Academic Advising at the Intersection - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

Academic Advising at the Intersection

Description:

Student Retention and Degree Completion Concerns ... provides assistance mediating the dissonance between student expectations and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:17
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: usm53
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Academic Advising at the Intersection


1
Academic Advising at the Intersection
  • Dr. Susan M. Campbell
  • University of Southern Maine

2
The Context for Conversation
  • Education More Important than Ever
  • Changing Demographics
  • Resource Constraints
  • Student Retention and Degree Completion Concerns
  • Conversations about the Role of Academic Advising
    in Supporting Student Success
  • Conversations about Accountability

3
Shared Goal
  • Commitment to the Education of Students
  • Retention is a by-product of a good educational
    experience.
  • Vincent Tinto
  • Leaving College
  • 1993.

4
Shared Commitments
  • To the Whole Student
  • To the Recognition and Appreciation of Individual
    Differences and Diversity
  • To Facilitating Student Development, Success, and
    Learning
  • To Providing Quality Services to Meet Student
    Needs
  • To Providing Access and Opportunity

5
Shared BeliefAdvising as a Bridge
  • Personal tutoring academic advising can provide
    information about higher education processes,
    procedures and expectations.Personal tutoring
    can provide guidance and structure, especially in
    those early days.
  • Liz Thomas, Widening Participation and the
    Increased Need for Personal Tutoring, Personal
    Tutoring in Higher Education, 2006.

6
  • Academic Advising provides assistance mediating
    the dissonance between student expectations and
    the realities of the educational experience.
  • Habley, NASPA Journal, 1981

7
  • Advisors Aid Students in Understanding
  • the amount of time needed to study vs. their
    expectations
  • what a particular program of study or course
    involves vs. their perception
  • The college culture vs. their high school
    experience
  • Nancy King, Vice-President for Student Success,
    Kennesaw State University

8
Shared BeliefAdvising as Teaching
  • Higher learning provides an opportunity for
    developing persons to plan to achieve
    self-fulfilling lives. Teaching includes any
    experience that contributes to individual growth
    and that can be evaluated. The student should not
    be a passive receptacle of knowledge, but should
    share responsibility for learning with the
    teacher.
  • Crookston, 1972

9
  • Just as the university curriculum should be about
    more than knowledge and skills (Barnett and
    Coate, 2005), teaching involves engaging with
    students as persons rather than simply
    depositories of learning.
  • Bruce Macfarlane
  • The Academic Citizen
  • 2007

10
  • Advising is that part of teaching which stretches
    beyond instruction, beyond lectures and seminars.
    Its words reach students during moments of
    reflection when they are pondering the future and
    their place in it.
  • Berdahl
  • Educating the Whole Person
  • 1995

11
Shared BeliefAdvisor as Teacher
  • An excellent advisor does the same for
  • the students entire curriculum that
  • the excellent teacher does for one
  • course.
  • Marc Lowenstein, 2005

12
Academic Advising Promotes Retention
  • Good advising is one of the key conditions that
    promotes retention for it reflects an
    institutions commitment to the education of
    students.
  • Vincent Tinto
  • Taking Student Retention Seriously
    Retrieved April 24, 2007 from
    http//soeweb.syr.edu/Faculty/Vtinto/

13
  • What is clear from this researchis that the
    tutor academic advisor is the most significant
    actor in determining whether students persist
    (Gibbs, 2004).
  • Bruce Macfarlane
  • The Academic Citizen 2007

14
  • Advising is viewed as a way to connect students
    to the campus and help them feel that someone is
    looking out for them.
  • George Kuh (Indiana University
    Bloomington)
  • Student Success in
    College 2005

15
Advising and the College Experience
  • Two Dimensions of the College Experience
  • Student Behaviors
  • Institutional Conditions

16
Student Behaviors
  • What matters most is what students do and the
    effort they expend, not who they are

17
Institutional Conditions
  • Educationally effective institutions channel
    student energy toward the right activities

18
Engagement
  • The intersection of student behaviors and
    institutional conditions over which colleges and
    universities have at least marginal control (Kuh,
    et al, 2007)

19
Academic Advising at the Intersection
20
  • Academic Advising helps students
  • make sense of their experiences
  • derive meaning from their experiences
  • make decisions about their experiences

21
  • Academic Advisors have the opportunity and the
    responsibility to help focus student behavior
    toward the right activitiesthose that will
    enhance and support their learning and
    development.

22
  • Academic Advising is key to engagement.

23
NACADA Concept Statement on Academic Advising
  • Academic advising is integral to fulfilling the
    teaching and learning mission of higher
    education.
  • Through academic advising, students learn to
    become members of their higher education
    community, to think critically about their roles
    and responsibilities as students, and to prepare
    to be educated citizens of a democratic society.

24
  • Academic advising engages students beyond their
    own aspirations, while acknowledging their
    characteristics, values, and motivations as they
    enter, move through, and exit the institution.
  • NACADA Concept Statement on Academic
    Advising, 2006

25
  • Academic advising synthesizes and contextualizes
    students educational experiences within the
    frameworks of their aspirations, abilities and
    lives to extend learning beyond campus boundaries
    and timeframes.
  • NACADA Concept Statement on Academic
    Advising, 2006

26
Academic Advising
  • Is integral to fulfilling the teaching and
    learning mission of higher education.
  • Is a series of intentional interactions.
  • Has a curriculum, a pedagogy, and a set of
    student learning outcomes.

27
Academic Advising is Integral
  • Academic Advising is not just nice to have
  • Effective retention programs have come to
    understand that academic advising is at the very
    core of successful institutional efforts to
    educate and retain students.
  • Vincent Tinto
  • Leaving College Rethinking the Causes
  • and Cures of Student Attrition, 1993

28
  • Advising should be at the core of the
    institutions educational mission rather than
    layered on as a service.
  • Robert Berdahl
  • New Directions for Teaching
  • and Learning

29
Academic Advising is Intentional
  • Not Serendipitous
  • At the Intersection of Student Behaviors and
    Institutional Conditions
  • It is one of the key institutional conditions
    that supports student success

30
Key Institutional Conditions
  • High Expectations
  • Support
  • Academic Advising
  • Involvement
  • Student-Learning Focused
  • Vincent Tinto
  • Taking Student Retention Seriously Retri
    eved April 24, 2007 from http//soeweb.syr.edu/Fac
    ulty/Vtinto

31
Advising has a Curriculum
  • Academic advising promotes learning and
    development in students by encouraging
    experiences which lead to
  • intellectual and personal growth
  • the ability to communicate effectively
  • appropriate career choices
  • leadership development
  • the ability to work independently and
  • collaboratively
  • Council for the Advancement of
  • Standards in Higher Education

32
Advising has a Pedagogy
  • Actually, multiple pedagogies

33
Advising Has a Set of Student Learning Outcomes
  • While Contextually-Specific, among these are
  • To use complex information to set goals, reach
    decision, and achieve those goals
  • To craft a coherent educational plan
  • To articulate the meaning of higher education and
    the intent of the institutions curriculum
  • To assume responsibility for meeting academic
    program requirements
  • To behave as citizens who engage in the wider
    world around them
  • NACADA Concept Statement

34
Translating the Concept Statement into Practice
  • For Advisors
  • For Advising

35
Effective Advisors
  • Understand the purpose of academic advising and
    their roles in creating intentional contexts for
    student learning.
  • See themselves as critical links and part of a
    collective whole.
  • Understand those factors that are known to
    contribute to student persistence and success and
    translate those into practice.

36
Effective Advising Systems
  • Have a collectively developed and widely shared
    philosophy/mission for academic advising that
    links it to the teaching learning mission of
    the institution
  • Have clearly identified outcomes for student
    learning, derived from the philosophy/mission and
    linked to institutional goals, that guide the
    development of educational opportunities

37
Effective Advising Systems
  • Have clearly identified outcomes for advising
    delivery that inform professional development
  • Have systemic and systematic processes of
    assessment to inform and support changes in
    philosophy and practice
  • Have recognition reward structures that
    acknowledge the role of advising in student
    engagement

38
  • Advising IS teaching
  • and represents a
  • Key INTERSECTION in a Successful Student
    Experience

39
References
  • Astin, A. (1993) What Matters in College? Four
    Critical Years Revisited. San Franciso
    Jossey-Bass, publishers.
  • Berdahl, Robert O. (1995) Educating the Whole
    Person
  • Council for the Advancement of Standards. CAS
    Standards for Academic Advising Programs.
    Retrieved June 27, 2007 from http//www.nacada.ksu
    .edu/Clearinghouse/Research_Related/CASStandardsFo
    rAdvising.pdf
  • Crookston, (1972) Crookston, B. B. (1972). A
    developmental view of academic advising as
    teaching.
  • Journal of College Student Personnel, volume 13,
    pp. 12-17. 
  • Habley, W. (1981) NASPA Journal
  • Kuh, G.D., Kinzie, J., Schuh, Jo.H., Whitt, E.J.
    and Associates (2005) Student Success in
    College Creating conditions that Matter. San
    Franciso, Joseey-Bass, publishers.
  • Lewin, K (1997) Resolving Social Conflicts
    Field Theory in Social Science. Washngton, D.C.
    American Psychological Association.
  • Lowenstein, M. (Fall, 2005). If teaching is
    advising, what do advisors teach?
    www.nacada.ksu.edu/AAT/NW30_2.htm
  • Macfarlane, B. (2007). The Academic Citizen The
    virtue of Service in University Life. New York
    Routledge Publishing.
  • National Academic Advising Association.
    (2006). NACADA concept of academic advising.
    Retrieved June 27, 2007 from http//www.nacada.ksu
    .edu/Clearinghouse/AdvisingIssues/Concept-Advising
    .htm
  • Thomas, L and Hixenbaugh, P., eds. (2006)
    Personal Tutoring in Higher Education. Stoke on
    Trent, UK Trentham Books
  • Tinto, V (1993) Leaving College Rethinking the
    Causes and Cures of Student Attrition. San
    Francisco Jossey-Bass, publishers.
  • Tinto, V Taking Student Retention Seriously.
    Retrieved April 24, 2007 from http//soeweb.syr.ed
    u/Facuty/Vtinto/
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com