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University of Southern Maine Thinking Outside the Box: Student Success Center

University of Southern Maine Thinking Outside the Box: Student Success Center.  Charlie Nutt, Executive Director, NACADA Rodney Mondor , Coordinator, Student Success Center University of Southern Maine. NACADA

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University of Southern Maine Thinking Outside the Box: Student Success Center

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  1. University of Southern MaineThinking Outside the Box: Student Success Center  Charlie Nutt, Executive Director, NACADA Rodney Mondor, Coordinator, Student Success Center University of Southern Maine NACADA International Conference 2013

  2. University of Southern Maine Gorham Portland Lewiston • 9,600 undergraduate/graduate students • 115 areas major options • 3 campus locations • Average age undergraduate: 27.5 years • Residential Housing: 1,400 students

  3. The Way We WerePrior to 2009 • Advising Services (Academic Affairs) • 3 Locations • Early Student Success (Student and University Life) • 2 Locations • Career Services (Student and University Life) • 2 Locations • Student Services (Lewiston-Auburn College) • This “silo-ing” led to lack of coordination and duplication of services to students.

  4. Why Students Leave • Involuntary Leaving • Academic Difficulty • Voluntary Leaving • Adjustment Difficulties • Goals & Uncertainty • Commitments • Finances • Integration & Community Membership • Fit, Involvement, Learning • Tinto, Vincent, “Rethinking the First Year of College”

  5. Institutional Conditions for Student Success • Expectations - clear and high • Support - academic, social, financial • Feedback - ongoing and immediate • Involvement - time on task, contact with faculty/staff, active learning Tinto, Vincent, “Taking Student Retention Seriously”

  6. What Matters Most… • What matters most is what students do, not who they are! • The more students engage in ‘educationally purposeful activities’ the more they learn and the more likely they are to persist and graduate from college. Dr. George Kuh, Indiana University, Center for Postsecondary Research

  7. Student Engagement Trinity • What students do -- time and energy devoted to educationally purposeful activities • What institutions do -- using effective educational practices to induce students to do the right things • Educationally effective institutions channel student energy toward the right activities The “Student Engagement Trinity” as described by Dr. George Kuh

  8. Benchmark: Supportive Campus Environments • “Students perform better and are more satisfied at colleges that are committed to their success, and cultivate positive working and social relations among different groups on campus.” • nsse.iub.edu/

  9. Supportive Campus Environments • Those campuses: • Help students succeed academically • Help students cope with non-academic responsibilities • Help students thrive socially • Promote supportive relations between students and their peers, faculty members, and administrative personnel & offices

  10. NACADA Consultant Visit • Two Consultants on Campus • NACADA - Consultant and Speaker Service • Three Day Process • Reviewed Missions and Operations • Interviews • Students – Staff – Faculty – Community Members • Produced Final Report

  11. NACADA Consultant VisitSummary • Students were bounced around • 3 campuses • 3 offices on 3 campuses • Incomplete referrals • Inability to track student progress • “Students succeed despite us rather than because of us” -USM Community Member

  12. NACADA Consultant Visit • “The recommendations of the external review team included integrating the offices of Academic Advising, Career Services and Professional Life Development, and Early Student Success and reframing the processes through which students are engaged in academic and career planning and supported throughout their educational experience at USM. “ • -NACADA Consultant Report

  13. What We Do • …focus on the development of an intentional pathway from the point of acceptance through graduation that engages students in conversations and learning experiences that will assist them and maximize their persistence and success.

  14. MISSION • To guide and support students in the discovery process, and the achievement of their academic, career and related life goals.

  15. STUDENT SUCCESS • Student Success Advisors: • Academic Advising • Academic Support • Career and Personal Exploration • Financial Literacy

  16. Academic Advising • New Student Orientation • Undeclared • Primary Advisor • Caseload – 200-250 • Registration • Course selection • Transfer course review • Walk-In Services: All Students • Classroom Presentations

  17. College of Arts, Humanities & Social Science • Started 2011 • Student Success Advisor (SSA) • Primary Advisor • Students under 54 credits • Strong connection with departments • Major Advisor Coordinator (MACs) • Point person for Department • Contract and compensation • Transitions all students • Junior Check – Degree Audit Review • Art • Classical Languages • Communication and Media Studies • Creative Writing • Criminology • Economics • English • Foreign Languages • General Science • Hispanic Studies • History • Liberal Studies, Humanities • Music • Philosophy • Political Science • Social Science • Sociology • Theatre

  18. Career Exploration • Resume / Cover Letter Writing • Interviewing Skills • E-Recruiting • CHOICES • Formal/Informal Assessments • MBTI • Strong Interest Inventory • Skills Card Sort • Online Resources • O-Net • Occupational Outlook Handbook • Job Fair

  19. Basic Academic Support • Time management • Reading college textbooks • Note taking • Academic Alert • A student intervention initiative intended to identify students who may be having difficulty in their course work (i.e. low grades, performance or attendance problems, financial concerns, or behavioral issues). 

  20. Financial Literacy

  21. Assessment

  22. Assessment • 1st Appointment • Why in school? • Review Core and Major Requirements • Graduation Planner • Explanation of the Advising Relationship • Review MaineStreet system and how to utilize features

  23. Assessment • Priority Registration • Review Requirements • Understand Prerequisites • Review Wish List and approve courses • Provide options to meet career/academic goals.

  24. Assessment • Career Exploration • What are their interests? • Utilize Assessment tools. • Review major/minor options to meet interests

  25. Assessment • Transition • Declaration of major/minor • Help connect student with major advisor • Have updated graduation planner

  26. Initial Data

  27. Initial Data • 1st to 2nd Semester Retention: Fall to Spring • 2009 / 2010 / 2011 / 2012 • UND - 77% / 79% / 80% / 86% • CAHS - >60% / >60% / 97% / 95% • 1st to 2nd Year Retention: 65-68% • Informal Survey Results • Feel Valued as a student– Satisfied/Extremely Satisfied (95%) • Issued resolved - Satisfied/Extremely Satisfied (94%) • Overall satisfaction - Satisfied/Extremely Satisfied (95%) • Increased Walk In and Evening Hours • Points of Contact Numbers

  28. RELATIONSHIPS • Academics • CAHS Program • Point of contact for faculty for questions/referrals • Expanding advising model to other majors • Residence Life • Expanding advising into residence hall • Utilizing Res Hall staff for outreach • Increased programming in residence halls • Student Life • Expanding outreach efforts to commuters • Co-sponsored programming efforts • Admissions • Provide a stronger presence • Referring agent for transfer students exploring options

  29. Professional Development • Bi-weekly sessions • Academic and Student Support Departments • Common Readings • Develop new resources • Staff presentations • Career Development Facilitator class and certification (GCDF) • Surveying of faculty regarding dual advising relationships

  30. Wrap Up • Staff report out • Better connections/conversations with students • Relationship with students is more purposeful • Students • Career exploration appointments have increase • Exposure to Student Success through entry level course and senior seminars • Faculty • Referrals for a variety of support services have increased

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