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Why
Do Assessment of Academic Advising? (Part 1)
Susan
Campbell, Chair, NACADA Assessment Institute Advisory
Board
This
October, the Council for the Advancement of Standards in Higher
Education (CAS) will give final review to updated academic advising
standards that require the assessment of academic advising on our
campuses and specifically the development of student learning outcomes.
This should come as no surprise to those who have attended one or
more of the NACADA Summer, Administrators’,
or Assessment Institutes, where we have discussed
the importance of assessment in academic advising. Not only must
we assess academic advising to respond to external notions of accountability,
e.g., accreditation, CAS Standards, etc., but we must assess in
order to gather evidence to make improvements to our programs.
More importantly, and drawing from the work of Peggy Maki (2004),
we must engage in assessment to understand how and what students
are learning through their involvement in their academic advising
experiences. The evidence we gather for understanding should
then be used to support improvements in the academic advising process
and student learning. Let’s look a bit more closely
at assessment in academic advising and explore three questions:
What do we assess in academic advising? What are the
steps involved in the assessment of academic advising?
And, finally, is it worth it? [Editor’s
note: The first of these three questions will be addressed
in this piece. The final two will be discussed in Part 2, in the
December edition.]
What
do we assess in academic advising? Assessment in
academic advising is really about:
- Developing consensus around our collective
understandings of academic advising and expectations of student
learning;
- Gathering evidence so we can understand
student learning and the delivery of academic advising; and
- Using evidence to support improvements
in the advising process that will contribute to improvements in
student learning.
Let’s
explore these a bit more. One of the most important reasons
for engaging in assessment in academic advising is to develop consensus
– through collective conversations – about
what academic advising is and what advising is not. In the
absence of dialog to clarify meaning, we each create our own in
order to inform and guide our behavior. When we engage in
conversation, assumptions about meanings are affirmed or discarded,
and what emerges is a shared understanding of academic advising
within the context of our college or university. These collective
understandings of academic advising become codified through the
development of values, vision, mission and goal statements that
are essential to the assessment process. Our conversations
provide opportunities to affirm academic advising as part of a teaching
and learning paradigm which, in turn, guide the development of student
learning outcomes and advisor outcomes.
There
are two dimensions to assessment in academic advising. These
dimensions relate to expectations regarding student learning
and expectations within the advising process.
At the program level, learning outcomes identify
the general parameters for learning, that is, what we expect students
and academic advisors to know, be able to do, and value/appreciate
as a result of participating in the academic advising experience.
While not directly measurable, programmatic outcomes
flow naturally from the values, vision, mission and goals for the
academic advising program and serve to guide the development of
more specific learning outcomes for students and academic advisors
that are measurable because they are expressed in behavioral terms.
At the student level, learning outcomes reflect what we expect students
to demonstrate they know, are able to do, and value/appreciate
as a result of participating in the academic advising experience.
Confused? Perhaps a simple example will help. At
the programmatic level, a learning outcome might be that “Students
and academic advisors will understand the nature and importance
of academic advising to the educational experience.”
The question becomes “what does a student need to demonstrate
they know, are able to do, or value/appreciate in relationship to
this programmatic outcome?” At the student level,
this outcome takes on behavioral dimensions, such as “Students
will be able to describe how academic advising has contributed to
their educational experience.” Evidence of student
learning could perhaps be gathered through focus groups, surveys,
and other evaluation tools, such as those used in specific courses
or on an institution-wide basis.
Learning
outcomes for the advising process are anchored in the academic advisor
and reflect what we expect advisors to demonstrate they know, are
able to do, and value/appreciate in the context of the academic
advising process. Extending the previous example, an advisor
outcome might be, “Academic advisors will be able to articulate
how academic advising contributes to student learning and the overall
student experience.” These outcomes can be (and ought
to be) used to inform the design of professional development experiences;
for if we expect advisors to demonstrate a set of knowledge, skills,
and values related to academic advising, as with students, we need
to provide advisors with the opportunities to learn what we expect.
These outcomes can also inform the performance evaluation process
in that they delineate knowledge and behaviors associated with being
an effective academic advisor.
Ultimately,
assessment is about understanding and improving. In this regard,
the assessment process provides a systematic way through which information
about student learning and program effectiveness can be obtained.
Done in the collective and continuous way intended, the assessment
process provides a systemic way to use that information to support
improvements in student learning and the advising process.
In the end, assessment is systematic, systemic, and relational;
there are steps to the process; the process is intentional in the
gathering of evidence to support improvement in learning and process;
and all of the steps within the process are inextricably intertwined.
Susan
Campbell
University of Southern Maine
(207) 780-4547
scamp@usm.maine.edu
Reference
Maki,
Peggy L. (2004). Assessing for Learning: Building a Sustainable
Commitment Across the Institution. Sterling VA Stylus Publishing.
Editor’s
note: Stay tuned for more on this topic from Susan in our
December edition! But, in the meantime, begin planning now to attend
the Assessment of Academic Advising Institute in
Clearwater Beach, Florida on February 8-10, 2006. Visit http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/AssessmentInst/index.htm
for more information.
Think
Big….Think Bold: The Importance of Our Work
Eric White , President, NACADA
I find myself at this time more than halfway through my year long
presidency. You have already elected a new president (Jo
Anne Huber from the University of Texas-Austin) to take
office in October at the end of our National Conference in Las Vegas,
and the editor of Academic Advising Today tells
me that this is my last column as president. The natural tendency
might be to do some sort of reflection on the past year, but I think
I will reserve that for another forum. Suffice it to say that NACADA
continues to grow in numbers (we have now exceeded 8200 members),
and we are looking forward to a capacity crowd in Las Vegas.
I would prefer to look forward to what I see are some of the issues
that are affecting higher education and, consequently, academic
advising. They will be presented in no particular order of importance.
In fact, they are all important! Nor can I assume that I have “covered
the waterfront.”
I have been following a discussion on ACADV related to the current
crop of parents that we as advisors meet and deal with on a regular
basis. For those of you who are not part of ACADV and enjoy being
on e-discussion lists, I invite you to sign up. You can do that
via the NACADA web page (http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/list
serve/index.htm). For those of you who have missed the discussion,
it should be available in the ACADV archives.
As the cliché goes, “you must have been living under
a rock” if you can’t figure out what this discussion
of parents is all about. It probably will take a sociologist among
us to determine just what the cause of this phenomenon is and how
long it might last, but right now we advisors, who are often the
very first people to meet new students and their families as they
enter our institutions, must deal with the realities as we find
them. This is a time for us to understand these parents and the
context in which they are functioning, not to pass judgment, but
to help educate them as much as we are here to educate their children.
So, in a sense, we have a new clientele.
To perhaps explain some of this, just recently a press release from
Penn State came in from an electronic news wire. The first paragraph
reads: “Over the past two generations, the marketplace
forces in higher education have resulted in the evolution of college
students into consumers, affecting the nature of learning and favoring
affluent students who can afford academic resources, said a Penn
State researcher.”
I’m sure this doesn’t come as much of a surprise to
advisors who have, in most cases, resisted the notion of students
as consumers, at least in its most crass forms. As we struggle to
keep the focus of learning and students as learners, we understand
all too well the impact of such consumerist attitudes, not only
on our students, but on their families. The press release ends with
a quote from the researcher, Roger L. Geiger, a
distinguished professor of higher education at Penn State: “The
competition for students, for good or ill, has bred consumerism—a
reversal of attitude from students as clients, fortunate to attend
a particular university, to students as customers who must be pleased
with a variety of amenities—from upscale dormitories to mall-like
shopping facilities—that have little to do with actual education.”
How this heightened sense of entitlement and consumerism plays itself
out, I will leave for the futurists to speculate about. Suffice
it to say that we advisors are confronted with these attitudes on
a daily basis and must, with all our skills, respond to them in
meaningful and productive ways.
Given the emphasis on consumerism and its first cousin, vocationalism,
there is little wonder that the proponents of general education
in the curriculum find themselves once again looking for new ways
to infuse this section of the curriculum with new meaning, new ways
to instruct, and new configurations of content. I fear, though,
that all the efforts of the general education reforms will be lost
without the full support of the academic advising community, for
it is advisors who have to articulate curriculum to students. In
many ways, it is the foundation of our work, and how students come
to appreciate all aspects of the curriculum will
depend upon the advising community’s appreciation for general
education, their understanding of it within the total curriculum
of their institution, and their willingness to take the time to
help students appreciate why general education is important.
And finally, higher education must adjust to, respond to, and articulate
revised definitions for affirmative action. While one hates to use
the metaphor of warfare, it is quite true that there is a ”battle”
over the future of affirmative action. This battle, recently “fought”
in the halls of the Supreme Court, is clearly not over. A recent
piece in the Chronicle of Higher Education quotes Richard
C. Atkinson, the former president of the University of
California system: “Colleges should focus more on helping
students from low-income families and look for applicants who have
made the best use of their opportunities to learn.” It remains
to be seen whether income will replace race, ethnicity and gender
as the determinates for affirmative action. Americans, in general,
have avoided issues of class, just as until recently, we wanted
to believe in the melting pot analogy for American racial and ethnic
history. The myth of a classless America may have to be put aside,
just as most have put aside the melting pot paradigm. No matter
what happens, once again advisors will be at the forefront of this
issue, which from my perspective has to do with access. American
higher education, for better or worse, has always been seen, along
with all education, as a means for social mobility. I would bet
(Yep, I’m ready for Las Vegas) that virtually all advisors,
if not all, believe in the power of education and that we work as
hard as we can to see that students succeed and if they can’t,
we look for other venues for their success.
This is important work to do, because it represents the very essence
of American societal values. So we must grasp on to the challenges,
sometimes maybe even going it alone, realizing that the democracy
that we know as the United States of America depends upon the work
we do.
Postscript
I would like to thank all those NACADA members who took the time
to read my columns and especially those who sent me personal responses
to them. It was most appreciated. As I come to the end of my time
as NACADA president, I leave knowing that this is an organization
comprised of caring and thoughtful individuals who have been able
to form an (inter)national community of practice. My hope is that
all who are members of NACADA benefit from this association, and
that higher education benefits from the existence of NACADA.
Eric White , President
National Academic Advising Association
(814) 865-7576
erw2@psu.edu
A New Year with New Expectations
Roberta “Bobbie” Flaherty, Executive
Director
Welcome to a new academic year that promises many new experiences,
challenges, and opportunities for academic advisors! These same
expectations apply to NACADA, as we work to develop and deliver
new methods for helping you address the academic advising needs
of your students to enhance their success. There are always new
initiatives underway at NACADA!
Our first challenge will be meeting the diverse needs of our record
8,242 members! We will begin by continuing the successful events
offered in the past (Administrators’ Institute, Assessment
Institute, Regional Conferences, State Conferences, Summer Institutes,
and, of course, the soon to occur National Conference), and then
adding to those successes with a National Seminar addressing Ethical/Legal
Issues in Academic Advising in February. The Graduate
Certificate in Academic Advising Program continues as well.
In addition, the first in a series of Advising Training CDs will
be released soon. This series, entitled “Foundations
of Academic Advising,” will kick off with “What
is Academic Advising?” – which will begin
by discussing the history and terminology of academic advising and
describing the general expectations for academic advising in the
areas of content, pedagogy, outcomes, and assessment. This will
be followed with CDs to develop advising understanding
(in areas such as how advising is organized, how students develop,
legal/ethical issues, etc.) and skills (in areas
such as multicultural interaction, interpersonal communication,
how to organize resources, how to incorporate technology into everyday
practice, etc.).
This fall should see the release of a new monograph, “Peer
Advising: Intentional Connections to Support Student Learning,”
and “A Guide to Assessment of Academic Advising,”
delivered on CD to assist in the establishment of an institutional
assessment program.
By January, we hope to release a joint publication with Jossey-Bass,
titled “Career Advising: An Academic Advisor’s
Guide,” which will serve as a handbook as the lines
of academic and career advising become more blended. This guide
was authored by Virginia Gordon, and we are proud
to offer it to the higher education community.
At least monthly, you will also find new information or new topics
available in the ever changing NACADAClearinghouse
of Academic Advising Resources on our web site. The
NACADA Consultants Bureau is also expanding to
offer ongoing assistance to institutions beyond “one-shot”
consultancies and is enhancing its team approach to provide broader
expertise.
Add these exciting new resources to an “on-time” Journal
in your mailbox twice a year, and you have a comprehensive library
and network of resources at your fingertips.
Just as you have your year laid out in front of you, so does your
association. We look forward to serving you and welcome your opinions/ideas
on what we might do to serve you even more.
Roberta “Bobbie” Flaherty , Executive Director
National Academic Advising Association
(785) 532-5717
nacada@ksu.edu
The
NACADA Statement of Core Values was first adopted
by the Board in 1994. A periodic review of the Statement was requested
in the original document, and in 2003, a Task Force was charged
with that assignment. In the following companion pieces, Task Force
members Maura Ivanick (Chair) and Kathie
Simon Frank share their thoughts on the history of the
Statement, their experiences on the Task Force, and the results
of the Task Force’s work.
The Core Values: A History and User’s Guide
Kathie Simon Frank, Core Values Task Force
Eleven years old and about to enter puberty – that was NACADA
in 1990. There was no question that NACADA, established in 1979,
was filling a critical need for academic advisors. The flourishing
membership, increasing attendance at annual meetings, and strong
regional associations acknowledged the importance of NACADA in academic
advisors' lives. Academic advising was increasingly being recognized
as essential for improving student life at institutions of higher
education, large and small, urban and rural, teaching- and research-oriented
alike. So, it was no surprise that those in this emerging profession
– comprised of thoughtful and devoted faculty, professional
staff, and others – desired to define and clarify what values
drove their practice and to find ways to communicate those values
broadly within the academy.
At a large gathering of advisors from multi-versities during the
1990 Anaheim annual conference, several raised the question: do
we have a Code of Ethics to guide us? No one
knew of one. Some asked, shouldn't we have one? From that
initial discussion, a small group began to consider ways that the
larger NACADA membership might begin to address the question.
The next year, four individuals from three institutions offered
a session to begin an organization-wide debate. They proposed the
need for a Code of Ethics and suggested several types of conduct
that might be covered. Approximately forty people attended that
session, supported the notion of moving ahead, and added their suggestions.
Over the next year, the small committee investigated existing professional
Codes of Ethics of related fields (counseling, teaching, social
work, etc.) and began to draft a Code of Ethics for discussion.
At the 1992 and 1993 annual meetings, the committee sought additional
support, received suggestions and responses to the proposed drafts
of an advisors' Code of Ethics, and wrote a survey that was published
in a NACADA newsletter a few months later. Ninety three percent
of those who responded to the survey supported the proposed Statement
of Core Values that came to supplant a Code of Ethics. In October
1994, the NACADA Board adopted this Statement of Core Values
(SCV) as the organization's own. The Core Values were written to
guide faculty, professional academic advisors, and others performing
academic advising functions, without compromising or conflicting
with Codes of Ethics for other roles that those individuals also
fulfilled.
Nearly a decade later, in early Spring 2003, the NACADA Board revisited
the Statement of Core Values. They realized that with pervasive
introduction of technology and recent attention to diversity issues
in advising practice on our campuses, the SCV would benefit from
a thorough review. Maura Ivanick ( Syracuse University
) accepted the NACADA Board's invitation to head the Task Force.
Doris Brightharp-Blount ( Mississippi Valley State
University ), Lynn Freeman ( University of Wisconsin
– Oshkosh ), Rob Mossack ( Lipscomb University
in Tennessee ), Donna Drake ( Allen County Community
College in Kansas ), Beth Davis (formerly of St
Joseph 's College, West Hartford , CT ), and I were invited to be
Maura's committee.
In September 2003, the Task Force submitted a historical timeline
of past work on the SCV, new findings, recommendations for further
changes, and a revised SCV. At the March 2004 Board meeting, Ruth
Darling, NACADA president, requested that the recommendations
of the Task Force be followed. A small subset of the Task Force
began addressing the Board's concerns and continued work on the
revision through June 2004. To get as much input as possible on
the developing SCV, the committee asked five NACADA members (including
two deans, two advisors, and one administrator) at different institutions
to review the SCV from their various perspectives. The committee
also wrote a new survey for publication in the August 2004 NACADA
newsletter, along with a draft of the revision. The survey elicited
several helpful responses, including ideas that we incorporated
into a new version.
Two months later, the Board reviewed the feedback at a pre-conference
meeting, placed the draft on the NACADA business meeting agenda
for member discussion, and finally, voted on the Statement of Core
Values at a post-conference meeting. In January 2005, the Board
published the SCV on NACADA's website and in various professional
publications.
So, what's new? Most obvious, the basic structure has changed and
been expanded. The new SCV has three parts: an introduction (a one
page general statement about the SCV), a brief statement of each
of the six Core Values, and, finally, an exposition in which each
Core Value appears with a fuller description and examples for application.
We offer the brief statement of the Core Values for quick reference
and convenience. Maura Ivanick suggests in her
accompanying article in this publication how the Core Values might
be used. The exposition is helpful when advisors seek a broader
understanding and examples for using each Value.
We incorporated the concept of diversity throughout the document.
We found that issues of diversity were interlaced through many of
the values, but diversity affected each in different ways, thus
requiring different ways of handling.
We treated questions of technology similarly. In a given value,
technology serves different functions, and, thus, is used in a variety
of ways. It seemed best to address each aspect of technology within
its context.
Everywhere, we attempted to view the SCV with the eyes of a newcomer
to the profession. Where we identified confusing or unclear statements
or assumptions, we clarified the language.
With this revised and restructured Statement of Core Values,
advisors can find the guidance they seek from NACADA. Relationships
between academic advisors and their advisees are dynamic, changing
with our culture and our institutions of higher learning. Thus,
the Statement of Core Values is also a dynamic document. As such,
we hope those who use it continue to review it periodically to keep
it relevant for and compatible with current advising professionals.
It is your guide to good practice. Adopt it, embrace its principles,
and with its guidance, be the best advisor you can be.
Kathie Simon Frank
University of Minnesota , retired
(612) 379-4253
kathie@atlas.socsci.umn.edu
It’s Simple to Use the Statement of Core Values
Maura L. Ivanick , Chair, Core Values Task Force
I was recently given a 2005 calendar based on Sarah Ban Breathnach’s
book, Simple Abundance. I didn’t know why I was given
this gift, but I suspected there was a message in there that I had
to find for myself. I already kept too many calendars, but I loved
what these pages said about simple things in life. I decided that
I was only going to enter those things that were joyful and reflected
my happy life moments this year. Happily, there have already been
many simple entries like “watched Ice Age (again) with the
girls” or “took a long walk in the sun.”
When I think about the challenges to academic advisors today and
read the NACADA Statement of Core Values, I am
reminded of the ‘simple things’ calendar in this way:
the six core values are simple to believe, uphold, and value. They
are easy to articulate to others and to apply when actively advising.
They are responsibilities to reflect and act on, and in the quiet
moments, they can hopefully inspire us to be bigger than our job
requires. The message is in there; sometimes it takes time to find
it and use it well. So, how do we do this?
If you were to use the Statement of Core Values in a meaningful
way, what would that mean to you personally? What would “using
the Statement of Core Values meaningfully” on your campus
entail? How would you advertise them as a measure of how and why
you work the way you do? What would you say to someone who asked
you about the Statement of Core Values? How would you interpret
them for you and your institution? Who else should know about them?
Who else does know about them?
Here are three challenge questions for you and a general suggestion
with each one:
- How would you use the Core
Values Statement in your everyday work? It’s
important to read them, digest them, and decide how to convey
that you actively address them in your everyday work with students,
parents, faculty, colleagues and administrators. For instance,
no matter how big or small our work areas, we all have items that
show our interests, passions, and beliefs. Sometimes they are
subtle, while others are prominent displays of our own design.
One possibility is posting the ‘Six Areas of Responsibility’
logo on your file cabinet or bulletin board, demonstrating that
you embrace the responsibilities of being an excellent academic
advisor and inviting conversation.
- How would your colleagues
in advising practice use the Statement of Core Values? Do you
know? Is there a mechanism for discussion? Can you begin a dialogue?
Okay, that was three extra questions, I know. On a car ride home
from a Northeast Regional NACADA Conference, a discussion of values
and our work and the realization that the practitioners did not
have a good communication path led to the birth of an award-winning
group of advising practitioners from across the campus. This group
has been instrumental in fostering discussions, sharing and networking,
presentation development, drive-in workshops and more for a group
of advisors who were previously not well connected. Now that the
Statement has been revised, I am sure this discussion item will
be back on our group’s agenda. Ask around – you might
be surprised at what you hear people want and need.
- In what other ways could
the Core Values Statement be used to reach academic advising goals
on your campus? If there is an articulated goal,
say, of increased student awareness of the institution/school/department’s
commitment to academic advising, how could you use the Statement
of Core Values to create potent, creative education on your campus?
Answer the previous questions and then use publications such as
advisor handbooks, student posters, advising mailings, undergraduate
and graduate bulletins/course offerings and opportunities such
as faculty advisor preparation and meet-and-greet opportunities
with students to educate the campus about academic advising increases
the “visibility quotient.”
We’ve all heard the call to create a living document, something
well-intentioned that can guide us in our work. But too often, these
ideas get stuffed in the drawer, forgotten in the rush to meetings,
preparation for appointments (and walk-ins!) or keeping up with
the paperwork. The Statement of Core Values is too important to
hide away, too necessary to ignore. We hope that when you use the
Statement of Core Values, your work as academic advisors and administrators
is enhanced and you are reminded that simple messages are often
hidden in everyday tasks. You can reference the Statement of Core
Values at any time at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Clearinghouse/AdvisingIssues/Core-Values.htm.
Happy Advising!
Maura L. Ivanick
Syracuse University
(315)443-1045
mlivanic@syr.edu
Improving Academic Advisor Preparation Through Cultural
Self-Awareness
Cornelius K. Gilbert, University of Wisconsin
One of the most perplexing issues encountered on today’s college
campus colleges is how to adequately serve a diverse student body.
The requirement to effectively meet the needs of students from diverse
backgrounds surfaced during the civil rights movement (or Freedom
Struggle and ethnic movements) of the 1960s and 1970s, as predominately
white campuses across the country became increasingly more integrated.
Challenges raised during that time continue to face us today.
Over the past forty years, campus administrators and practitioners
have put forth efforts to meet the needs and concerns of students
of color. Efforts have included diversity or multicultural “training”
– principally for white professionals – to become better
informed about diverse cultures, experiences, and histories that
exist among their changing student populations.
The traditional narrative of multiculturalism in higher education
has focused on providing adequate cross-cultural services at predominately
white institutions of higher learning; today this phenomenon is
not limited to predominately white institutions. Historically Black
colleges and universities (HBCUs) are experiencing the same trends
of increased “minority enrollment” and the need to provide
effective cross-cultural services. The U.S. Department of Education
reported that white enrollment at HBCUs over the past twenty-five
years has jumped from 21,000 to 35,000, a percentage spike of 65
percent (Blitzer, 2000). At some schools, such as Bluefield State,
Virginia State and Lincoln University, student bodies have just
about transformed from all Black to overwhelmingly White.
As America ’s ethnic and racial demographics continue to shift,
not only on college campuses but throughout the nation, it is essential
that administrators and practitioners prepare to effectively deliver
cross-cultural services. Professionals of all ethnic and racial
backgrounds need to gain multicultural awareness and multicultural
competency.
We begin to establish multicultural competence when we become self-aware
– when we establish a racial consciousness of our own –
thereby becoming able to view ourselves as racial beings (Carter,
1995; Pope & Mueller, 2000, p. 133). Research shows that improvements
can be made to better relate to students – therefore better
serve them – if professionals are aware of their racial identity
(Mueller, 1999; Mueller & Pope, 2000, p. 133). When self-awareness
or a racial consciousness is established, regardless of racial or
ethnic background, a heightened sensitivity and awareness occurs
toward the issues minority students experience and voice. As a result,
we are in a better position to deliver enhanced cross-cultural services.
Perhaps even more critical is that, as a result of these efforts,
professionals become more receptive to their students’ experiences.
Such awareness serves to facilitate a move from mere multicultural
tolerance to appreciation, inclusion, and an increased understanding
of students’ experiences. This is particularly true in academic
advising.
Consider
how academic advisors support students as they explore the reasons
they are in school, assess their interests and talents, and integrate
into the campus community. Habley (1981) noted that academic advising
is instrumental in the fight against student attrition when he said
that “academic advising is the only structured service
on the campus in which all students have the opportunity for on-going,
one-to-one contact with a concerned representative of the institution.”
Delivery
of important services such as academic advising must be executed
in a genuinely caring, understanding, knowledgeable, yet direct
and honest method. The amount of cross-cultural interaction that
occurs during advising makes the preparation of academic advisors
critical to institutional success.
The preparation we receive should require a highly collaborative
and interactive self-awareness and include a racial consciousness
component that allows us to gain an awareness of our their beliefs
and attitudes as they pertain to multiculturalism. This exploration
provides an opportunity to to check biases and stereotypes that
can affect our delivery of adequate cross-cultural service. Becoming
aware of our values and biases is a move toward positive orientation
of multiculturalism (Sue, et. al, p. 633).
As we grasp our attitudes and beliefs, the next step in the multicultural
competency process is acquiring knowledge. Knowledge and understanding
of our the professionals’ heritage and worldview(s), as well
as knowledge of the multicultural groups we they work with and their
sociopolitical influences, serves to improve cross-cultural services
(Sue, et. al, p.633).
Lastly, intervention techniques and strategies must be incorporated
into the preparation for all professionals who work cross-culturally.
Intervention technique education helps develop multicultural competency
as a lifestyle. The preparation should constantly question/challenge
professionals. Examples of questions that advisors should address
include:
- How have you benefited from your
racial or ethnic status?
- How are you seeking to broaden
your experiences and knowledge of different multicultural groups?
- Have you considered what it may
feel like to be ‘the only’ in a rather large setting?
- Do you know how it feels to be
‘appointed’ the representative of your race because
you are ‘the only’ in a setting?
- How are you going to continue to
understand yourself as a racial or ethnic being in society?
- Are you consistently seeking knowledge
about multicultural affairs?
As education professionals, we become better equipped to serve when
we take a hard look in the mirror and acknowledge ourselves as cultural
beings. The more we are aware of our biases and cultural influences,
the better we are able to serve and therefore create more sensitive
multicultural campuses through better programs and better policies
(Mueller & Pope, 2001, p. 7).
Cornelius
K. Gilbert
University of Wisconsin
(608) 265-5460
cgilbert@lssaa.wisc.edu
References:
Author would like to thank psychologist Dr. Jeffery S. Hird, of
the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Center for Counseling
and Consultation Services, for his knowledge, input, and support.
Blitzer, Wolf. (18 May 2000) . “Enrollment of white students
on rise at historically black colleges” CNN.com. Retrieved
from http://cnnstudentnews.cnn.com/2000/US/05/18/black.colleges/
on 31 May 2005 .
Boume-Bowie, Khandi. (30 March 2000). Retention depends on new models
of student development. Black Issues In Higher Education,
17:3 . Online Edition available at http://www.blackissues.com/articlePage.asp?i=113&c=11&a=3078
.
Carter, R.T. (1995). The Influence of Race and Racial Identity
in Psychotherapy . New York : Wiley.
Habley, Wes. (1981). "Academic Advising: Critical Link in Student
Retention." NASPA Journal, 28(4): 45-50.
Harding, Blane. (June 2005). The Changing Face of College Campuses.
Academic Advising Today, 28 (2). Online Edition available
at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Newsletter/NW28_2.htm.
Mueller,
John A. (1999) . The Relationship Between White Racial Consciousness
and Multicultural Competence Among White Student Affairs Practitioners.
Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Teachers College, Columbia University,
New York , N.Y.
Mueller, John A., and Pope, Raechele L. (2001). The Relationship
Between Multicultural Competence and White Racial Consciousness
Among Student Affair Practitioners. Journal of College Student
Development, 72, 133-144 .
Nutt, Charlie L. ( 2003). Academic Advising and Student Retention
and Persistence. NACADA National Academic Advising Association
Clearinghouse of Academic Advising Resources. Retrieved 31
May 2005 from http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Clearinghouse/AdvisingIssues/retention.htm.
Scott, Tracy L. (10 November 2004). “More Whites Attending
HBCUs. ” Retrieved 31 May 2005 retrieved on 31 May 2005 .
Sue, Derald Wing; Arredondo, Patricia; and McDavis, Roderick J.
(1992). Multicultural Counseling Competencies and Standards: A Call
to the Profession. Journal of Counseling and Development,
70, 477-486
Sue,
D.W., & Sue, D. (1990). Counseling the culturally different:
Theory and practice. New York:Wiley .
First-Year
Pre-Law Students: An 8-Point Academic Advising Curriculum
Julie Givans , Chair, Pre-Law Advising Interest
Group
What do pre-law students need to know? Information for
junior- and senior-level students abounds; hundreds of books have
been written on taking the LSAT, writing personal statements, and
choosing the best school. But what about first-year students?
Great law school applications don’t start with a high LSAT
score. They come from years of engagement with academics, the community,
and an understanding of what the study and the profession of law
is really about. Get your freshmen started right by incorporating
this eight point “academic advising curriculum” into
your work with first-year pre-law students.
- Stretch academically
. Suggest students take classes that require them to read, write,
think, research and analyze. These are the skills students will
need to succeed as law students and as attorneys; if students
master them as undergraduates, they are then able to spend their
law school years focused on learning the law. Students need to
learn to write clearly. Freshman composition classes should lay
the foundation, but also suggest writing courses in the disciplines
and professors that focus on writing. Encourage students to read
and engage with “dense” material, and to become comfortable
grappling with difficult ideas. Let your freshmen know that in
college, as in law school, reading the text just once is rarely
enough. It is through reading, re-reading and analyzing texts
that material is mastered.
- Choose the “right”
major . The “right” major for a pre-law student
is a major that they love to study. Law schools look for diversity
in their entering classes. That diversity includes diversity of
undergraduate major. In addition, choosing a major the student
is passionate about results in better grades when applying to
law school and happier lawyers after graduation. For example,
students who love art as well as the law might find their best
fit as an in-house attorney for an art gallery or museum (Coleman,
1996).
- Get to know professors.
As Richard Light explains in his book Making
the Most of College (2001), students who get to know their
professors outside of the classroom tend to be happiest and get
the most out of their college experience. Pre-law students should
be especially encouraged to make personal connections with professors.
In addition to important intangible benefits, pre-law students
may be motivated by knowing that such relationships can lead to
better letters of recommendation.
- Get involved in the community
. Whether it’s being president of the boating club, volunteering
with the church or participating in student government, law schools
look for students who are active in their communities, outside
the classroom. As with choosing a major, students should seek
out opportunities that interest them, not what they think law
schools “want to see,” because law schools, again,
look for diversity of experience when admitting students.
- Investigate careers
. Many students choose a pre-law path based on mistaken ideas
of what it is like to be an attorney. As an academic advisor,
the best question you can ask them is “Why do you want to
be a lawyer?” Get them thinking about their skills, their
values, and their interests. Encourage students to begin conducting
informational interviews, attending career services events and
alumni mixers, and searching out internships. Have them explore
different practice areas (such as international, family, corporate
law), different work environments (such as government, big firm,
not-for profit), and what attorneys do all day. As freshmen, students
should research not only careers in law, but also in related fields.
Only by exploring a variety of careers can students determine
if they are truly selecting the one that fits them the best (Schneider
& Belsky, 2005).
- Avoid debt. Students
with heavy debt loads may have difficulty getting government loans
for law school and limit their job options upon graduation from
law school (Schneider & Belsky, 2005). Starting as freshmen,
students need to watch expenses, for example by limiting credit
card use and reducing unnecessary expenses such as eating out,
cell phones and cable TV.
- Keep out of trouble
. When law school graduates apply to take the bar exam, state
bar associations conduct a thorough background check. Because
of this, most law school applications require students to disclose
any brushes they have had with the law. Some schools require letters
certifying that the student has not been subject to any disciplinary
action while at school. Thus, for pre-law students, infractions
such as underage consumption of alcohol or academic dishonesty
(i.e. plagiarism, cheating on exams) can have a lasting impact
on their academic and career plans! Clean records are best, as
there is nothing to explain.
- Investigate pre-law resources
. Students should begin to research organizations that offer programs
to nurture pre-law students. The Law School Admission Council
offers videos and other resources to students through their website
(http://www.lsac.org/). The
Council on Legal Education Opportunity (CLEO) also offers summer
programs for undergraduate students from underrepresented groups,
to assist them with their path to law school (http://www.cleoscholars.com/index.cfm).
Incorporating these ideas into your academic advising with pre-law
students from the beginning gives these students the opportunity
to not only start preparing for law school, but also to make the
most of their undergraduate years.
Julie Givans
Arizona State University
(480) 965-6506
Julie.givans@asu.edu
Works Cited
Coleman, Ronald. (1996). The Princeton Review Pre-Law Companion
. New York : Princeton Review Publishing.
Light, Richard. (2001). Making the Most of College: Students
Speak Their Minds. Massachusetts : Harvard University Press.
Schneider, Deborah & Gary Belsky. (2005). Should You Really
Be a Lawyer? The Guide to Smart Career Choices Before, During, and
After Law School . Seattle : Decision Books.
Vantage
Point
Creating a Campus-based Advising Organization: The KASADA Experience
Deborah Barber, Kent State University
From a loose affiliation of advising and student affairs professionals
to a dynamic professional organization – how did the Kent
Academic Support and Advising Association (KASADA) get
there?
In 1989, about 30 professional advisors got together at Kent State
University to talk about forming a university-wide organization
for those of us who work directly with students. We sought to establish
a network that would help facilitate information sharing and provide
a mechanism for diminishing the bureaucracy faced by students. There
was also a need to provide professional development opportunities
and establish a visible presence on campus.
We created a name – KASADA (Kent Academic
Support and Advising Association), wrote a mission statement, found
volunteers who were willing to organize meetings every other month,
and began to gather on a regular basis.
This continued for about twelve years, until we reached stagnation.
While much of our meeting time was devoted to sharing individual
practices and discussing relevant policies, little was done to facilitate
professional growth or help us connect strategically with the institution.
As a result, decisions concerning advising-related issues were made
without input from professional advisors, a situation that gave
KASADA members a growing sense of frustration in a time when the
university placed an increased emphasis on academic advising. It
was the ideal time to change our organizational model, respond to
member interests, and partner in a more dynamic way with the institution.
Several advisors held a day-long retreat in conjunction with some
faculty and administrators who were directly involved with academic
advising. We discussed where we wanted to go and brainstormed ways
we could get there. We moved toward the adoption of a formal organizational
structure that included bylaws, dues, elected officers, and key
standing committees: Professional Development, Campus Affairs, and
Communications. KASADA dues, which are minimal, provide a small
treasury that enables us to offer refreshments at some meetings,
honoraria, and small gifts to guest speakers. With assistance provided
by a NACADA Region 5 start-up grant, we created a web site, rewrote
the mission statement, and became a NACADA Allied Member.
(See the complete list of NACADA Allied Members at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Membership/allied_members.htm.)
As we worked through the bylaw process, we realized that it made
sense to create a standing committee to work on assessment, an effort
that keeps us aligned with the university’s strategic planning
principles. To encourage more faculty participation, a faculty representative
was added to the executive committee; this individual provided a
valuable link to the university’s Faculty Professional Development
Center.
The dynamic nature of KASADA is the result of the tremendous energy
and enthusiasm found in the committee members and the professionally
relevant events sponsored by the organization. KASADA sponsors an
annual conference that has included:
2003 “Empowering Students to Become Active, Responsible
Learners” (Keynote: Skip Downing)
2004 “Exploring and Embracing Diversity in Higher Education”
(Keynote: Bertice Berry )
2005 “Making the Connection: Learning, Teaching, and Advising”
(Keynote: Charlie Nutt)
Part of the success of the organization is a direct result of the
continuing support provided by the Dean of Undergraduate Studies.
The first dean of the unit, Terry Kuhn, created
two annual university advising awards: one awarded for the outstanding
professional advisor and the other presented to the outstanding
faculty advisor. We are proud to say that many of these recipients
have gone on to win national NACADA awards. We also enjoy support
from the Provost and President of Kent State University and can
brag that our president, Carol Cartwright, was
last year’s winner of the NACADA Pacesetter Award.
The current Dean of Undergraduate Studies, Gary Padak
, serves as the university administration liaison to KASADA.
Another annual event is the Fall Advising Forum, co-sponsored by
Undergraduate Studies. This is an opportunity for members to share
their research and conference presentations. This event is held
after the NACADA National Conference, so members can share ideas
gleaned from the conference.
KASADA meets monthly. In-service topics have included “Multicultural
Counseling Competencies,” “Career Exploration and Identity
Development,” “Exploring Approaches to Ethical Issues
in Advising,” and “Millennial Student Characteristics
and Implications for Advising.” Additional program topics
have included: FERPA, learning communities and freshman interest
groups, athletic eligibility, the Ohio Transfer Module, and changes
in financial aid progress calculations. Meetings typically end with
a “hot topic” discussion that is determined from suggestions
submitted at the beginning of the meeting.
KASADA delivers the Faculty Advising Workshop Series, a five-meeting
training program, which extends throughout the academic year; the
Series is underwritten by Undergraduate Studies with a grant from
the Provost. Additionally, the annual campus update allows each
Kent Campus academic unit to present new policies and curriculum
changes to members from all eight campuses. One regular KASADA membership
meeting is held at a regional campus location each year.
Recently, KASADA completed the online advising handbook, a major
undertaking which has been a two year project. The handbook provides
a ready and current reference for faculty and professional advisors
and is linked from the KASADA web site.
It is important to acknowledge that members’ professional
participation has grown from the local association. KASADA members
hold positions with OHAAA, the state organization, with NACADA Region
5, and at the national level in NACADA. Typically 20-30 KASADA members
attend, and many present, at the NACADA National Conference.
Can this success story be replicated at other institutions? We think
so. Move slowly and deliberately and be prepared for periods of
stagnation. Have faith that people will come forward to pick up
the ball. Begin by finding a core group of interested individuals.
Determine your group’s goals and mission; craft a functional
association structure that meets your objectives. Be inclusive not
only of professional advisors, but also faculty and interested administrators.
To the extent possible, partner with your institution; this sets
the stage for an enduring and rewarding relationship.
Please visit our website at http://dept.kent.edu/kasada/kasada.asp
for contacts and additional information.
Deborah Barber
Kent State University
(330) 672-0550
dbarber@kent.edu
SPARKLERS
It
takes but one SPARK to ignite the flame for an idea . Does your
campus have an unusual or exceptional process or program that could
spark an idea on another campus? If so, tell us about it
in 350 words or less. Send your ' Sparkler' to Leigh@ksu.edu.
Cross-campus
cooperation
and efforts
to undo the “silo effect” are hot topics on
many campuses today. Derek Bratton, Cashin Residence
Hall Director, reports on efforts that Residence Hall personnel
at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst are making to support
academic advisors in their efforts to encourage student success
and boost retention. “If one peruses through higher education
journals,” Bratton notes, “the literature strongly
suggests that there is an association between academic/personal
development and establishing meaningful contacts with students.
Facilitating relationships with students (especially first-year)
and having frequent contacts with them is a significant factor in
retention. We seek to bridge the gap between the work inside the
classroom and the skills that a student develops in a non-classroom
setting. The role of residence hall directors extends beyond the
normal working day. We have the ability to help students develop
competence in the areas of human growth. In the context of advising,
residence hall directors have frequent discussions with students
and other departments about the educational aspirations and the
issues that affect classroom learning.” One program they
are particularly proud of is known as the Northeast/Sylvan
Community Development Academic Excellence Awards, which
is “just one way of informing students that they are not
alone in the process of pursuing a degree,” says Bratton.
Student leaders are heavily involved with the process, which awards
a Lamp of Learning Trophy to the hall in each residential
area whose students achieve the highest cumulative grade point average.
In addition to the group awards, individual students are recognized
for outstanding performance in the following areas: Unsung
Hero-Heroine, Outstanding Community Development
Program, Best Community Leader, and Cluster Office
Managers. “With the harsh economic realities
of cut backs in academic programs in higher education,”
says Bratton, “I would challenge all to take the time
needed to celebrate the accomplishments of students academically
and in the campus community. Believe me, the students are very appreciative
that someone on campus cares about them as a person.” To
learn more about this program, contact Derek Bratton
at dbratton@gw.housing.umass.edu.
Continuing with the subject of AWARDS – while
many (if not most) campuses today reward outstanding academic
advising with some sort of campus award, two of our members
report “something special” about their Awards
Program that other campuses may want to consider emulating.
Selma
Reed, Assistant Executive Director of Enrollment Services,
tells us that San Diego State University's annual Exemplary
Academic Advising Awards recognize the many contributions
made by outstanding advisors. The entire campus community, including
students, faculty and staff, are encouraged to nominate advisors
to receive this award. Categories range from Undergraduate Advisor
to Distinguished Service. Award recipients are recognized at a reception
held in their honor, where their nominators, families, senior administrators,
and campus friends applaud them. The “sparkler” for
this program is that each award recipient also receives a year
membership to NACADA. NACADA membership forms are completed
and submitted in one package, and then each recipient receives a
letter of recognition from the NACADA Executive Director. Reed says,
“the celebration of exemplary advising, coupled with the
exposure to NACADA, is increasing interest in advising across our
large campus and motivating our hard-working advisors to go above
and beyond to provide exceptional service.”
Vince Magnuson, Vice Chancellor for Academic Administration
at the University of Minnesota Duluth, reports that the UMD
Outstanding Faculty Advisor Awards program is intended
to acknowledge the importance of the faculty/student advising relationship,
demonstrate that UMD values and promotes faculty advising, promote
excellence in academic advising among the faculty, and showcase
outstanding faculty advisors. Each academic year, this award honors
five faculty members (one from each collegiate unit) who have demonstrated
outstanding service to the students and the University through advising.
Nominating an advisor is a way for students or colleagues to say
“thank you for your contributions to students and colleagues
at UMD.” The “sparkler” for this program is that
each award winner receives $500 as a cash bonus,
a travel bonus, or an equipment allocation. In addition, each winner’s
department receives $500 to spend on its advising
program, thereby recognizing the departments that support faculty
advising. The program just completed its 6th year and has grown
into an anticipated annual event.
NACADA
Career Services Corner
Jennifer L. Bloom , Chair, NACADA Member Career Services
Committee
Dear Career Corner: I have been avoiding updating my Curriculum
Vitae (CV) because it hasn’t been updated in over five years.
But, now I am considering applying for another position and need
to submit a current CV. Do you have any suggestions for me? –
Signed, Guilty of CV Negligence
Dear Guilty: Many people only dust off and update their CVs when
they absolutely are forced to do so. However, let me urge you to
learn from this experience and be more attentive to updating your
CV on a regular basis in the future for a number of important reasons.
First, your CV is your professional diary of your activities, awards,
and education – it is an extremely significant document, and
it is imperative that it be correct and up-to-date. The Chronicle
of Higher Education and other newspapers frequently feature
stories about people who lost their jobs due to inaccuracies on
their resumes/CVs. Second, the best way to ensure that you provide
accurate information is to add things to your CV as they happen.
Third, updating your CV on at least a quarterly basis is a good
opportunity to reflect on what you have accomplished and to figure
out how to proactively acquire new skills, knowledge, and experiences.
If you do not have anything new to add to your CV every three months,
it should serve as a reminder to continue your lifelong learning
quest.
As far as how to approach your CV, I do have some recommendations.
First, as stated above, make sure that your CV contains only 100%
accurate information. Second, the typical sections of the CV include:
Education, Professional Experience, Committees, Honors and Awards,
Publications, Professional Affiliations, Presentations, and Teaching
Experience. In each of the sections, your experiences should be
listed in reverse chronological order. Please do not use the Microsoft
Word resume template – it is more geared towards a business
setting. Do not artificially limit the length of your CV to one
page – colleges and universities are used to seeing faculty
CVs that can range from 8-40 pages, so having a CV that is 2-5+
pages long is not a problem as long as you have enough substantive
information to justify that length. Lastly, have someone else carefully
and constructively edit your CV. Double-check that your contact
information at the top of the CV is correct and that there are no
typos.
On
The College Access and Opportunity Act and Federal Regulation
of Transfer Credit Policies
Troy
A. Holaday, Chair, NACADA Advising Transfer Students
Commission
In October of 2003, Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon (R-CA)
introduced The Affordability in Higher Education Act,
H.R.3311, a proposed amendment to the Higher Education Act
of 1965. H.R.3311 featured language that alarmed
many of us in postsecondary education who routinely deal with transfer
of credit issues. In an attempt at alleviating the rising
cost of higher education, McKeon’s bill proposed a College
Affordability Index, which would supposedly indicate
the general affordability of institutions based on a number of factors,
including their rate of acceptance of transfer credit. The
bill required that institutions of higher education refrain from
forcing students to “take the same course twice,” due
to what some perceived as elitist transfer credit evaluation policies.
Among the bills provisions were statements that required institutions
to evaluate credit from all schools recognized by the Secretary
of Education, not just those with regional accreditation, and to
report in detail on the percentage of credits accepted in transfer.
Noncompliance was threatened with loss of regional accreditation
and serious financial ramifications.
The Affordability in Higher Education Act of 2003
prompted lengthy and highly critical responses from such groups
as American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions
Officers (AACRAO) and the American Council on Education (ACE).
Among the chief complaints were the cumbersome reporting requirements,
the “federalization” of accrediting agencies, and above
all else, the unprecedented intrusion into the decision making processes
of institutions of higher education. Many also questioned
the necessity of such legislation when the mobility of student credit
is by all accounts at an all time high.
H.R.3311 has since been revised twice, first as H.R.4283, The
College Access and Opportunity Act of 2004, and more recently
as H.R. 609, The College Access and Opportunity Act of 2005.
Both bills were introduced by Rep. John Boehner (R-OH), chair of
the House Committee on Education and the Workforce (CEW).
Most of the troublesome language of the earlier bills has fallen
by the wayside, but H.R.609 still carries a “non-discrimination”
clause that prohibits institutions from rejecting transfer credits solely
on the basis of a sending institution's lack of regional accreditation,
if that institution’s alternative accrediting organization
is recognized by the Secretary of Education. In July of this
year, H.R.609 was forwarded by the subcommittee to the full committee
for a vote, and all signs point to the very real possibility of
this bill becoming a law.
Members of NACADA who deal with transfer students should be aware
of these developments for a number of reasons. First, those
of you involved in shaping institutional policies regarding the
review of transfer credit may be forced to comply with Rep. McKeon
and Rep. Boehner’s concept of fair play. Second, the
legislation is reflective of transfer credit evaluation initiatives
(such as mandated common numbering systems and transferable general
studies modules) that have been occurring across the country at
the state level for several years, and it indicates a measure of
more or less informed encroachment by government agencies into the
process of providing higher education. If you object to micromanagement
of your institution’s academic policies by state and local
government, now is the time to become involved. Contact
your elected representatives and let them know where you stand.
Troy A. Holaday
Ball State University
(765) 285-3936
tholaday@bsu.edu
New
in the Clearinghouse:
An Advising Administrator’s Duty
Linda Chalmers, Chair, Advising Administration
Commission
I profess that the most important job duty of an advising administrator
is to hire the right people, because no other function done improperly
or poorly will so quickly damage the advising operation and the
mission of providing quality advising services to students. Over
the twenty plus years that I have been an administrator/manager,
both in higher education and private industry, I have observed that
the art of hiring the right people is constantly cussed and discussed.
One must continually hone hiring skills, especially in light of
the ever-changing workforce landscape.
There remains a constant within the forces of human-resource changes
that I always use when hiring. My mantra is “hire the attitude
and train the skill.” I learned this valuable lesson early
on, when I discovered that a bad attitude will poison an office
staff very quickly. Bad attitudes rarely change to good.
A person’s worldview comes early as decision-making patterns
are developed early in life. Just take the person
who sees the world through the “half-empty” filter and
try to change them to see it “half-full”; you soon will
discover that no human power can perform that magic!
I have always willingly given people “the benefit of the doubt,”
but early on I learned the valuable lesson of listening. I will
never forget the administrative assistant I hired for a front desk-receptionist
position. During the job interview, I emphasized that this position
required that the individual be on-time and dependable. While I
heard, I did not listen to the candidate as she responded with a
saga that included living across town, childcare issues, and her
need to learn a new route to work. Unfortunately, I did not understand
this cue to her future performance. Instead, I looked at the candidates’
qualifications on paper; she was the “best qualified”
of the pool, so I hired her. Alas, during her first month she was
up to 30 minutes late every day (if only I had listened!). Soon
we parted amiably, and I learned a valuable lesson.
In my twenty-plus supervisory years, I have had many positive hiring
experiences. Much of this success stems from a few solid hiring
principles and techniques:
- Be sure you know what the job entails.
Have you served “time” in the position you are hiring?
Have you shadowed each staff position to experience what these
individuals do and how each must perform to be successful on a
daily basis?
- Break down the job into essential functions
– what must be done or the job fails. Identify the performance
outcome for each function and define the needed skill or skill
set. For example, an advisor position’s essential job functions
may be the following:
- Communicates well and builds rapport with advisees;
- Pays attention to details for accuracy;
- Focuses on the positive, using a strengths-based or developmental
advising approach, etc.;
- Uses technology well to gain, analyze, and communicate
information (uses PC, Microsoft Office Suite, email, the institution’s
records system, etc.);
- Is adaptable and flexible with institutional changes, policies;
and
- Understands and relates well with multigenerational advisees.
Map this on
paper and consider the types of questions you and your search
committee will need to ask interviewees in order to yield the
best information for making a hiring decision. (Note: It is
often wise to develop these questions with the search committee
since HR laws dictate that the same questions be asked of all
interviewees.)
Recently I was surprised to learn that, “…when surveyed,
over 90% of people (employers) indicate they hate to interview ”
(Peak Search, 2005). If that is true, then how can we expect to
hire good people? It’s all in the preparation. In a recent
issue of Employee Recruitment & Retention, a report
states that of the ten worst hiring practices, #7 is “no plans
for interviewing” (Sennett, 2004). Interview preparation is,
indeed, important.
Linda Chalmers
University of Texas at San Antonio
(210) 458-6325
Linda.Chalmers@utsa.edu
Works Cited
Peak Search. (2005). Interviewing for Employers, Winning the
Best in the 21 st Century. Retrieved from the World Wide Web
at www.peaksearch.net/hiringtips.htm.
Sennett, Frank. (2004). Special report: The 10 worst hiring
practices – and how to avoid them.
Employee Recruitment & Retention. Lawrence Ragan Communications,
Inc., Chicago , IL , Sample Issue, pp 6-7
 |
Hitting
the Jackpot:
Making Academic Success a Sure Bet!
Wednesday, October 5-Saturday, October
8, 2005
Bally's Hotel
Las Vegas , Nevada
Hosted
by NACADA Pacific Region 9 |
Join
your advising colleagues in warm and sunny Las Vegas! A great opportunity
for both personal and professional growth: over 400 formal as well
as informal sessions are offered.
You are sure to hit the jackpot by attending what is expected to
be the largest NACADA annual Conference! In addition to 30 pre-and
post-Conference workshops, 290 concurrent sessions, 35 Commission
and Interest Group meetings, 45 poster presentations, and 10 Region
meetings, there will be two plenary sessions. The opening plenary
session Wednesday evening, October 5, will feature Joe
Martin, founder and president of “RealWorld
University.” Robert Sherfield,
professor at The Community College of Southern Nevada, will speak
Friday morning, October 7.
Here is a preview from Robert Sherfield:
Few people could have hated school more than I. From the first
grade until the end of my junior year, the only word I could use
to describe how I felt about school was “agony.” Well,
there were a few others like “miserable,” “detached,”
and “wretched,” but basically, “agony.”
It showed in my attitude, my demeanor, my grades, my SAT score,
and my class ranking.
Twenty-eight years later, I love learning, I love reading, and
I love exploring new ideas. I have five college degrees, have
authored or co-authored nine books, and have been teaching college
for twenty-two years. “So what happened to you?” my
colleagues and students ask from time-to-time. I have two answers:
(1) I met a wonderful friend in the twelfth grade who showed me
that school and learning could be fun and rewarding and (2) I
learned about engagement. Those two things saved my academic life,
and it is my belief that they can help save the academic life
of many of our students today.
“I
understand about meeting your friend and him helping you understand
more about school,” you might say, “But what do you
mean by engagement?”
I read a quote once that said, “Learning is not so much
about the length of time spent in the classroom, but rather about
the intensity of engagement by the student.” For eleven
years, I had never been engaged. I had never made the connection
between school and my “real life.” Involvement was
never a part of my vocabulary and there were few chances to get
involved in the small, rural schools in South Carolina . My education
consisted of “sit there and listen.”
It wasn’t until college that a few teachers began to offer
activities, exercises, attitudes, and incentives for getting involved
and making education a part of everyday life. From oral reports
to performances to role-playing to cooperative learning to grades
tied to classmates, I began to understand and enjoy learning for
the first time.
Recently, I conducted a survey of over 1000 first year students
across America . One question asked was, “Why do you
think students are un-motivated?” The top responses
included: (1) I don’t feel like anyone really cares if I’m
involved or not, (2) I don’t feel like I belong, (3) No
one ever asked me to get involved or showed me how to be involved,
(4) I don’t understand the activity or how it fits into
my life, and (5) Why should I be motivated or get involved? What
are the payoffs?
Today, you and I have the unique and wonderful opportunity to
help students understand the value of becoming engaged in their
own educational experience. Through advisement, mentoring, and
encouragement, we can help students grow and mature in an Atmosphere
of Success.
Creating an Atmosphere of Success might
have its challenges, but creating a place where students feel
wanted, needed, encouraged, challenged, and appreciated has many
rewards – the least of which is retention for our institutions.
The rewards for students include persistence, growth, accomplishment,
and maybe turning them onto learning for life.
So, what is this Atmosphere of Success?
Attend Dr. Sherfield’s session to find out!
Visit
http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/NationalConf/2005/index.htm
for more information.
2005 NATIONAL CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
Heather Howard, Rimi Marwah
University of Nevada-Las Vegas
Co-Chairs
Sherri Theriault
University of Nevada-Las Vegas Volunteers |
Nancy Torno
University of Nevada-Las Vegas Preconference
Workshops |
Kenny Eng
University of Southern California
Exhibits
|
Cindi Guimond
Claremont McKenna College
Poster Sessions |
Anne Hein
University of Nevada-Las Vegas
Evaluations
|
Julie Landaw
University of Nevada-Las Vegas
Hospitality |
You’re
in the Library? – Scholars at Work in Las Vegas
“The
Library” is the name of a bar within walking distance of the
Kent State University campus. A mother who calls on her son’s
cell phone and asks where he is may smile and think, “My son,
the scholar,” when he says, “The Library.” What
she doesn’t know won’t hurt him.
Imagine yourself at this fall’s NACADA Conference.
You could be there as an advisor, an administrator, a faculty member,
a scholar, a reveler, or as all of these if you take advantage of
a new Conference offering: Cultivating Scholarship in
Academic Advising.
Cultivating Scholarship in Academic Advising is designed for
current doctoral students, practicing professionals who are thinking
about a research study at their institutions, or anyone interested
in refining their research skills.
To take advantage of the Cultivating Scholarship
offering, those in need of a research methodology refresher should
plan to attend the Research Committee Pre-Conference Workshop
or a research methods class prior to the conference. Once you’ve
dusted off your research basics, sign up for the Cultivating
Scholarship Pre-Conference Workshop. It will be conducted
as a discussion of research thinking, current scholarship, and participants’
research interests. Throughout the Conference, Cultivating
ScholarshipWorkshop attendees will regroup informally to
discuss sessions they have attended and the potential they see in
those sessions for scholarly inquiry.
If you are ready to move your research thinking from thought to
action, if you are ready to experience the conference as a scholar
as well as a practitioner/reveler, then make the most of the Cultivating
ScholarshipWorkshop.
SPECIAL
ANNOUNCEMENT: Terry
Kuhn and Gary Padak have promised to
share the formula for their magic elixir that is guaranteed to vanquish
all research fears and apprehensions. Start gathering the ingredients
for the elixir in the Cultivating Scholarship Pre-Conference
Workshop and end each day “In the Library”
with fellow scholars discussing your research.
MEMBER
EXPERTISE DATABASE
NACADA members are encouraged to share their expertise by registering
with the NACADA Expertise Database at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/memberexpertise.htm.
This database is used to identify members' areas of expertise for
media requests, authorships, presenters at NACADA events, etc. So,
make your expertise known by registering or updating your information
today!
2006
NACADA Awards Program
The 2006 Call for Nominations for the NACADA
National Awards Program will be available in November 2005.
Until then, the criteria and nomination guidelines used for
the 2005 awards can provide you with a general idea of the types
of information and documents requested in the nomination materials
for the current award categories. Please note that it is possible
that some nomination guidelines and criteria may change for the
2006 Awards Program, depending on discussions held by the Awards
Committee at the National Conference. Therefore, please be sure
to check all guidelines closely once the 2006 Awards Call becomes
available before submitting any nomination materials.
Next year’s deadline for submitting nominations or applications
for most award categories will be March 6, 2006
. Retiree recognition notifications will be due June 5, 2006 . Information
on the Awards Program is available at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Awards/index.htm.
Start now in planning for the advising awards nominations to be
submitted in 2006 from your institution!
2006
NACADA Leadership Nomination Information
The next NACADA Leadership elections will be held in February-March
2006. For a complete list of NACADA leadership opportunities available
in the 2006 elections, visit the NACADA web site at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Election/index.htm.
(A direct link to election information is also available on the
NACADA home page.)
Nominations for the various positions can be submitted electronically
using the online form available at the web site above. A Word version
of this document is also available that can be faxed or mailed to
the NACADA Executive Office. In addition, nomination forms will
be available in the NACADA display booth in the Exhibits area at
the National Conference in Las Vegas this fall, as well as in the
back of the Conference program. These printed forms can be submitted
while at the Conference or faxed/mailed afterwards. The deadline
for submitting nominations to the Executive Office for the 2006
elections is Monday, October 31, 2005 .
If you are interested in becoming more involved in the governance
of the Association, we encourage you to submit a nomination to be
considered for a position. If you know someone whom you believe
would be a good candidate, please submit his or her name via the
recommendation form, and the NACADA Executive Office will follow
up to determine if he or she is interested and meets the eligibility
criteria. Position descriptions and eligibility requirements are
provided at the link above on the NACADA web site. If you would
like to inquire about your eligibility or that of a colleague for
a particular position prior to submitting a nomination, please contact
the Executive Office.
All candidates accepting their nominations will be required to complete
a personal biography form detailing past NACADA involvement, specific
accomplishments, and other relevant support of advising, as well
as a platform statement. Based on information submitted, the NACADA
Board of Directors and Executive Office may solicit additional nominees
to assure at least two candidates for each position. The final slate
of candidates will be available in late fall 2006 and will be posted
to the election web page noted above. The elections will be conducted
online in February-March 2006 and newly elected leaders take office
in October 2006 after the National Conference in Indianapolis .
Watch the monthly Member Highlights e-mails for more information
about the 2006 elections. If you have questions, contact the NACADA
Executive Office at nacada@ksu.edu
or call (785) 532-5717.
Kansas
State University and NACADA Announce August Recipients of the Graduate
Certificate in Academic Advising
The following learners were awarded
the KSU Graduate Certificate in Academic Advising in August 2005:
Heather Adams (Kent State University), Jodi
Bernstein (Excelsior College), Deborah Bitzer
(University of Michigan-Ann Arbor), Pamela Bridgeforth
(Alabama A&M University), Stanley Burdette (Tri-County
Technical College), Pamela Comstock (Creative Concepts,
Inc.), Darren Francis (University College of the
Fraser Valley), Jo Kolkay (North Central College),
Danielle Letendre (George Mason University),
Mary Tipton (Bryant & Stratton College-Rochester), and
Patricia Walsh (Iowa State University).
Recipients will
be recognized in a special ceremony at the NACADA National Conference
in Las Vegas in October, with KSU College of Education Dean Michael
Holen present to honor their accomplishment.
FALL
2005 classes are now enrolling! Offerings for this
semester are EDCEP 851 Multicultural Advising and EDCEP 863 Trends
in Career Development.
To
learn more about the Program, including application and registration
information, go to http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/GraduateCertificate/index.htm.
Commission
and Interest Group Updates
Advising
Administration Commission
Linda C. Chalmers, Chair
Early
in the fall we will be sponsoring a survey, written by one of our
members, to gather data about institutions that charge academic
advising fees. The survey will be sent to the Commission members
by email from NACADA's Executive Office. Following the data
collection, the results will be summarized and submitted in a future
edition of Academic Advising Today.
Please be on the lookout for the survey (no fee to complete it –
ha)!
Thinking
about how you can help colleagues nation-wide without leaving your
office? Have I got a deal for you! The Commission Chair
for 2006-2008 term is coming up for nominations. I must admit
it has been more time than I anticipated, but it's been rewarding
so far. I feel like I've really contributed to the "greater
good" of advising administration and most of it from my trusty
ole' computer. The Executive Office staff is so very helpful
– many times my guardian angels with deadlines and copy text.
I encourage you to “give it a whirl"! (For more
information, visit http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Election/index.htm.)
We
are looking for a few good – no, cross that out – ALL
those great administrators who have not yet joined the Commission!
We have about 1800 members on our roster. Come to our Commission
meeting at the Las Vegas Conference (on Thursday at 3:15) and find
out about us, meet us, and you will want to join us!
At our meeting, we will honor the Commission members who received
awards (or nominated their staffs for the bestowed awards) and toast
our Service to Commission award-winner as well. We will introduce
and applaud the Commission-sponsored presenters. We will give ourselves
a mental "checkup" as to accomplishing our goals, invite
"new business," and close with having time for networking
among us.
Watch
out, Las Vegas, Advising Administrators are on a roll!
Cheers,
Linda
Linda
C. Chalmers
University of Texas at San Antonio
(210) 458-6325
Linda.Chalmers@utsa.edu
Advising Transfer Students Commission
Troy A. Holaday, Chair
2005 has been an exciting year to be involved in working with transfer
students. The Advising Transfer Students Commission
has continued to monitor developments in state and national legislatures
that target accreditation and transfer credit evaluation, as well
as inform its electronic list members of the many conferences, new
research opportunities, and ground-breaking practices related to
transfer that seem to be arising on a monthly basis. [Editor’s
note: See Troy’s piece on The College
Access and Opportunity Act and Federal Regulation of Transfer
Credit Policies in this publication.]
Basking in the glow of a new NACADA monograph devoted
to transfer students and an article in Academic Advising
Today, the Commission has enjoyed increased recognition.
A mention on the CollegeSource website and extended comments from
the Chair in an upcoming issue of Hispanic Outlook are two examples.
Sadly, no nominations for the Service to Commission award were forwarded
this year and no budgeted projects were proposed, but we can work
on that in Las Vegas! The conference proposals sponsored by
the Commission at this year’s National Conference will cover
a wide variety of transfer-related topics, including transfer shock,
two-year and four-year institutional partnerships, research on transfer
patterns, post-orientation transfer experiences, innovative transfer
centers, and more. We certainly hope that the wealth of quality
content and materials shared in these sessions will inform the practices
of those who attend and prove the inaccuracy of the slogan, “what
happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas.” The Commission is
also currently seeking someone to provide leadership in the fall
of 2006, at which time the term of the current Chair ends. (For
more information, visit http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Election/index.htm.)
Troy A. Holaday
Ball State University
(765) 748-1198
tholaday@bsu.edu
Faculty Advisors Commission
Kathy Stockwell , Chair
Do you know, or have you ever known, a faculty advisor who really
loves advising? Or maybe you know of someone who has been an advocate
for faculty advising. We now have a way for you to honor that person!
The Faculty Advisors Commission has launched "Who's
Who Among Faculty Advisors" – a new project
on the NACADA web site – and we really need your help for
it to succeed. All you have to do is send us a picture of any faculty
advisor or supporter of faculty advising whom you would like to
honor, together with a description of what they have done for faculty
advising. Individuals are posted in two categories — current
faculty advisors and former faculty advisors who have moved on to
other positions.
We welcome all entries for posting, as this is not a competitive
award process. Great care will be used to help make all submissions
suitable for posting. You may send us information about yourself,
a colleague, or perhaps your own faculty advisor when you went to
college. We have even created a special section honoring faculty
advisors throughout history. So if you love doing research, send
us what you find about notable advisors from the past. We want to
make this list as diverse as possible.
For more information on our new Web site, and for a sample format
for the postings, just follow this link: http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Commissions/C15/resources.htm.
Kathy Stockwell
Fox Valley Technical College
(920) 735-2428
stockwel@fvtc.edu
Two-Year College Commission
Dianne Castor , Chair
The Two-Year College Commission has been very active during the
2004-2005 term. Commission members have participated in many facets
of NACADA throughout the year:
- The NACADA Board has worked to make
sure that the Two-Year Colleges are represented in all areas of
NACADA. Several members of the commission have served on the Annual
Conference planning committee and have made sure that the Commission
has been represented in any changes or proposed changes that have
been discussed.
- Members have served on a variety of
other committees as well and provided support for the Commission
in those areas. For instance, Commission members have served on
steering committees of several Regions. Regions that did not have
designated region members still were able to have input into the
functions of the Commission.
- Our 900 list serve members have discussed
numerous topics over the past year. While not all of the list
serve participants are current Commission members, their participation
demonstrates their support, and we hope that those who have not
yet done so will soon seek official Commission membership.
- Commission members submitted 22 proposals
for the upcoming annual Conference in Las Vegas, and many of those
were chosen for presentation. Unfortunately, only five could be
selected to be Commission-sponsored Conference sessions, and since
the proposals were all very good, the readers for the selection
of the sessions had a difficult time making those choices! We
encourage all members and potential members of the Two-Year College
Commission to attend the annual Commission meeting (Thursday,
2:00 p.m.), CIGI Fair, and the sessions. A special invitation
is extended to all who serve in any capacity on two-year colleges
to attend the annual meeting and help us welcome our new Chair,
Peggy Jordan (Oklahoma City Community College),
and to help her plan for the upcoming year.
Dianne T. Castor
Coastal Georgia Community College
(912) 262-3298
dcastor@cgcc.edu
Distance
Learning Interest Group
Bobbi Thomas,
Chair
Members
of the Distance Learning Interest Group who are planning to attend
the National Conference in October are invited to share their advising
orientation program with the larger group!
The
approximate amount of time each member will have to present their
program will be 10-15 minutes.
If
you are interested in participating in this event, please contact
Bobbi Thomas at thomasb@wsu.edu.
Bobbi Thomas
Washington State University
(509) 335-9271
thomasb@wsu.edu
Probation,
Dismissal & Reinstatement Issues Interest Group
Karen Reynolds,
Chair
By
the time you read this, the PDR Interest Group will have just completed
administration of its first Interest Group Survey. Thanks to all
who took time to complete it! The goal of the survey was to gather
information on current PDR practices around the country. This was
a need identified by PDR Interest Group members at the annual meeting
during the 2004 NACADA National Conference. The survey results are
being tallied, and I am excited about presenting them during the
Interest Group meeting at the 2005 NACADA National Conference in
Las Vegas (10:00 a.m. on Friday) and publishing them to PDR Interest
Group members and the PDR list serve.
The
2005 Conference is just around the corner. Information about program
topics/tracks has been published and is available to view online
at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/NationalConf/2005/tracks/index.htm.
We are fortunate to have 23 presentations designated in the Probation/Dismissal/Reinstatement
Issues track. Additional PDR related presentations have listings
in other tracks, such as Developmental Advising, First Year Students,
and Retention. They all look very interesting – check them
out. My only problem is not being able to attend them all!
I
hope to see many of you soon in Las Vegas!
Karen
Reynolds
Michigan State University
(517) 432-5298
reyno238@msu.edu
Region
Reports
Northeast
Region 1
Susan Campbell , Chair
As Always….Region 1 Rocks!
2006 Region 1 Conference planning is underway. Plans have
begun for another successful Regional Conference, this time in Connecticut
at the Hartford Hilton Hotel. The dates are March 29-31, 2006 .
The Conference Committee welcomes volunteers to participate in planning
for this event. Interested folks should contact Conference Co-chairs,
Susan Kolls (s.kolls@neu.edu)
or Gail Stubbs (g.stubbs@neu.edu);
both are at Northeastern University .
Interested in submitting a proposal? Please see the Conference details
at our Regional website (http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Regional_Divisions/region1/index.htm).
Drive-Ins. The strategic plan for Region 1 included expanding
the number of local, drive-in professional development opportunities
for regional membership. We are pleased to note the following successful
programs this year. Many thanks and kudos to the coordinators of
these workshops:
Eastern New York: “Plugging the Holes in Institutional
Services for Undecided Students,” coordinated by Susan
Moyer of Excelsior College.
Western New York: “Academic Advising and the Career Connection,”
coordinated by Susan Herzberg of Rochester Institute
of Technology.
Maine: “Legal Issues in Academic Advising,”
coordinated by Marcia Mower of the University of
Maine at Augusta .
Belated Welcome and Best Wishes. We welcome Rich
Robbins, Director of Engineering Advising at Cornell, to
Region 1. Rich joined Region 1 last year when he moved from West
Virginia . He is very active in NACADA, serving on the Editorial
Board for the Journal and the Advisory Board for the Assessment
Institute. Rich is one of the co-authors of NACADA’s Guide
to Assessment in Academic Advising that will soon be available
to the membership at large.
We also offer our best wishes to one of our best NACADA citizens,
Vicki McGillin. Vicki, previously Assistant Provost
at Wheaton College, is now Associate Provost at Texas Woman’s
University. While we will miss her in Region 1, we wish her well
in this new adventure!
Region 1 also offers best wishes to Jean Landes,
who left her position at St. John Fisher University to pursue opportunities
outside of academia. Jean coordinated many successful drive-ins
for academic advisors in Western New York .
Until Las Vegas, where our Regional Meeting (Thursday at 4:30 )
promises to be lively, remember – Region 1 Rocks!
Susan Campbell
University of Southern Maine
(207) 780-4547
scamp@usm.maine.edu
Mid-Atlantic
Region 2
Suzanne Trump, Chair
Happy Fall to all the members of Region 2.
As I write this report, I am enjoying the heat and humidity of summer
in Philadelphia, but I know that when you read it, we will all be
in the midst of helping students navigate another year of college.
It amazes me how quickly time passes!
On behalf of the Region Steering Committee, I have lots of exciting
news to share with you. Both Eastern and Western Pennsylvania are
hoping to have Drive-In Workshops in the Fall. (For more details,
please contact Chuck Allen at callen@temple.edu
or Harriett Gaston at hlg5@psu.edu.)
The Regional Conference Committee, under the able direction of Susan
Fread ( Lehigh Carbon Community College ), is busy planning
for the Regional Conference to be held March 22-24 in Lancaster
, PA. We will be sending out a Call for Proposals much earlier this
year, so look for email information in the very near future.
Last year, we developed an Awards Program for our Region, and it
was so successful that we are expanding the program for 2006. This
year we will solicit nominations for the following awards:
- Service to Region 2
- Outstanding Advising Award for Faculty
Academic Advising
- Outstanding Advising Award for Academic
Advising, Primary Role
- Outstanding Advising Administrator
- Outstanding New Academic Advisor
We will send an email to all members when the nominations open and
hope that you will nominate your worthy colleagues. Last year we
had excellent nominations, and the Committee members shared with
me that making a decision on the winners was one of the hardest
things they had to do in their professional careers. Let’s
make it hard for them again this year – nominate a colleague
in each category!
We started a new tradition last year at the Regional Conference
in Virginia Beach of giving state baskets as door prizes during
our meal. Since some of our states are considerably larger than
others, this year the Steering Committee decided to do three regional
baskets with goodies from all over the Region and one basket dedicated
to the Lancaster Area. Please respond generously when your State
Representative contacts you regarding donating to the baskets. It
is a great way to publicize your institution.
The Steering Committee will meet again in December, and we will
continue to look for ways to increase membership, provide local
continuing education and networking opportunities, and develop closer
relationships with the Commissions and Interest Groups. If you have
ideas or suggestions, please forward them to me.
Hope to see you all in Las Vegas. Please be sure to join me for
the Region 2 meeting on Thursday, October 6 th from 4:30 to 5:30.
Suzanne Trump
University of the Sciences in Philadelphia
(215) 596-8758
s.trump@usip.edu
Mid-South
Region 3
Rob Mossack, Chair
Well, as I write, the lazy days of summer have set in, so there
isn’t a tremendous amount of news coming out of Region 3.
Here are a couple of items from Tennessee :
- Plans are underway for a Tennessee
State Conference/Drive-In sometime during the 2005-06 academic
year.
- Tennessee Tech recently hosted an “Advisors
Roundtable” on their campus, dealing with pertinent topics
such as the impact of advising on campus retention, scholarship
issues, etc.
By the time you read this, however, it will be time to start thinking
about our 2006 Regional Conference.
- We have a date: March
19-21
- We have a place: Downtown
Sheraton, Nashville , TN
- We’ll have a theme before long…
- Now all we’ll need is YOU—be
sure to get those proposals for presentations ready to go!!!
This is the last time I’ll be posting one of these updates.
It’s my pleasure to turn this over to Karen Thurmond
(University of Memphis), our new Chair for Region 3. I’m
truly excited to have Karen taking the leadership role for our Region—she’s
a hard worker, and she’s got a boatload of great ideas to
keep us moving forward. I’ve really enjoyed my time
as Region Chair, and I thank all of you for your support.
Go Region 3!!!!!!
Rob Mossack
David Lipscomb University
(615) 279-6297
rob.mossack@lipscomb.edu
Southeast
Region 4
Annie Turman, Chair
Hey Region 4!
I am excited to announce the new Region 4 Awards Program. Begin
now thinking of colleagues you would like to nominate for an award.
There will be four categories: Professional Advisor, Faculty
Advisor, New Advisor, and Volunteer Award
(in honor of Joyce Jackson). Call for nominations
will go out in mid-October. Awards will be presented for the first
time at the 2006 Regional Conference in Atlanta, Georgia.
By the way, plans are underway for a great time in ‘HOTLANTA’
on March 5-7, 2006. Just check the region web site at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Regional_Divisions/region4/index.htm
for more detailed information. GET THOSE PROPOSALS READY!
Finally, please join me in welcoming aboard our new State Reps—Don
Killingsworth (Jacksonville State University) for Alabama,
Michelle Rutherford (Florida State University)
for Florida, and Mary Lee McDaniel (Hinds Community
College) for Mississippi. Thanks for volunteering your services
to NACADA!
Hope to see ya’ll in VEGAS!
Annie H. Turman
Georgia State University
(404) 463-9500
sacaht@langate.gsu.edu
Great Lakes Region 5
Becky Ryan, Chair
NACADA Region 5 is currently in the midst of our Grant Application
process. Five grants are available this year: Advisor Training
& Development, Allied Institutional, Allied State/Province Organization,
Regional Recruitment, and the Region 5 Scholars
Grant. Recipients will be announced in mid-September. For
more information, visit http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Regional_Divisions/region5/grants.htm
From around the Region:
Ontario representative Tom Fairbairn (Ontario
College of Art & Design) has been making headway in getting
the Ontario advisors organized. The regional conference in Toronto
was a great place to start, and advisors are eager to share, network,
and grow as a professional group!
The Illinois Academic Advisors Association (ILAAA)
fall conference will be held on Friday, November 4, 2005 at Moraine
Valley Community College in Palos Hills , IL . Charlie
Nutt, Associate Director of NACADA, will be the keynote
speaker. For more information, visit http://ilaaa.org/.
Michigan held its first Academic Advising Conference on
May 12, 2005 at Michigan State University. This successful
venture brought together 162 attendees from a wide variety of higher
education institutions across the state. Three keynote speakers
were featured: Charlie Nutt, June Youatt
(Assistant Provost for Undergraduate Education and Dean of Undergraduate
Studies, Michigan State University ), and John Austin
(Vice President, Michigan State Board of Education). As a result,
interest and momentum have been generated to form a Michigan NACADA
Allied Organization.
Deb Dotterer ( Michigan State University ) was elected
as the new Michigan Representative, and the current Michigan Representative,
Dan King ( Michigan State University ), was elected
as the new Region 5 Chair.
The Wisconsin Academic Advising Association (WACADA) is
gearing up for their annual conference, and Sheboygan is the place
to be on September 23rd! The theme this year is Life in Balance: Blending
Work & Education, and Carol Ann Baily
(Director, Adult Services Center, Middle Tennessee State University)
will be the keynote speaker. Conference and registration information
is available at www.wacada.org/conferences.htm.
Steve Schneider (Fox Valley Technical College) was elected
as the new Wisconsin Representative and will begin his two year
term in October.
In Ohio, this year’s annual Kent Academic
Support and Advising Association (KASADA) conference, Making
the Connection: Learning, Teaching, and Advising, which featured
Charlie Nutt as keynote speaker, was a tremendous
success. KASADA welcomes their new Chair, Heather Adams,
as well as Vice-Chair, Meg May, and Assessment
Committee Chair, Kathy Zarges. The KASADA group
is currently working on two exciting initiatives: (1) identifying
alternative majors for students who are not admitted to selective
programs and developing a training program for advisors who work
with these students; and (2) looking at the advising as teaching
paradigm shift in our profession, including developing a definition
of academic advising in this framework, as well as learning outcomes
and an assessment process for an academic advising curriculum. [Editor’s
note: See Debbie Barber’s Vantage
Point article in this publication for more on KASADA.]
Also at Kent State, the Raymond J. Kuhn and Shirley J. Kuhn Excellence
in Undergraduate Advising Awards were presented to Jessie
Carduner (Outstanding Faculty Advisor) and Charity
Snyder (Outstanding Professional Advisor). The previous
year’s recipients, Barbara Miller and
Benjamin Newberry, will be honored with Outstanding Advising
Awards at the NACADA National Conference in Las Vegas .
The Academic Advising Association of Ohio State (ACADAOS) announces
that Paul A. Heimberger and Karyl Shirkey
are the 2005 Outstanding Advisor Awards for undergraduate advising.
They were recognized at the annual ACADAOS award luncheon.
The Indiana Academic Advising Network’s
(IAAN) 2005 Conference was held at the University of Southern Indiana
on May 13, 2005. Charles Harrington (USI Academic
Affairs) welcomed the group, and George Steele
(Ohio Learning Network) was the keynote speaker. Steele’s
talk on “Where have we been? Where are we going? Perspectives
on Technology and Advising” gave rise to many scenarios
for advisors.
Becky Ryan
University of Wisconsin-Madison
(608) 265-5460
rjryan@wisc.edu
North
Central Region 6
Kim Roufs , Chair
Carol Gruber, former Region Chair, has left our Region
for Pennsylvania, and I have agreed to finish Carol’s term
of office. We wish Carol well at her new position as the Assistant
Vice President for Academic Affairs and the Dean of Student Life
at Carlow University in Pittsburgh.
We are happy to announce two winners of NACADA Advising Awards.
Mary Keenan ( University of Minnesota Duluth )
won the Outstanding Advising - Primary Role award. Kris
Reed (University of South Dakota, Vermillion) won the Outstanding
New Advisor - Faculty award. These colleagues will be formally recognized
for their contributions to academic advising in Las Vegas .
Pat Mason Browne, Kathy Keasler, and Jennifer
Joslin of the University of Iowa are co-chairing the Regional
Conference to be held in Iowa City, May 18 - 20, 200 . Mark these
dates on your calendar now! Keep up with conference developments
through the NACADA Regional web site at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Regional_Divisions/region6/index.htm.
The Region held a Diversity Workshop in Sioux Falls. Participants
brainstormed initiatives that Region 6 could undertake to put it
at the forefront of NACADA in the area of diversity. These initiatives
are:
- Sponsor a Drive-In Conference on diversity
or a specific diversity issue.
- Hold Regional Conferences in locations
that can highlight diversity or a diversity issue.
- Communicate what we do.
- Include and invite more diverse presenters
to Regional conferences.
- Partner with a "diversity"
organization.
- Revive Regional scholarship program.
- Form a Regional Diversity Committee
to continue to focus attention on the issue.
These items are on the table as we move forward.
Finally, we invite anyone in the Region to provide feedback, ideas,
or concerns as to how your Region can help you. Let us know about
advising initiatives on your campuses. Contact your state or provincial
representative at the Regional website. Your input is valuable.
Kathleen (Kim) S. Roufs
University of Minnesota Duluth
(218) 726-8761
kroufs@d.umn.edu
South
Central Region 7
Patricia Griffin, Chair
Region 7 will be welcoming a new Chair at the end of the NACADA
National Conference in October. Jill Anderson-Hieb,
Associate Director of the Freshman-Sophomore Advising Center at
the University of Kansas, will assume this leadership role. Jill
has been involved with the Region 7 Steering Committee since 2003.
I believe that Jill will do an excellent job representing Region
7; she is already familiar with many of the responsibilities.
It has been a wonderful experience serving as the Region 7 Chair,
and I appreciate the opportunities that I have been given to work
with remarkable individuals within the NACADA membership. In 1999,
Rich Robbins (formerly Washburn University) and
Dwight Moore (Emporia State University) opened
a door of opportunity for me to join the leadership of the Kansas
Academic Advising Network (KAAN). I had been in advising administration
for three years at the time and was looking for opportunities to
become more involved at the state level. They believed in me and
supported me in the process. In 2002, I became the NACADA South
Central Region 7 Steering Committee-Kansas Representative. This
provided an opportunity for me to become involved in leadership
at the regional and then national level.
NACADA provides many leadership opportunities for those who are
seeking to be involved at a different level. Please consider what
you have to offer your state, regional and national organizations.
If you are interested, let someone at NACADA know. I can speak personally
regarding the leadership opportunities I have had because two NACADA
members believed in me and provided an opportunity. I am sure that
I forgot to say “thanks,” but I appreciated the encouragement
and remember it still today.
Hope to see you all in Las Vegas !
Patricia Griffin
Fort Hays State University
(785) 628-5577
pgriffin@fhsu.edu
Northwest
Region 8
Sarah Ann Hones , Chair
Thursday, September 15, 2005 will be the Montana Drive-In Conference
in Bozeman – Advising under the Big Sky. Visit the
website for more information: http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Events/Conferences/State/upcoming.htm.
This is a great opportunity for professional development as our
school year begins!
Sarah Ann Hones
Southern Oregon University
(541) 552-8418
honess@sou.edu
2006 Regional Conferences
1.
Northeast |
March 29-31, 2006
|
Hartford
, CT |
2.
Mid-Atlantic |
March 22-24, 2006
|
Willow
Valley , PA |
3.
Mid-South |
March 19-21, 2006
|
Nashville
, TN |
4.
Southeast |
March 5-7, 2006 |
Atlanta
, GA |
5.
Great Lakes |
April 20-22, 2006
|
Cleveland
, OH |
6.
North Central |
May 18-20, 2006 |
Iowa
City , IA |
7.
South Central |
March 9-11, 2006
|
Little
Rock , AR |
| 8.
Northwest and 9.
Pacific |
March 22-24, 2006
|
Hawaii
|
10.
Rocky Mountain |
Feb 22-24, 2006 |
Albuquerque
, NM |
NACADA
will host three Professional Development
opportunities at the beach in February 2006!
First,
a special seminar on Ethical/Legal Issues in
Academic Advising will be held February 2-3. (For more information,
visit http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Ethical-Legal/index.htm.)
Next,
the 4th Annual Academic Advising Administrators'
Institute will be held February 5-7. (For more information,
visit
http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/AdminInst/index.htm.)
Finally,
the 2nd Annual Assessment of Academic Advising
Institute will be held February 8-10. (For more information,
visit http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/AssessmentInst/index.htm.)
All
three of these events will be held at the Hilton
Resort in Clearwater Beach, Florida. Watch the web and
your mail for more information!
Guidelines
for Submission
Academic
Advising Today is a quarterly publication of the National
Academic Advising Association. Articles are generally short and
informal. Original articles and opinion pieces directed to practicing
advisors and advising administrators that have not been printed
elsewhere are welcome. They are printed on a space-available basis
and should not exceed 1000 words. Guidelines and deadlines for submission
are located on the web at www.nacada.ksu.edu/Newsletter/guidelines.htm.
Academic
Advising Today
Published
four times annually by the National Academic Advising Association,
located at the address below:
National
Academic Advising Association
Kansas State University
2323 Anderson Ave., Suite 225
Manhattan, KS 66502
PH: (785) 532-5717
FAX: (785) 532-7732
nacada@ksu.edu
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|