Improving Your Online Writing Center for International Students

As international student enrollment rises at many institutions, it’s going to be increasingly important to provide academic support for a growing population of students who may have diverse levels of fluency with academic writing in English. While there is a long tradition of providing ESL writing labs and other support for these “second language students” on campus, providing writing support for international students in an online writing center involves unique challenges and requires some specific expertise in the writing center staff in order to be effective. For advice, we turned to Beth Hewett, an educational consultant in online writing instruction and an adjunct associate professor with the University of Maryland University College (UMUC) and St. Mary’s University and Seminary. A college instructor for 30 years, Hewett is the author of The Online Writing Conference: A Guide for Teachers and Tutors (Heinemann, 2010) and one of the most knowledgeable practitioners in this area. We asked Hewett to offer some key considerations for institutions looking to launch or improve an online writing center or online tutoring service intended to support second-language students. Staffing the Online Writing Center Effectively “If you anticipate serving many second-language students via an online writer center or online […]

Four Experts on the Need for Annual Giving Planning

For most shops, the past several years have been a financial roller coaster for annual giving numbers. As annual giving recovers momentum this year, now is the right time to invest time and energy in planning for the long term. One of the most critical lessons that can be learned from the past few years is the importance of not remaining at the mercy of macro-level trends in giving. Rather than invest in the same efforts year after year, take a proactive approach to annual giving planning so that you can deploy your solicitation tools in support of specific, long-term goals. This week, we reached out to four leading thinkers on the issue to learn more about the shift in thinking that needs to occur in order to position the annual fund strongly for the future: Jessica Neno Cloud, who administers a comprehensive annual giving program for the University of Southern Mississippi Foundation Brian Daugherty, director of development and alumni relations for the School of Law at the University of San Diego Heather Grieg, interim senior director for Georgetown University’s annual fund Janine Kraus, assistant vice chancellor for annual giving programs at Texas Christian University Here are their insights. Defining […]

Setting and Funding Priorities for Your Division: Making the Tough Decisions

In this Report: As institutions face increasing financial constraints, they frequently ramp up fundraising efforts in order to secure new funds –- rather than asking the tough questions about how to spend existing funds more wisely. Oftentimes, guidance from an institution-wide plan is vague or missing altogether. But because the majority of decisions that impact how an institution’s resources are expended are made at the division or college level, vice presidents, deans, and department heads have tremendous influence for ensuring maximum value from every dollar and person. It’s critical to establish a credible process for setting and funding several key priorities for your division, in order to gain your team’s commitment and ensure successful execution. Doing so can build trust — internally and externally — as resources are used more effectively to serve the institution. This edition will walk you through such a process, with input from past institutional presidents, provosts, chief financial officers, and division heads. We hope their advice will be useful to you. Read this report

Setting Priorities for Your Division

  In This Issue Setting Priorities for Your Division Developing the Action Plan Funding Your Action Plan Strategies to Ensure Implementation Managing your division with excellence is going to require making very tough decisions. For example, perhaps you recognize the need to add an academic major in response to rising market demand. Yet your faculty and other resources are already operating at capacity, and you have limited funds for hiring additional faculty and limited space to allocate for the new courses. This scenario demands an honest and courageous look at whether your current resources are being invested in the best possible ways. As Michael Porter, a professor in the Harvard Business School, contends, it’s difficult to decide what to do and even more difficult to decide what not to do. But it’s most difficult to decide what to stop doing. “Just adding revenue streams isn’t enough. The public is increasingly skeptical as to whether colleges and universities use their resources in the most effective way. This will have a major impact on revenue growth in the coming years —- be it from net tuition, fundraising, or state appropriations. I can’t think of a more critical time for division heads to […]

Developing the Action Plan

  In This Issue Setting Priorities for Your Division Developing the Action Plan Funding Your Action Plan Strategies to Ensure Implementation Once you have defined the priorities for your division and have set some strategic objectives for the immediate future (e.g., the next three years), how do you turn those objectives into concrete action plans with a champion, timeline, and clear measures of success? Larry Goldstein, president of Campus Strategies, LLC, suggests the following process. Gather a broadly representative group from your division and divide them into small groups, each of which will draft an action plan for one of the strategic priorities you’ve established. “The key is self-selection,” Goldstein notes. “Don’t assign someone to work on an action plan if they lack the enthusiasm and the interest. Otherwise, how strong can your action plan actually be?” Following a template for action planning developed by Pat Sanaghan, president of The Sanaghan Group, Goldstein recommends having each of the groups outline: What is the overarching goal? What are three specific action steps or activities that will move us toward the goal? What is the timeline? What resources are needed? Who will champion and steward the effort? Who else needs to be […]

Funding Your Action Plan

  In This Issue Setting Priorities for Your Division Developing the Action Plan Funding Your Action Plan Strategies to Ensure Implementation Consider this likely scenario. Your division has identified four strategic priorities that are of both high importance and high cost. But the institution is facing budget cuts, and you actually have less funding to work with this year than you did last year. How do you proceed? Too often, the answer proposed is more fundraising. While fundraising and friend-raising will be critical to the success of your initiatives, devoting an increasing percentage of your time to raising donor dollars — if you are relying on this as your primary means of generating additional revenue — is not a sustainable solution. You will need to find more creative ways to fund your division’s action plan — either by cost-cutting, or by finding a way for your high-cost initiatives to generate revenue and become self-sustaining. To help review an array of examples, we turned to Larry Goldstein, president of Campus Strategies, LLC, and Lucie Lapovsky, president of Lapovsky Consulting and past president of Mercy College. Revenue Enhancement: Thinking Outside the Box KEY EXAMPLE: DREXEL UNIVERSITY Looking at the high cost of […]

Strategies to Ensure Implementation

  In This Issue Setting Priorities for Your Division Developing the Action Plan Funding Your Action Plan Strategies to Ensure Implementation Beginnings are critical, and operational plans often lose momentum in their first year of implementation. This “first-year dilemma” emerges when expectations around timeline and phasing haven’t been right-sized. Consider these two scenarios: The student affairs division at Institution A has over-committed its staff and its limited resources, committing to too many action steps in the first year. In a surge of enthusiasm for moving the division into the future, the champions of the action plan have committed to do 80 percent of the work in the first year. The teams involved are stretched too thin and are losing momentum. The college of education at Institution B has the opposite problem: it’s become bogged down in the research and data gathering, and is seeing few tangible results in the first year. The college is still “planning to plan.” Let’s look at both what could have been done at the outset to avoid these two scenarios, and also at what can be done now, in the midst of the year, to diagnose the issue and address it. We asked for the […]

Transitioning International Students into Your Donor Pipeline

With the balance of wealth shifting overseas — and with more colleges and universities increasing their international enrollment — international fundraising is likely to play an increasingly larger role in development at North American institutions. To learn how institutions can get started in such an effort, we interviewed Gretchen Dobson, the senior associate director for alumni relations at Tufts University and the principal and founder of Gretchen Dobson Go Global, a consulting firm focused on helping educational institutions, non-profit member organizations, and consulate/embassy education officers facilitate alumni engagement and advance international programs. Dobson has also authored the book Being Global: Making the Case for International Alumni Relations (CASE, 2011). A TWO-PART LOOK AT THE CHALLENGES After speaking with Dobson, we’re offering these two articles to help you think through some initial steps for getting started with international fundraising: Reaching Them While They’re Students Dobson notes that international alumni are “hard enough just to find”; if you are serious about cultivating lifetime relationships with this growing body of alumni, the key is to begin building the relationship while they are still students. STUDENT PHILANTHROPY The article you’re reading covers some of the opportunities for international students specifically, but the first step […]

Engaging International Alumni

With the balance of wealth shifting overseas — and with more colleges and universities increasing their international enrollment — international fundraising is likely to play an increasingly larger role in development at North American institutions. To learn how institutions can get started in such an effort, we interviewed Gretchen Dobson, the past senior associate director for alumni relations at Tufts University and the principal and founder of Gretchen Dobson Consulting, LLC, a consulting firm focused on helping educational institutions, nonprofit member organizations, and consulate/embassy education officers facilitate alumni engagement and advance international programs. Dobson has also authored the book Being Global: Making the Case for International Alumni Relations (CASE, 2011). A TWO-PART LOOK AT THE CHALLENGES After speaking with Dobson, we’re offering these two articles to help you think through some initial steps for getting started with international fundraising: Dobson recommends several steps that make all the difference in launching an effective effort: Telling the Story As with any fundraising effort, the key to being effective is to tell a story about what your institution can help potential donors achieve with their time and money — not just a story about how they can help you with their time and […]

Tips for Establishing Paid Peer Mentor Positions

The 2009 Peer Leadership Survey sponsored by the National Resource Center for The First-Year Experience and Students in Transition found that 65 percent of peer mentor positions receive some financial compensation. Today, the nature of the compensation (paid/unpaid, type of pay, and expectations for the position) varies widely between institutions and often varies widely even across a single campus. We spoke this week with Jimmie Gahagan, director for student engagement at the University of South Carolina, an institution with a well-established track record in developing strong and innovative student leadership programs. USC does offer paid peer mentor positions, and we were interested to hear Gahagan’s advice on the questions and issues other institutions will need to address in order to set up these positions effectively. “Paid positions can definitely provide a financial incentive to the students and can provide supervisors with the ability to more specifically direct their work through performance review and supervision. The risk is that in hiring you may lose some of the intrinsic volunteer motivation that you often see in peer leaders who have taken unpaid positions.”Jimmie Gahagan, University of South Carolina To make sure that you are using paid peer mentor positions to the maximum […]