Academic Advising Guidebook
Academic advising at 51ÁÔÆæ helps students make responsible, informed decisions about their intellectual development. Working with a faculty advisor, students craft an educational plan reflecting their particular interests and abilities, and the College’s . The plan, which typically evolves over time, balances the freedom of an open curriculum and the breadth of a liberal arts education.
The Faculty Advisor-Student Relationship
The faculty advisor-student relationship sits at the center of a larger system of formal and informal advising resources on campus, a system that engages students in conversations that transcend mere course selection. Drawing on multiple sources of advice will enable students to make the most of their college experience through a well-thought-out exploration of various disciplines, selection and completion of a concentration, consideration of options for off-campus study, and preparation for life after 51ÁÔÆæ.
For the first two years, until students declare a concentration, faculty advisors help them adjust to the intellectual demands of the College. Once students declare a concentration, they will be advised by a professor in that department or program. Advisors vary in their approaches to advising, but all are eager to see students succeed and to help them toward that success. Although advisors are ready to assist, students must assume major responsibility for their own education when they matriculate at 51ÁÔÆæ. Students must take the initiative to seek out advice, and take responsibility for their educational plans.
Advising at 51ÁÔÆæ: Expectations & Responsibilities
Advising at 51ÁÔÆæ is designed to help students make responsible, informed decisions about the course of their intellectual development. The advising system incorporates all of the formal and informal advising resources on campus.
The College supports that system by providing information about goals, regulations, policies, and procedures (e.g., purposes and goals, off-campus study opportunities, the process for declaring a concentration, and each student’s progress toward a degree) and by providing resources to support the advising process (e.g., support services and post-graduate planning). The College also provides training for advisors, conducts ongoing assessment of the advising system, and recognizes outstanding advising.
Advisee-advisor interactions primarily will involve discussions to encourage reflection on decisions in academic planning, as noted below. The College expects that over the course of the first three years each student will become self-sufficient and independent in making decisions about the student’s educational plans, and that the advisor will facilitate such growth.
The College expects that students will familiarize themselves with:
- Graduation requirements
- The College’s
- The process of declaring a concentration
- Options and academic regulations for off-campus study if they are interested in pursuing Global Learning
- Support services that are available and how to obtain help
- Their ongoing academic progress toward graduation
Questions about the above topics can be directed to the Registrar’s Office or the Associate Dean of Students for Academics, as appropriate.
The College expects that advisors will communicate their availability for preregistration and informal meetings, and that students will make appointments for preregistration planning and for other discussions.
During their meetings, the student and advisor should discuss:
- The student’s educational plan, which will evolve over time and should reflect both the student’s particular interests and abilities and the College’s purposes and goals. The advisor should inquire about the student’s plan and provide feedback and advice, as appropriate.
- Courses throughout the College curriculum, including areas of study with which the student is unfamiliar
- Whether or not off-campus study should be included in the student’s educational plan
- The reasons for the student’s choice of concentration
- The student’s progress toward completion of any chosen concentration and minor
- Campus resources that are available to assist with academic, career, and personal concerns, and, when appropriate, the advisor should make recommendations about what service(s) the student may wish to use
- How the student’s choices contribute to post-51ÁÔÆæ career plans
Who is eligible to advise?
- All tenured and tenure-track faculty who are not on leave during the academic year are eligible to advise that same year.
- Exceptions: Long-term visiting faculty may agree to advise with approval of department
Guidelines used for determining advising load
- Generally a 20-student max
- Exceptions by consent of faculty member
- Usually an issue for departments with high numbers of concentrators
- Senior concentrators will count as ½ an advisee
- No more than 8 first-year advisees in the fall
- First-time advisors will normally have a maximum of four first-year advisees in the fall
- Faculty on leave in the spring semester will not be assigned new advisees in the preceding fall
Assignment of Pre-Concentrator Advisees
The Registrar’s office assigns first-year advisees.
- Students will be assigned advisors who are their first-semester instructors insofar as is possible. Other students will be assigned to faculty who will be teaching introductory courses in the spring, if possible, and will be linked to students' stated interests.
- January admitted students will be assigned to someone who will be one of their instructors in the spring semester.
- Typically, students will remain with their pre-concentrator advisor until they declare a concentration near the end of their sophomore year; however, students have the option of changing their academic advisor at any time.
Assignment of Concentrator Advisees
Departments handle assignments of concentrator advisees according to their own procedures and guidelines. Some allow students to self-select advisors. In some high-enrollment departments, the chairs may determine assignments to maintain equity in advising load.
- When assigning concentrator advisees, it helps if department chairs try to keep the concentrator advising load lower for faculty who are scheduled to teach FYCs in the fall.
51ÁÔÆæ has offered an open curriculum since 2000. Because there is no fixed set of core distribution requirements, an open curriculum encourages breadth through intentional exploration. Consequently, the success of an open curriculum lies in the ability of students to be actively engaged in their decisions and to consider how their choices address their own and 51ÁÔÆæ’s educational goals in the context of their academic planning. This is a big responsibility – how can we engage students in this process?
51ÁÔÆæ’s Curriculum
General Tips
For academic advisors:
- Take time to become acquainted with their advisees
- Be aware that students arrive at 51ÁÔÆæ with a diversity of backgrounds, experiences, strategies, challenges and expectations. The advising website provides some framework for putting 51ÁÔÆæ students’ experiences in context
- Discuss academic and career goals and students’ progress towards them
- Help advisees identify their own passions and goals, and envision their own paths as they balance their personal goals with those of the institution.
- Help students learn how to set and achieve goals.
- Act as a supportive critic, guide and ally.
- Be aware of information that students may need and where to refer them.
- Help advisees learn how the advising system and WebAdvisor works.
- Have an awareness of issues that affect students’ academics and some knowledge about appropriate referrals.
Advisors are not expected to:
- Fill out forms for students
- Register students for courses
- Make sure requirements are completed
- Know requirements for every major
- Make decisions for students
Advisors are expected to encourage students to:
- Take responsibility for their academic career
- Think about goals for 51ÁÔÆæ and after
- Explain their ideas and plans
- Gain an understanding of a liberal arts education
- Make use of their advisor’s knowledge
- Think about the questions from their advisor
- Evaluate the advice given
- Show up for the job
- Schedule appointments
- Arrive on time and prepared
- Take time for conversation with their advisor
- Make decisions, be reflective
- Consider and reconsider goals
- Decide on courses, concentration, co-curricular and extra-curricular experiences
- Take charge of registration matters
- Obtain necessary information
- Learn and complete all requirements
- Register for courses
Students are not expected to:
- Memorize the college catalogue
- Know immediately all of 51ÁÔÆæ’s requirements
- Know the requirements for every major
- Know immediately their career and life goals
Advising Website
51ÁÔÆæ’s advising website provides useful guidance for students as they develop their educational plan.
Faculty Resources
Information to support academic advisors is provided online. This page brings together information on 51ÁÔÆæ's curriculum and advising tools.
Self-Service
Self-Service is an online tool that faculty use to access all of their advisees’ academic records and to clear advisees for course registration. It is also used for faculty to track the enrollment status of courses offered at the College. The student facing version of this tool is called Student Planning.
Information from the Registrar
The Registrar’s Office maintains a website to assist new faculty with academic advising and other procedural policies.
New Advisor Orientation & Training
Faculty workshops are offered throughout the academic year to assist faculty with a range of advising matters. Topics are geared towards issues that are likely to arise for a particular time of year. Sample topics are provided below.
Late Spring
Nuts and bolts session for new advisors.
August
- Nuts and bolts session for new advisors.
- Advising workshop session. Discussion on various general topics such as developing a relationship with new students, developing a long-term educational plan to attain goals (studying off-campus, planning for medical school), advising students from a broad range of backgrounds.
Ad hoc sessions during the year
Past topics: handling sticky situations; visiting resource centers on campus; meeting some pre-professional advisors; preparing for meetings to assist with registration; advising for January admits; helping students who are on the fence make decisions about concentrations, internships, study abroad, opportunities for extra-curricular scholarship, or pre-health professions; discussions with personnel who provide support in different aspects of students’ lives (e.g., Career Center, Counseling Center, Health Professions Advising, Opportunity Programs, etc.)
The Pre-registration Process
Incoming first-year students will have completed an online summer advising tour in June, during which they will provide information to assist with their academic planning. In the tour students are introduced to the curriculum, and they select a set of twelve preferred courses to take in their first semester. Students will be pre-registered for courses based on their responses and will be notified of their schedules in late summer. Advisors will have access to their advisees’ responses to the tour through a link provided by the Registrar Office.
(January Admit students complete the tour in the fall semester and are registered for spring courses during the regular course registration period in November)
New Student Orientation
During new student orientation advisors meet with their first-year advisees to begin the academic advising process. If students wish to make changes to their preliminary schedule they may do so after meeting with and obtaining approval from their academic advisor. Advisors must clear all students in Self-Service after their individual sessions to indicate that the meeting has taken place – even students who do not wish to make changes to their schedules.
Schedule Changes during Orientation
- Advisors should make sure students understand how to check if a course is open or closed in Self-Service (Student Planning is the student version of the tool).
- Students who wish to make schedule changes, if the course has open seats, the Registrar’s Office will make the change with the student
present. - If the course a student wants is closed or waitlisted, they will have to wait until the add/drop period which begins on the first day of classes.
- Students will not be permitted to register for more than four courses until the add/drop period during the first week of classes.
- Once classes start all students will begin using the new online add and drop forms, which require approval from their advisor and instructors of the dropped and added courses in order to make changes. Instructions and links to these forms will be provided separately by the Registrar’s Office.
- During the first full week of classes, students can continue to check for newly opened seats on Self-Service, as other students drop courses throughout the first days of classes. If a seat opens up that they want, they can complete the online add and drop forms.
Below is a brief summary of important details for each class year.
6.1. FIRST YEAR
Summer Pre-registration & Fall Orientation
- Incoming students will learn about the curriculum as part of an online summer advising tour in June; students will select a set of twelve preferred courses for possible fall enrollment.
- The Registrar, working with the Associate Dean of Students, Academics, the Assistant Director of Opportunity Programs, the Pre-Health Advisor, and feedback from other relevant faculty about placement, will enroll students in courses in July, giving each student as many of their top choices as possible. Preliminary schedules are created for each student based on their preferences some guidelines identified by the Advisory on Academic Advising. For instance,
- Students should be registered for only one WI course in the fall. Only one WI completed in a semester counts towards the requirement, unless the second WI course is in Math or a foreign language.
- Schedules should be balanced, i.e., courses distributed across disciplines (e.g., not more than 3 in the same division), courses not all on the same days of the week, all four courses should not be QSR courses.
- Schedules should allow time for students to eat lunch
- There is a short period during which students can change their schedule (see Section 5 above). Schedule changes will be permitted during this time if all their health forms are in and have been reviewed by the Health Center.
- Students will be assigned academic advisors who are their first-semester instructors insofar as is possible. Other students will be assigned to faculty in one of their major or new major interests.
- Students will meet advisors during orientation to discuss and approve, or consider changing, their fall course schedules, as well as to discuss a longer-term educational plan.
January admitted students
- Some first-year students matriculate in January. These students will complete an online advising tour in the fall to begin learning about 51ÁÔÆæ’s curriculum and to select courses.
- They will be assigned to academic advisors who will be one of their Spring term professors or to faculty in one of their major or new major interests.
- Deadlines for completion of degree requirements are similar to those for students who matriculate in the fall: Declaration of major, QSR, and PE requirements are to be completed by the fourth semester of attendance, the writing requirement by the sixth semester.
Introducing the academic advising system
Many faculty will be formal academic advisors to students who are enrolled in their introductory courses and important informal advisors to others. A key step in easing students’ transition to college is introducing first-year students to 51ÁÔÆæ’s academic advising system. This introduction should include discussions about the following:
- each participant’s responsibilities in the advising process
- initial steps in forming a student’s educational plan
- the use of Student Planning/Self-Service and the College Catalogue
- the importance of taking placement exams for math and language study
- planning for off-campus study with staff in the Off-Campus Study Office, including understanding the
Conversations on these topics usually progress more smoothly and follow more naturally after taking some time to learn about your students’ interests, backgrounds, and goals.
6.2. SOPHOMORE YEAR
- If students are interested in studying off-campus they should begin planning in their first year or early in their sophomore year with the staff in the Off-Campus Study Office. Students should be aware of the process for transferring credit back to 51ÁÔÆæ from study off campus, which includes submitting a Transfer Credit Petition and understanding the various policies for transfer credit.
- Completion of QSR should occur in the sophomore year.
- Completion of the PE requirement must be in pending status or completed by spring break of a student's sophomore year or a 24-hour hold is placed on the student's fall registration.
- Students declare a concentration in spring of their sophomore year. They must have completed two courses in their concentration by the end of their sophomore year.
- January admitted students are given an additional semester, but may declare in the third semester with their classmates, if they wish.
- At the time they declare their concentration, sophomores are asked to reflect on their educational plan to date, in light of the College’s purposes and goals, and their plans for the remainder of their time at 51ÁÔÆæ. (See questions below.) Those responses will be available for advisors to review and discuss with their new concentration advisees.
- When declaring a concentration, students will also be asked for feedback on their academic advising experience thus far. (See section below on Assessment.)
- Students work with their concentration advisor in Spring of their sophomore year.
- Following-up on responses to the sophomore reflection survey is a good way to get to know your new advisees.
Questions for Sophomores to Respond to When Declaring Concentration
(Proposed by Advising Assessment Committee Spring 2014)
- What led you to choose your concentration? (such as: particular course(s), career aspirations, personal experiences)
- (a) Explain how your education thus far has helped you address the College’s purposes and goals [see pop-up listing]
(b) Which of the purposes and goals have you yet to address, and what do you plan to do to address them? - Other than completing your concentration, what are your educational plans for your final two years at 51ÁÔÆæ? For instance:
- Are you planning on studying off-campus? If so, where and why?
- In what ways are you interested in exploring the connections between your academic coursework and co-curricular applications? (e.g., internship, leadership and volunteer activities, etc.) If so, what connections do you want to explore?
- How do you think your academic plan will help you achieve your life goals?
- What departments or programs offer courses you have not taken but that you want to explore?
6.3. JUNIOR YEAR
- Completion of writing-intensive requirement should occur in the junior year.
- Many students choose to study off campus in their junior year (over 54%). Planning for this time away and for their return is important to ensure a successful experience.
- Guide students through completion of college and concentration requirements
- File for leave of absence in the semester before your planned travel.
- Discuss post-51ÁÔÆæ career plans
- Encourage exploration of internships or other avenues for co-curricular/extra-curricular opportunities as they relate to educational or career goals.
6.4. SENIOR YEAR
- Seniors no longer need signatures on registrar forms such as add/drop forms, but they will keep their advisor of record.
- Seniors, of course, may still want to meet with their advisors to discuss various matters, often including their post-graduation plans.
- Each senior counts as one-half of an advisee for advising load purposes.
- At the end of senior year, advisees provide feedback on their advising experience in their concentration.
In May 2014 the faculty approved a three-year pilot period beginning Spring 2015, during which time sophomores and seniors would complete surveys on their advising experiences. In the fall of 2018 an ad hoc Advising Assessment Committee was elected to gather feedback from faculty on the survey tools and propose any changes. Below is the motion that was approved on April 30, 2019 with revised survey tools for both sophomores and seniors.
Motion from the ad hoc Advising Assessment Committee regarding the assessment of academic advising.
Moved, that the Faculty approve the following assessment tools for sophomores and seniors with the following conditions:
- The assessment tools will be first administered in the 2019-20 academic year.
- The Advisory Committee on Academic Advising (ACAA) with the Office of Institutional Research and Assessment will oversee the administration of the assessment tools.
- The ACAA, in consultation with Academic Council, will bring any future revisions of the assessment tools to the Faculty for consideration.
- Beginning in the 2020-21 academic year, the ACAA will be responsible for presenting an annual report at the October or November faculty meeting summarizing the aggregated College results of the assessment tools from the previous academic year.
- The results of the assessment tools will be provided in the aggregate to each department/program along with comparable data for the entire College on an annual basis.
- Beginning in 2021, a new question will be added to the Department Annual Report that will require a summary of the department’s discussion about the feedback from the assessment tools from the previous academic year (e.g., in the 2021 Department Annual Report chairs/directors will summarize the conversation the department/program had during the 2020-2021 academic year about the assessment tools that were completed by students in the spring of 2020).
- The assessment tools will be required for sophomores when they declare concentrations and for seniors when they complete course evaluations in the spring term. Grade availability will be delayed if the evaluations are not completed.
**
ASSESSMENT FOR SOPHOMORES
51ÁÔÆæ Advising Mission and Expectations
Academic advising at 51ÁÔÆæ helps students make responsible, informed decisions about their intellectual development. Working with academic advisors, students craft an educational plan reflecting their particular interests and abilities, and the College’s purposes and goals. The plan, which typically evolves over time, balances the freedom of an open curriculum and the breadth of a liberal arts education.
Instructions: The answers to the following questions are meant to be a reflection of the extent to which your advising experience met the College's advising mission and expectations. A mark of N/A is an acceptable choice to indicate that your advising experience allowed no opportunity to assess this expectation. N/A should not be chosen to avoid a low score on an expectation. A low score should be given when your advising experience did address an expectation, but in your opinion did not meet a standard acceptable for 51ÁÔÆæ.
*Disclaimer - The information acquired through this tool is solely collected to assess the College’s academic advising experience. All data will be reported in the aggregate by department and for the College. The data will not be linked to individual academic advisors, used for student or faculty evaluation, or be directly considered in the distribution of College resources.
ASSESSMENT FOR SENIORS
51ÁÔÆæ Advising Mission and Expectations
Academic advising at 51ÁÔÆæ helps students make responsible, informed decisions about their intellectual development. Working with academic advisors, students craft an educational plan reflecting their particular interests and abilities, and the College’s purposes and goals. The plan, which typically evolves over time, balances the freedom of an open curriculum and the breadth of a liberal arts education.
Instructions: The answers to the following questions are meant to be a reflection of the extent to which your advising experience met the College’s advising mission and expectations. A mark of N/A is an acceptable choice to indicate that your advising experience allowed no opportunity to assess th is expectation. N/A should not be chosen to avoid a low score on an expectation. A low score should be given when your advising experience did address an expectation, but in your opinion did not meet a standard acceptable for 51ÁÔÆæ.
*Disclaimer - The information acquired through this tool is solely collected to assess the College’s academic advising experience. All data will be reported in the aggregate by department and for the College. The data will not be linked to individual academic advisors, used for student or faculty evaluation, or be directly considered in the distribution of College resources.
For those who indicate a single concentration:
For those who indicate two concentrations: