The Dual Role of Faculty Advising in Faculty Leadership and Student Success: A Time for Discussion

The Dual Role of Faculty Advising in Faculty Leadership and Student Success: A Time for Discussion


Create an infrastructure of faculty advising to ensure faculty and student success.Create an infrastructure of faculty advising to ensure faculty and student success.

Overview

As Carol Moore notes in her article, “Advising: Meeting Student Needs?”, “only 22% of colleges have the advising function staffed by professional advisors.” At schools with professional advisors, students often encounter a well-oiled machine of advising that transitions them from their first years of college with a general advisor to more focused work with a major-specific faculty member or advisor. Students at institutions without professional advisors need that same kind of support and guidance in navigating their academic careers, and if they do not receive it, they may struggle to retain at the institution. At the majority of institutions, meanwhile, undergraduate students are too often left with faculty advisors who are neither trained nor given the time to provide appropriate advising.

Join us for a one-hour facilitated discussion on the challenges of faculty advising and how to equip faculty with the skills to be successful advisors. You’ll have the opportunity to discuss how your institution prepares faculty for advising, as well as what changes you’d need to make to incorporate advising as service into promotion and tenure portfolios. The author, Carol Moore, will be present to answer your questions and share her thoughts about the changes needed to ensure student success in today’s higher ed landscape.

Who should attend?

Student success leaders, academic leaders, and faculty who advise undergraduates will benefit most from this discussion. Although it is not necessary to read the article “Advising: Meeting Student Needs?” before attending, we recommend that you do so in order to make the most of your experience.