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Academic Advising: Teaching Our Students to Be Independent Learners ~~~~~. Charlie L. Nutt, Ed. D. National Academic Advising Association Associate Director Kansas State University cnutt@ksu.edu.
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Academic Advising: Teaching Our Students to Be Independent Learners ~~~~~ Charlie L. Nutt, Ed. D. National Academic Advising Association Associate Director Kansas State University cnutt@ksu.edu
People will forget what you say. They will even forget what you do. But they never forget how you made them feel Maya Angelo
“Good advising may be the single most underestimated characteristic of a successful college experience.” Richard LightMaking the Most of College (2001)
“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 Student Success in College (2005)
“Advisors are interpreters who help students navigate their new world. As such, academic advisors have to make connections.” Nancy King 2005 Summer Institute on Academic Advising
Key Issues in Higher Education Globally • Time to Graduation • Retention/Persistence • Transferability • Assessment of Student Learning • Cost of Education • General Education Core • Value of Higher Education
Dec. 2004 – Pell Institute Study – What Institutions With Higher Than Expected Graduate Rates Have In Common: • High student participation in advising and counseling opportunities • Intentional Academic Planning • Educational innovations to assist students
July 2004 – Pell Institute Study Institutions Focused on Student Retention and Persistence: • Teach students how to effectively make decisions and maneuver the system • Teach students how to make decisions about career and/or majors • Teach students how to identify and utilize campus resources and assistance
Advising that contributes to the teaching and learning mission of the institution: Is a student-centered process Facilitates behavioral awareness and problem-solving, decision-making and evaluation skills Encourages both short-term and long-term goal-setting
Makes the students feel that they “matter” Stresses the shared responsibility between the student and the advisor, with an emphasis on the advisor helping the students to make decisions for themselves and teaching them the skills and knowledge they need make decisions and be successful.
Questioning Skills • Focus questions on the concerns of the students not on the concerns of the advisors • Use open-ended questions focused on the student, not on advisor -- • not “How can I help you” - instead “What do you want to talk about today? • not “What can I do for you today” - instead “What issues do you have about semester” • Closed-ended questions are used to gather vital information and are necessary -- but be aware they are indicators of your interest in only facts, not concerns or interests of the students
Referral Skills • all referrals must be based on the students’ needs, concerns, and life issues - not on the advisor’s own feelings or views • explain in a clear and open manner why the student should seek assistance from another source • advisor and student must joint develop a plan of action for the referral and expected results • provide all information to the student for the referral -- reason, possible results, location, telephone, email
Referral Skills • Assist student with making appointment by making phone call, walking student to referral source, etc. • ALWAYS set a time for a follow-up session on the outcome of the referral -- without this some students see no reason for following through on the referral as well as student believes referral was not important, unnecessary, or just a way to get him out of the advisor’s office
The questions we raise, the perceptions we share, the resources we suggest, the short-term decisions and long-range decisions we help them think through, all should aim to increase their capacity to take charge of their future. --Arthur Chickering