Erin: So this video is an overview of
how to conduct an advising session,
from both perspective of the faculty adviser and
the Student Success and Advising Office.
So, I'm Erin Baumgartner, currently
Director of General Education,
but also a Biology Faculty adviser.
Nikki: And I'm Nikki Weight. The Director
for Student Success and Advising.
Erin: So what we're going to do today,
is we're just going to walk you through,
sort of a basic advising session
from beginning to end,
and share some of the associated
resources that go with that.
Now, if you're relatively new to advising,
you're going to have the opportunity
to kind of connect with Nikki's office
for some of their resources,
and we'll get to those in just a minute.
But first we're going to kind of
just start with the process
of how do you figure out who your advisees
are and how to connect with them.
So the easiest way to do that is
by going through the Portal,
and if you just click on Wolf Web,
you'll go to the Faculty Menu,
and your advisers menu, and then you can
just click on your Advisee Listing.
Now I'm not going to click on that right now, because I have some advisees in there
and their information is confidential, but this would basically bring up a list of my advisees.
And then what I normally do is, I simply
set up in Google Forms,
I'll make a little list of an advising schedule,
and what that's going to do is, I'll send
out the Google Forms link to my advisees,
so that they can sign up for their advising time.
And then they can fill that in,
with the time that they want,
they can edit it online,
they can make changes if they need to,
and it makes it really, really easy. They don't have to come in and see me to sign up.
They just have to do it on the Google Form.
Nikki: And then for Student Success and Advising,
for any students that come in for
advising through our office,
we use the Wolf Connection System
for our advising appointments.
That is a feature that if you are
interested in utilizing,
we can connect our offices to see
about going to get this set up.
A benefit of Wolf Connection System for our office,
is that it allows us to track our notes in there.
It also is available if other advisers use WCS,
that they can see past history with a student.
But, having an online scheduling format is
really beneficial for students.
They can easily get in touch - they're
not waiting to hear back from an email,
or trying to figure out when your office hours are if they're not in one of your classes,
so that way their time is set aside, so
that we're able to focus on that student
when they come in for advising.
Erin: Ok. So at the beginning of an advising session, especially if I'm with a new student,
what I like to do is make sure that I
have Degree Tracks up before they come in.
So, to get to Degree Tracks, you're still
going to use the Advisers Menu,
and then you'll just select Degree Tracks,
it'll ask you for the term,
and then you'll go to Degree Tracks.
Now, we already have one set up. We
have a simulated student account here.
So, what I would do is I would take
a look at this ahead of time,
I would look at where my students are.
And it'll tell me kind of where they are
with their academic standing and that's an
important thing to know.
And we're going to talk about what that means,
what those academic standing information means.
So I'm going to let Nikki say a
little bit more about that.
Nikki: So, any student at Western that is not in good standing,
they could be on Academic Warning,
Probation, Continued Probation
from a past semester, or they could
be on Academic Suspension.
Any student that falls into
one of these categories,
if you see that listed on Degree Tracks,
our office does advise them,
and work with them to make sure that any
challenges or barriers they're having,
that we're connecting with resources.
So I'm going to explain a little bit of
the process of what our office requires
of standing students, so if you see a
student that is on warning or probation
or suspension, you can refer them
to our office, but then also you can
check up and see how they're doing,
and see if they've connected with us,
and then we kind of try to loop
that full circle to refer them
back to their assigned adviser.
A student is placed on Academic Warning
if their term GPA drops below a 2.0.
If they're on Academic Warning,
and the following term they continue to
have a term GPA of below a 2.0,
they move to Academic Probation,
and if that happens again,
they're placed on Suspension.
Students that have a Warning or Probation,
and their next term they get above a 2.0
GPA, are placed back in good standing,
so you may see some fluctuation,
if they only take one class, or if
they took it over the summer,
it may change really quickly.
What happens if a student is placed
on Warning or Probation or Suspension,
is that at the end of every term,
once grades have been submitted
to the Registrar's Office,
the Registrar's Office will send
the official notification
to that student of what their
Academic Standing is and then
in that notification they are referred to
the Student Success and Advising Office.
We have two different tracks for students
that are in less than good standing,
just based on, how close they are to
reaching academic suspension.
Students on Warning have two options.
They can complete an online
Student Success Workshop, that
goes over what Warning is,
and what resources are available to them,
but also just refers them to our office.
Or they can just meet with an
Academic Success Adviser.
Those students who are on Academic
Probation since it's their
second term below a 2.0,
we want them to come and meet
with someone just to make sure that
we're addressing what their needs are.
Students who are on Academic Warning or
Probation, they receive a registration
hold on the first day of the term or
at some point after that email.
And that's just an incentive for them to
come and actually do the workshop
or come and see us so that they know what it
means for their standing
and resources to help them.
If students are placed on Academic
Suspension, they actually have
to sit out for at least one term before
being able to resume classes, and if
they happen to get a second Suspension,
that they're required to sit out a year.
Our office works with the students who
are returning after that break.
They are required to take a Learning
Seminar class their first term back,
and that is taught by staff in
Student Success and Advising.
Attached to this presentation on our
website, there will be a handout
with some helpful resources for doing
your first advising session.
In that resource, there'll be kind of a
one page cheat sheet
for the Academic Standing flow chart, so
you can also refer to that for questions
on how Academic Standing works. Our
biggest hope with Academic Standing is
that we're just getting the student connected
with all the appropriate resources
and helping them overcome whatever
challenges they faced in dropping below
that GPA and helping them get back on track.
Erin: So, a good reason to be aware of where
students are with their academic standing
is because that's part of
the conversation I like to have
with them when they come in.
So, if this is a new advisee I will
probably just start with getting to know
them a little bit better,
asking them a few questions about,
sort of, what's, you know, what's brought them to college, what are their goals,
what are they hoping to get out of their time here,
and also to just kinda get
a sense for who they are.
And then, at the same time,
I'm gonna walk them through
the DegreeTracks system so that
they know how to use it too.
So DegreeTracks, and this is really important,
the DegreeTracks is actually
the university's official record of the
degree requirements for each student.
So if students want to see kind of where
they are in their progress towards degree,
DegreeTracks is the best place to go.
The requirements in DegreeTracks align
to the requirements in the catalog.
So if, for some reason,
a program is looking to alter
what's in DegreeTracks, they need to do that
through the curriculum proposal process.
Of course, what that means is sometimes
between years when there are program changes,
depending on the student's catalog year, which is gonna be listed here under their Catalog Term,
if they are--if the program requirements
have changed and they're using
a different catalog term,
those may be different in DegreeTracks.
So that's an important thing to be aware of.
The other thing to be aware of
is that if a requirement is not marked
as complete in DegreeTracks,
this little green check box here,
then it is not marked as complete
in the Registrar's Office.
Sometimes people make
a mistaken assumption that,
well it's not marked off in DegreeTracks
but the Registrar's Office knows about it.
If it's not in Degree Tracks, it is a safe bet that
the Registrar's Office does not
have it recorded as well.
The blue sort of squiggle here,
what that shows is a degree requirement
that's in progress, and then if it's red
and not filled in then we know that
that requirement is not quite complete.
So those are things to sort of
work students through.
Now sometimes it's necessary to make
an exception or a substitution.
For example, if a student transfers something in,
so here we have some students who
transferred in some biology classes,
these are articulated from Chemeketa,
but let's imagine that a student transferred
something in from a college on the
east coast where we don't have
an articulation agreement,
if someone is making a substitution
or an exception to a requirement here
that's usually a department head
or a division chair, somebody like that,
that's gonna be noted in here as well,
so that is something that students can look for.
And so those can be made in DegreeTracks.
One thing to be aware of is that if
an exception is entered in DegreeTracks,
it does not affect the prerequisites at registration,
so a student may still have to
get that blue add/drop form signed
if they don't have a prerequisite, even though that is checked off in DegreeTracks.
So that is one little funny quirk there.
So, I like to go over kind of all
of the basics of DegreeTracks
with students so that they know how
to read this and interpret it, and then,
as we talk about their plans for the academic year,
what I will do is I will add notes in DegreeTracks,
and I just do that by adding a note.
You can choose a pre-defined note,
but what I usually do is I like to kind of
do a custom note, and I might describe
what the student, what classes
we talked about, if I recommended they
take a placement test before next term,
something along those lines,
and what's really great is I can always
go back to those notes, but so can the student,
so it's of course really important
to remember that your student advisees
can see everything that you put in these notes.
So if they are frustrating you,
maybe that's something
to write down some place else.
But the other thing that's nice
here is if a student decides
to change their major,
or change their advising plans,
then as they move forward, their new adviser will also have access to these notes.
Nikki: Just a note on the note section,
oftentimes there will come a situation
in the future where a student
will look back and say,
"Well my adviser told me A, B, and C",
and it's really helpful to have those
notes written down at the time
so that it doesn't become a
"he said, she said" scenario.
So I use notes, not only for you know,
a resource for the student
and when they come back to meet with me,
but also as we talked about
degree requirements and things they need
to get done, like prerequisites
or specific graduation requirements,
that I can look back and say,
"Look on this date is when we
discussed these requirements",
so that's recorded if it ever,
a student ever tries to petition it
or question it down the road.
The thing I also like to do with the notes is, as
Erin mentioned, those introductory
conversations asking about why
they're at Western, or what their career goals are,
the next time the student comes in
I can review those notes before they come
in and ask them kind of a follow-up
on our conversations from last time.
I get really funny reactions from students
when I do that because
they think I have this great memory,
and that I just pulled that off
the top of my hat, but really I
just pulled it from their notes,
but it really helps me keep that
sense of connection with the students
as we move forward, that they really do
feel like I care about what's going on
in their life, and I care about what
they're doing with their degree,
and so as we move further along their degree path
and away from more of the new student,
where we have to go through this is
DegreeTracks, these are your generals,
these are your major requirements,
and we move more into how do we
prepare you for graduation or graduate
school or internships that we've developed
that rapport over time
and we can kind of shift that focus.
DegreeTracks is a really great tool
and my expectation when I advise
is early on I'll teach students
very much how to use it,
but then over time I want them to be
using it themselves and then coming to me
with questions, rather than just them
assuming that I'm going to tell them.
One area I think that is not very obvious
for students that I always
like to point out is right here at the top
of the screen where it has the
degree requirements, I think it's fairly
straightforward to explain like
the check boxes and you haven't
met these degrees,
but a lot of students aren't aware
that you need 180 credits to graduate
and you have to have so many upper
division credits and if they're a transfer
student they have to have 45 of their
last credits at Western for that to count
and so they're not reaching
graduation and having 11
elective credits to graduate,
but their lower division electives
didn't count because they
weren't the upper division.
So that's an area both Erin and I really
try to make sure students
are aware of very early on that's
not kind of a checklist type.
The other feature of DegreeWorks,
DegreeTracks, that I use fairly regularly
is over on the left-hand side
there's this "What If" option.
This is really helpful if a student
is not 100% sure if the major
they're currently in is the right fit,
or if they want to add a minor,
and this allows them to add whatever
changes they would wanna make
and see what their worksheet would
look like under the new requirements.
Now in this test environment it
doesn't let us pick the major or minor,
but what you would typically do, and
the student is able to do this as well,
so usually I'll just show them how to do it
and allow them to go and do it themselves
is under the "Select Additional Areas"
under the primary--make sure you pick
the most recent academic year,
and then under the major, select
the most recent one and then
you can also add a minor or a concentration.
They'll show up under the chosen
area of study drop list
and once they have shown up
there you go back up
to the process "What If" button at the top.
And it will look the exact same as their
current worksheet just with
the updated information,
so the student will be able to see
how close they may be to
finishing a minor in one area,
or how close they may be if they
decide to switch majors so that
can be a really helpful feature if,
or another option is if they're pre-major.
For example, if they're currently looking
at going to pre-nursing but they
want to maybe have a backup degree
like biology or something else,
you can do a What If for if they stay
in your major that they have a plan
of what they should be working on
while they're maybe pursuing
alternative plans at the same time.
Erin: Yeah, and this brings up a really good point.
One of the conversations I
regularly have with students,
especially early in their degree process
is oftentimes they will come in
and I will simply ask them you know,
"How are things?
How are things going with your major right now?
Tell me a little about your classes."
And that gives us an opportunity
to have some conversations,
especially when they start to recognize that maybe
they want to make a change to their major.
And that can be a really important conversation.
I find oftentimes students aren't
always comfortable opening
that conversation because they
mistakenly feel like they have to stay
committed to their major.
I have had several students worry
that they would hurt my feelings
by wanting to change majors.
So by opening that conversation
with them I think it gives them
an opportunity to kind of ask
the questions that they need to ask,
and then we have the opportunity
to investigate what happens when
we want to make a change to a major.
And so, the way to do that is the
university Registrar's Office,
if you go to "Forms", there is a form,
the "Major/Minor/Adviser Change Form"
which is a PDF.
I think I'm clicking the right button.
And so, this is an opportunity if students
do decide they wanna change their major,
or add a minor, or perhaps they want
to choose a different catalog year
because they want some,
the major was just updated this year
and they wanna come in under those requirements.
This is the form that you use to do that.
It's really straightforward, it's
form-fillable, put all the
student information up here,
depending on what they're doing
you just mark all the intended changes.
Most frequently for me, that's a change of major.
Occasionally it's a change of catalog
year, because I advise pre-biology
sometimes it's also a change of advisor.
And then you can make a note of what
their major is, and then what happens
down here is this is going to be listed
and signed by the advisor for the major
that they are switching into.
So if they come to see me because they
want to switch into biology I would
complete this and sign off on it for them.
But if they are wanting to leave biology,
I might get them--help them get started
with this, but ultimately they are going
to need to go to whatever department
program is going to be taking them in.
And if you're not sure about that there's
a really good way to find out,
and that's through the Student
Success and Advising Office website,
and there's this advising contact sheet.
So let's imagine we wanted to find out
who a student needed for biology,
it's got all the information,
Cinda DeVoe is our academic
program administrator,
we're gonna give her those forms to file.
But then we can see who all the
different advisers are as well.
So, if for example, a student is
interested in pre-med we'd wanna
make sure they go see Dr. Baltzley.
If they're not sure he would also
be a good person to talk to because
he's the department head.
But let's say maybe a student
is interested in botany,
that would be perhaps Dr. Howard.
So this gives you an opportunity
to kind of help them so that
they're not chasing around
all over campus.
This is a really helpful resource.
[Nikki]
And with the changing majors,
once the student has taken the new form
to the correct department,
that department will assign the student
an advisor and get the form
over to the Registrar's office so that
the student's curriculum is changed
so that way their DegreeTracks
shows up accurately.
Couple things of note with
the change of major form
is I try to keep copies of them.
Often times if it doesn't make it
from the department to the
Registrar's Office and the student
is emailing saying,
"Why hasn't my DegreeTracks updated?"
Or they haven't been assigned
to you as an advisee,
that can cause some frustration
so keeping record of when that
was submitted so that you
can quickly submit it again.
One thing to note is if the student
is coming to you and they want to change
into your major,
and they have an advising hold,
you may not be able to remove
that hold right away.
One thing to note with
Western Oregon University is we do
require every student every term
to meet with their assigned
academic advisor so their changing majors
and that assigned adviser changes
then that may require a little bit
of emailing with their current advisor.
And Erin pulled up the advisor menu again
and when you have a student you want
to remove a hold for you go
to the same advisor menu,
instead of going to advisee listing you
go to remove advisor hold
and they'll be a check box there you
can select advisee's name and remove it
after you've met with them.
There is a search bar you can
enter a student's information,
but if you get an error that says, "You
do not have access to remove this hold",
that's because you haven't been
assigned as the advisor yet,
then you can often times I'm just
calling whoever their past advisor
was and just say,
"We met.
We're changing their major.
Can you remove the hold?"
On kind of that same note,
if a student knows that their
current major is not a good fit,
that they don't quite have a,
"What next?",
they're not necessarily need to stay
in their current major that
is one of the resources the
Student Success and Advising Office
provides at Western
is advising students who are exploratory.
And just in case you
can't see it on the slide,
the website for Student Success
and Advising is wou.edu/advising.
We have academic success advisors
who are specifically focused on advising
exploratory students, and this is a big
area that we wanna make sure students
know it's OK that students don't know
what they wanna do yet.
We'd rather them start the process
of exploring earlier and be OK with that
uncertainty so that they make a good
decision, then staying in
the wrong major too long,
and then maybe having it effect
their GPA because their classes
didn't go very well,
or they get two years into a major
and realize it's not a good fit.
So if any students are just not sure,
they have questions definitely
having that conversation about
why maybe it's not a good fit,
but then if they need to have further
conversation that's outside the realm
of knowledge area and they don't
have a direct area we welcome
them to come see an advisor in office.
We can actually change their major
to "Exploratory" while their exploring
so they will have an
assigned adviser in our office,
and we work very closely with various
resources and opportunities on campus
and do training to really help these
students have opportunities to explore,
so there are definitely is an area
I encourage students to be willing
to explore and usually they end up
doing better if they do that earlier.
So if you have any students
that they're not doing well,
it's not a good fit, but they just don't
really know what they wanna do
or what the next step would be,
that is a great opportunity
for us to connect with our office.
[Erin]
However, at some point the students
are going to pick a major that's
a good fit for them,
they're gonna stick with that major,
and they're gonna approach
their graduation day.
So at that point, again,
one of the things I wanna make sure
I do is I'm double checking that they have
all of their requirements checked off.
One of the things that's really
nice especially as they get close
and we use DegreeTracks is if
they want to, for example,
figure out remaining requirements
like maybe I have a student
who still needs to take their PE 131
they can check on this box
and it'll pop up and it'll tell them
what the class is and it will give
them a historic record of when
it has been offered.
So they're likely to see here,
"Oh, this class
is offered pretty regularly. I shouldn't
have any trouble picking it up."
As opposed to a class that might
not be offered all that regularly.
So that can be really handy.
The other thing that's great is that
the Student Success and Advising Office
does provide guides to advising the
liberal arts core curriculum so students
can look at those and see
what classes they need, as well.
As the new general education program
comes online we will have
similar guides to advising
that particular program.
[Nikki]
And the current guide is included
in the handout on our website
so that's attached with this presentation.
[Erin]
So, but in the meantime as students
get closer and closer they're going
to want to prepare for graduation.
And the easiest way to do that
is to send them back to the university
Registrar's Office website and there's
this fantastic turn-by-turn steps
to graduation for undergraduate students.
So making sure that they're aware
that two terms before their graduation
term they should be applying to graduate,
reminding them to always double check
with their advisor's to make sure they
have everything checked off
in DegreeTracks all the way up through
what happens when they graduate.
So this is a very handy resource to share
with students so that they know
what they need to be doing.
Depending on your program there
may also be some test requirements.
For example, I advise students who
are often times planning to apply
to the Master of Arts and Teaching
program, and so they have some testing
requirements that they need to complete
prior to application for that program.
So making sure that they're aware of all
those little fun quirks that specific
to your academic program
as they get closer
to graduation can be really helpful.
[Nikki]
And kind of on that same note with going
with a purpose of the advising appointment
is that really make sure students
are on track for graduation
and not reaching their last year
and realizing that they're
six credits short,
or they're missing a key requirement.
So a big portion of the advising
appointment opportunity is reviewing
that DegreeTracks and seeing
where they're missing areas.
But kind of the bigger scope of that
advising appointment is getting them
a connection with campus and helping
them be connected with resources.
The Student Success and Advising Office,
we work as a resource for all students
in a lot of different areas,
and so as you're meeting with students
that maybe they're struggling
with a particular class,
or maybe they are having
some things going on,
just to kind of make you aware
of some of the other resources
that are available through our office,
but not only that, through campus
in the handout that's attached
to the website with this powerpoint
there is a list of common
resources across campus.
Everything from helping students
get more engaged, like through
Service Learning Career Development
to maybe volunteer or career internships
and things like that to you know,
Student Health and Counseling Center,
Office of Disability Services.
There's a pretty broad range of resources
across campus that the advisor can
kind of serve as sort of the keychain
so to speak as connecting those students
with those resources they
may not know exist,
or may be hesitant to go
and explore 'cause they're,
they don't know somebody there
so someone can help make the introduction.
Student Success and Advising,
couple areas that we offer is we do have,
we coordinate tutoring for some of
the main general education opportunities.
There is a separate writing center,
science center,
and computer science tutoring,
as well as math tutoring,
so our office with tutoring focuses a lot
on common general education classes.
We also offer a study skills
tutoring option, so if a student
just wants help with time management
or note-taking but they don't necessarily
have a specific class they're struggling
with they can meet with a tutor for that.
They can also always meet with an
academic success adviser to talk
about study skills and that type of thing.
We also have some resources
on our website for students
who have any questions about tutoring,
they can schedule it online through WCS,
the Wolf Connection System,
or they can always just come
and contact our office and were located
in the Advising Center on the south side
of the street across from the
Werner University Center.
Another resource with our office
is as students, and this for faculty
may apply also as you're teaching,
if you have students that
you're concerned about,
they're not showing up to class,
or they aren't turning in assignments,
they aren't doing well on tests,
you can create an alert through the
Wolf Connections System to say,
"We're concerned about this student",
and the academic success advisors
in our office will reach out
and make connections with that student
to see what challenges they're facing
and help them get connected to campus.
Basically, whenever we can we're trying
to give the student as many connections
to campus as possible to help them
with being successful,
and the Wolf Connections System
allows us to maybe know which students
to reach out a little bit sooner to try
to help them overcome any obstacles
so that's another area
that our office works with.
And then as I mentioned
the academic standing, we also do
teach a student success class
so if any students are interested
in really in-depth skills for learning
how to be a better student
we teach a class in that area, as well.
[Erin]
So I think one of the things
that's important there as I often times
wrap up an advising session with students
is I will also remind them while
they are required to come
and see me during that advising week
and I have an advising hold
that I can use to force them to do
so they're not limited to that time.
They're always welcome to stop back by,
to send me an email,
occasionally during registration,
for example, a class they thought
they wanted to get into will be closed,
they have a prerequisite error
because of that funny little quirk
in DegreeTracks where a course
substitution won't sub out a prereq,
so those kinds of things
occasionally come up after we've
finished our advising conversation
for that term, so I like to make sure
that they know the they're always
welcome to come back and ask questions.
And, in fact, they're not bothering me
when they do that,
they're saving us both a lot of time
and effort because when they self-advise,
if they make a mistake
and something goes wrong,
it's a lot more challenging for me
and for them to go back
and take care of that issue,
whereas if they just ask
we can usually figure it out together.
[Nikki]
And a couple other helpful notes
with the advising holds that are placed
on students is that those,
that's something that the
Student Success and Advising Office
does facilitate that happens
the 5th week of every term,
a student receives an email with,
from our office that an advising hold
has been placed encouraging them
to meet with their advisor.
And then a couple things to note
with holds, often times students
will have multiple holds
placed on their account.
They might have an advisor
hold that's cleared by you,
but they might also have
a hold from admissions,
or a hold for doing a
sexual assault training,
or something from the business office,
and so every time I'm meeting
with a student I also encourage them
to look up their holds prior to
their registration time and make sure
they contact the office that
placed the hold to get the hold resolved.
And often times those holds
will be placed after the advising hold,
and so whenever I'm meeting with
a student I always make sure to tell them,
"Check before you're
registration time your holds",
and students can do that by logging
into the WolfWeb and they'll be a student
and then student records
and then a "View Holds" option.
And even doing that the day before they
register or the week before
so that they're not caught
off guard and emailing saying,
"Why didn't you remove my advisor hold?"
And we check and we did but they
had some other holds placed on there,
so that's another thing I like to check
when I'm meeting with students is to just
make them aware that there may be other
holds and they should've received
emails about it, but in
case they missed that to always check.
And then advising, another piece that
I've seen faculty advisors do is to talk
to students about when they will register
'cause it's assigned based
on how many credits,
but it's broken down into several
different time slots based on
they're day and so students
can see their registration
time also in WolfWeb.
They receive an email about that
so just letting the student to watch
for an email about their registration
time, but also how to go into WolfWeb,
click on Student, click on Registration,
and it will tell them
when their time ticket is.
So not trying to register the day of,
that kind of leads into another just
with advising it helps students to kind
of just be aware of important dates
and deadlines like maybe when the drop
deadline is, when the add deadline is,
and all of that information can be found
on the main Western page,
but also on the Registrar's Office page.
So a lot of advising is just helping
students be aware of some
of those university policies and
dates and deadlines so that
if they have concerns or challenges
that they're able to take care of those
and not be emailing you the day
after the withdraw deadline saying,
"I didn't know that there was a deadline."
And so those are just some resources
to help with making students aware
of when you're meeting with them.
[Erin]
So those are sort of the basic things that
may come up during an advising session.
Every student is different so every
advising session is different.
If you have questions,
it's always good to talk to
the more experienced advisors
in your department,
but just to reiterate the
Student Success and Advising Office
is a wonderful resource that
can be really, really helpful
in getting your students succeeding
towards graduating as well.
[Nikki]
And I am always welcome to talk
with people one on one for strategies
and we're hoping over time
to be able to get more and more
resources put together to create kind
of a resource library for advisors so that
you don't have to try
to remember everything,
you can refer back to it.
I do agree with Erin that if you
have the opportunity to sit in
with a current faculty adviser,
maybe someone who actually advised
some of the students you will be
seeing to help with that transition,
that's a great training opportunity.
And just never being afraid to ask
questions is one thing I've learned
with this university is everyone
is very willing to help.
So rather than be unsure, feel free
to reach out to the Registrar's Office,
Financial Aid, any of those areas just
to try to help the student be bounced
around from office to office and get
the resources from you as their advisor
and that there's a lot of
resources available to help you,
so you don't feel like you have to know
everything that you're not gonna reach
out to if you have questions.
If you have any suggestions for further
training that you would like to see,
or discussions you would like to have
as advising that is something
I would like to hear, so feel free
to email me, my email is Weight,
W-E-I-G-H-T-N@wou.edu, or feel free
to come see me in the advising center.
[Erin]
And we wish you good success
with advising!