. - Were determining now if the end result simple
and easy enough to use.
19The Common Academic Advising Data Sets
- Name, SSN, address, e-mail, home address, ACT
scores, photo, phone - Major/Option
- Requirements/Taken
- Electives (restricted free)
- Transfer courses accepted (that apply to degree)
- Transfer courses in limbo
- K-State GPA (by semester overall)
- University General Education Requirements
20Related Efforts
- Concentrate on the interactive PROCESS for any
key scenario between the advisor and a distant
learner. - At K-State, its how the advisor and learner
look at and discuss the transcript, deciding
what courses to take next - Technology solutions have as their objective the
duplication of the face-to-face dialog.
21Summary
- Combining the common DATA SET with the desired
PROCESS yields a do-able, measurable model with
which to test the proof-of-concept of online
academic advising. - At K-State, the most widely accepted platform for
combining the DATA SET with the desired PROCESS
is our proprietary course management system
K-State Online.
22Questions?
- Mel Chastain, Ph.D.
- Director, Kansas Regents Educational
Communications Center - Interim Associate Vice Provost for Information
Technology - Bob Dole Hall
- Kansas State University
- Manhattan, Kansas 66506-6902
- (785) 532-3112
- chastain_at_ksu.edu
23K-State Online and the Online Academic Advising
System
- Rob Caffey
- Director, Information Systems
- Division of Continuing Education
- Kansas State University
- Manhattan, Kansas 66506
- (785) 532-2719
- caffey_at_ksu.edu
Jennifer Bambach Multimedia Coordinator Division
of Continuing Education Kansas State
University Manhattan, Kansas 66506 (785) 532-5629
jbambach_at_ksu.edu
24Advising Using K-State Online
Please open Advising Online.ppt to see the demo