National Academic Advising Association
THE STATEMENT OF CORE VALUES
OF ACADEMIC ADVISING
EXPOSITION
Core Value 1: Advisors are responsible to the individuals
they advise.
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Academic advising is an integral part of the educational
process and affects students in numerous ways. As advisors
enhance student learning and development, advisees
have the opportunity to become participants in and
contributors to their own education. In one of the
most important potential outcomes of this process,
academic advising fosters individual potential.
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Regular student contact through in-person appointments,
mail, telephone, E-mail, or other computer-mediated
systems helps advisors gain meaningful insights into
students' diverse academic, social, and personal experiences
and needs. Advisors use these insights to assist students
as they transition to new academic and social communities,
develop sound academic and career goals, and ultimately,
become successful learners.
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Advisors recognize and respect that students' diverse
backgrounds are comprised of their ethnic and racial
heritage, age, gender, sexual orientation, and religion,
as well as their physical, learning, and psychological
abilities. Advisors help students develop and reinforce
realistic self-perceptions and help them use this information
in mapping out their futures.
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Advisors introduce and assist students with their
transitions to the academic world by helping them
see value in the learning process, gain perspective
on the college experience, become more responsible
and accountable, set priorities and evaluate their
progress, and uphold honesty with themselves and
others about their successes and limitations.
- Advisors encourage self-reliance and support students
as they strive to make informed and responsible decisions,
set realistic goals, and develop lifelong learning
and self-management skills.
- Advisors respect students' rights to their individual
beliefs and opinions.
- Advisors guide and teach students to understand and
apply classroom concepts to everyday life.
- Advisors help students establish realistic goals
and objectives and encourage them to be responsible
for their own progress and success.
- Advisors seek to understand and modify barriers to
student progress, identify ineffective and inefficient
policies and procedures, and work to affect change.
When the needs of students and the institution are
in conflict, advisors seek a resolution that is in
the best interest of both parties. In cases where the
student finds the resolution unsatisfactory, they inform
students regarding appropriate grievance procedures.
- Advisors recognize the changing nature of the college
and university environment and diversity within the
student body. They acknowledge the changing communication
technologies used by students and the resulting new
learning environments. They are sensitive to the responsibilities
and pressures placed on students to balance course
loads, financial and family issues, and interpersonal
demands.
- Advisors are knowledgeable and sensitive regarding
national, regional, local, and institutional policies
and procedures, particularly those governing matters
that address harassment, use of technology, personal
relationships with students, privacy of student information,
and equal opportunity.
- Advisors are encouraged to investigate all available
avenues to help students explore academic opportunities.
- Advisors respect student confidentiality rights regarding
personal information. Advisors practice with an understanding
of the institution's interpretation of applicable laws
such as the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act
(FERPA).
- Advisors seek access to and use student information
only when the information is relevant to the advising
process. Advisors enter or change information on students'
records only with appropriate institutional authorization
to do so.
- Advisors document advising contacts adequately to
meet institutional disclosure guidelines and aid in
subsequent advising interactions.
Core Value 2: Advisors are responsible for involving
others, when appropriate, in the advising process.
- Academic advisors must develop relationships with personnel
critical to student success including those in such diverse
areas as admissions, orientation, instruction, financial
aid, housing, health services, athletics, academic departments,
and the registrar's office. They also must establish
relationships with those who can attend to specific physical
and educational needs of students, such as personnel
in disability services, tutoring, psychological counseling,
international study, and career development. Advisors
must also direct students, as needed, to experts who
specialize in credit transfers, co-curricular programs,
and graduation clearance.
- Because of the nature of academic advising, advisors
often develop a broad understanding of an institution
and a detailed understanding of student needs and the
resources available to help students meet those needs.
Based upon this understanding:
- advisors can have an interpretative role with
students regarding their interactions with faculty,
staff, administrators, and fellow students, and
- advisors can help the institution's administrators
gain a greater understanding of students' needs.
- Students involved in the advising process (such as
peer advisors or graduate assistants) must be adequately
trained and supervised for adherence to the same policies
and practices required of the professional and faculty
advisors and other specially trained staff advising in
the unit/institution.
Core Value 3: Advisors are responsible to their institutions.
- Advisors work in many types of higher education institutions
and abide by the specific policies, procedures, and values
of the department and institution in which they work.
When circumstances interfere with students' learning
and development, advisors advocate for change on the
advisees' behalf with the institution's administration,
faculty, and staff.
- Advisors keep those not directly involved in the advising
process informed and aware of the importance of academic
advising in students' lives. They articulate the need
for administrative support of advising and related activities.
- Advisors increase their collective professional strength
by constructively and respectfully sharing their advising
philosophies and techniques with colleagues.
- Advisors respect the opinions of their colleagues;
remain neutral when students make comments or express
opinions about other faculty or staff; are nonjudgmental
about academic programs; and do not impose their personal
agendas on students.
- Advisors encourage the use of models for the optimal
delivery of academic advising programs within their institutions.
- Advisors recognize their individual roles in the success
of their institutions and accept and participate in institutional
commitments that can include, but are not limited to,
administrative and committee service, teaching, research,
and writing.
Core Value 4: Advisors are responsible to higher education
in general.
- Advisors accept that one goal of education is to introduce
students to the world of ideas in an environment of academic
freedom. Advisors demonstrate appreciation for academic
freedom.
- Advisors base their work with students on the most
relevant theoretical perspectives and practices drawn
from the fields of social sciences, the humanities, and
education.
- One goal of advising is to establish, between students
and advisors, a partnership that will guide students
through their academic programs. Advisors help students
understand that learning can be used in day-to-day application
through exploration, trial and error, challenge, and
decision making.
- Advisors advocate for student educational achievement
to the highest attainable standards and support student
goals as they uphold the educational mission of the institution.
- Advisors advocate for the creation, enhancement, and
strengthening of programs and services that recognize
and meet student academic needs.
Core Value 5: Advisors are responsible to their educational
community.
- Many institutions recognize the importance of integrating
classroom learning with community experience, study abroad,
and programs that bridge the gap between the academic
and off-campus environments. Where such programs exist,
advisors help students understand the relationship between
the institution and local, regional, national, and international
communities.
- Advisors advocate for students who desire to include
study abroad or community service learning into their
co-curricular college experience, and they make appropriate
referrals to enable students to achieve these goals.
- Advisors understand the intricacies of transfer between
institutions and make appropriate referrals to enable
students to achieve their goals.
Core Value 6: Advisors are responsible for their professional
practices and for themselves personally.
- Advisors use the Statement of Core Values to guide
their professional actions.
- Advisors seek opportunities to grow professionally.
They identify appropriate workshops, classes, literature,
research publications, and groups, both inside and outside
the institution, that can keep their interest high, hone
professional skills, and advance expertise within specific
areas of interest.
- Advisors seek cross cultural opportunities to interact
with and learn more about ethnic communities, racial
groups, religions, sexual preferences, genders, and age
levels, as well as physical, learning, and psychological
abilities and disabilities found among the general student
population.
- Advisors recognize that research topics are embedded
in academic advising practice and theory. Advisors engage
in research and publication related to advising as well
as in areas allied with their training and disciplinary
backgrounds. Advisors' research agendas safeguard privacy
and provide for the humane treatment of subjects.
- Advisors are alert to the demands surrounding their
work with students and the necessity of taking care of
themselves physically, emotionally, and spiritually to
best respond to high level demands. They learn how to
maintain a 'listening ear' and provide sensitive, timely
responses that teach students to accept their responsibilities.
Advisors establish and maintain appropriate boundaries,
nurture others when necessary, and seek support for themselves
both within and outside the institution.
A pdf
version of this document is also provided.
This document is a "member benefit publication";
it can be downloaded and used on campuses in accordance
with the NACADA
copyright statement.
The Statement of Core Values provides the guidance academic
advisors seek from the National Academic Advising Association.
The Statement is reviewed periodically to ensure its alignment
with current professional practices and philosophies. The
National Academic Advising Association encourages institutions
to adopt the Statement of Core Values and support the work
of those who provide academic advising.
Revised 2005 Copyright
© 2005 by the National Academic
Advising Association (NACADA)
Links to remaining portions of the Core Values Statement
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