Wednesday, August 5, 2009

From a Long Time Advisor

As advisors, we see so many different types of new-to-college-students!Each semester we see such VARIETY in their ages, life stages, socioeconomic backgrounds, family educational aspirations, cultural differences, and you can name many other variations that make our students somewhat unique from those possibly found at other colleges.Just yesterday working in the advising center I had a woman who is 56 going  to school for the first time who had been helping the elderly in their homes. She wanted to start at Richland but then go on to El Centro for Vocational Nursing. I also had a young man who was here to sign up for 5 classes (required number for the military), and then was going off to the army. He was all of 19 years old with a wife and a child. I also had another student right out of high school with high reading and writing scores who needed his math assessment testing.

Is it possible, Gary, to actually some of these very new to college students to have them give us input about what would like to see offered in a class like this? As professionals we have a good idea of relevant topics; however, I don't know that we do many focus groups with actual students to see what their needs are...

My ideas for relevant topics:
Career planning
Campus resources
Library tutorials
Study skills
Time management
Investigating class formats (DL, cooperative learning, learning communities, studies abroad, honors, global studies, etc.)

Good luck with this very worthwhile endeavor!

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