1 / 39

Advising Veteran Students

Advising Veteran Students. Steve Johnson Academic Advisor/Instructor/Veteran Utah State University (USU) Logan, UT Steve.Johnson@usu.edu 2011 NACADA Region 10. Objectives. Opportunities Advising Student Veterans Advising related to veteran benefits ‏

junius
Download Presentation

Advising Veteran Students

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Advising Veteran Students Steve Johnson Academic Advisor/Instructor/Veteran Utah State University (USU) Logan, UT Steve.Johnson@usu.edu 2011 NACADA Region 10

  2. Objectives Opportunities Advising Student Veterans • Advising related to veteran benefits ‏ • Veteran advantages and challenges in higher education • Education-related PTSD and TBI issues • Helpful tips in advising veterans

  3. Why Work with Veterans • Personal Reasons • Family • Friends • Work • Professional Observations • Experiences • Advising vs. Counselling

  4. Who Are We Talking About? • 20% Are female • 80% Are male • 50-60% Are married • 50% Have children • 45% Under 30 - people of color • 95% Have high school diploma

  5. What is it like to be deployed?

  6. Challenges of Deployments • Harsh living conditions • 130 °F ~ • Unrelenting noise • Lack of privacy

  7. Challenges of Deployments • Separation from family • Problems related to communication • Long and multiple deployments • Prolonged exposure to stress hormones • Sexual harassment/military sexual trauma

  8. War-Zone Stress • Urban combat with no clear front line • Constant threat of being attacked • Ambiguous, unknown civilian threats • Challenge of fighting “fair” (ROE) • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/ shows/company/view/3_hi.html

  9. Combat experiences (Mental Health Advisory Team V , 2008) • Being attacked/ambushed 52% • Receiving small arms fire 58% • IED/Booby trap exploded near you 49% • Seeing dead bodies/human remains 60% • Shooting/directing fire at the enemy 36% • Receiving artillery, rocket, mortar fire 78% • Knowing one seriously injured/killed 72% • Directly responsible for an enemy combatant death 13%

  10. Potential Psychological Challenges on Campus • PTSD - combat stress • Substance abuse/dependence • Depression/suicide • Anxiety • Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) • Reintegration issues

  11. Veteran Advantages • Learned self-discipline and to follow instructions • Maturity, act older than most same-age students • Value education, they have worked and paid for it - not valued as financial aid • Often have some other kind of financial support • Eagerness to get a good education. Feel to have lost time already • Doing something positive for their lives ‏

  12. Veteran Statistics 1.86 Million deployed since 9/11 - 288,952 veterans on US campuses Where current veterans attend: • 38% Community colleges • 36% 4-year public institutions • 19% For-profit inst. (online/distance)‏ • 6% Private institutions • 1% Undetermined (Top institution: U of Phoenix – online)

  13. Schools Veterans Choose (needs based) • Veterans are older, average age is 25 - 34 Attracted to schools with all age students • Prefer programs that allow them to balance work, studies, and family • Like programs that offer academic credit for military experience • Community colleges – help on benefits, provide academic support, help for physical and emotional disabilities • Major colleges providing veteran oriented services gain credibility among veterans

  14. Utah State University • About 450 veteran students • Veterans Resource and Affairs Office • Veteran/Non-traditional student orientation • Professional training for staff on PTSD? • Veterans Club and Mentorship program • Veteran work-study students • Counselling and advising veterans • Veteran Advisory Board • Veteran Celebration Days

  15. Helping Veterans • Growing drop-out rate. Veterans graduate at 1/10 rate of other students • Advising depends on benefit plan options • Majority of new people join Armed Services to get an education • Less than 10% of eligible veterans use all their educational assistance ‏ • About 6% of the new GI Bill use all entitled benefit hours • Student veteran concerns - save time and money

  16. GI Bill Monthly PayoutRates

  17. Post 9/11 GI Bill Percentage Payout Information

  18. Comparison

  19. UG Equivalent Credit Hours • 12 Credit Hrs = full time • 9 Credit Hrs = 3/4 time • 6 Credit Hrs = 1/2 time

  20. Exercise Brief Video Clip

  21. What is PTSD?(Posttraumatic Stress Disorder) Normal reactions to abnormally stressful events

  22. Symptoms of PTSD • Persistent re-experiencing of the event: • Intrusive recollections (flashbacks) • Nightmares • Avoidance of trauma-associated stimuli • Feeling of detachment • Avoid things that remind them • Persistent symptoms of increased arousal • Hyper-vigilance • Exaggerated startle response • Difficulty concentrating • Difficulty falling or staying sleep • Irritability

  23. Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (M-TBI) • The signature wound for the current wars • A main cause • Blasts • Damage occurs without impact to the head

  24. Consequences of M-TBI • Physical • Headache, dizziness, fatigue, noise/light intolerance, insomnia, sleep disturbance, balance/visual problems • Cognitive • Memory complaints, poor concentration • Emotional • Depression, anxiety, irritability, moodability

  25. Depression and Suicide More than twice as likely to commit suicide than non-vets (epidemiological data of 45 states in 2005) 18.7 to 20.8 per 100,000 compared to 8.9 for non-vets. Risk factors: Depression Substance abuse issues Prior psychiatric hospitalization Firearms may be more readily available

  26. Substance Abuse/Dependence • Self-medication • Anxiety/stress • Insomnia • Physical pain - narcotics • Most present problems at VA • Orthopedic injuries • Chronic back problems – body armor, gear (equipment) • 30% experience pain severe enough to limit daily activities

  27. What Can Advisors Do to Help? • Listen and validate • Be real and genuine • Refer to other campus resources, i.e. counseling centers, disability services, etc. • Consult with other professionals on campus

  28. Crisis Intervention Tips Have a response for dealing effectively with the Veteran student • Be brief, immediate and focused • Often requires advisor input • Allow them to voice their story and focus on their strengths • Focus on the concrete, and provide ongoing support and follow-up

  29. At Large Accommodations • One-stop center – advantages and disadvantages • Thorough veterans orientation program • Easily accessible resources for vets on main college website • Referral list for veteran services accessible to advisors and students • Opportunities to meet vets - Vet Club, Support Groups, Mtg Room, etc • Encourage students to create a facebook or my space page for vets

  30. Course Accommodations • Recommend multiple delivery in methods, assignments and materials • Provide Syllabus and PowerPoint presentations in advance • Provide opportunities to submit assign-ments for feedback prior to final grade • Communicate with students, instructors and counselling staff of disability issues and resources

  31. Accommodation Strategies • Implement veterans services at a campus level using student veteran employees • Coordination with all campus groups (health center, disabilities, counseling, etc) • Increase faculty and staff awareness of veteran issues and resources available • Use disability universal design principles to accommodate needs of veterans • Coordinate campus and community resources with veterans in mind

  32. What Courses Should Advisors Recommend • Depends on the benefit plan • Advising for online classes requires familiarity with benefit plan • New GI-Bill limits percentage of online classes • Smaller classes are preferable • Classes with practical applications are preferable initially

  33. What Can Advisors Do?‏ • Explore feelings toward war and soldiers. Treat veterans with the respect we have for other students • Make veterans feel welcomed, provide warm, friendly, connected service‏. • Be well informed about referrals for special needs • Be understanding, available and assist in their transition. Education is a process and a positive challenge • Know about benefits and what they must do if orders come before the end of term

  34. Considerations • Don’t seat them with their back to the door or with a closed door • Don’t discuss vet issues besides benefits unless they mention it • Ask if deployment is soon – explain what they have to do if deployed • If problems arise, calm student and avoid confrontational situation • Students may take a full load for financial reasons with a family and job. Discuss time management issues: - About college/job/family/friends/self - Bad grades hurt by losing time/money - Good grades require time and hard work

  35. Job Market Advantages • How military improved/reinforced excellent work qualities (i.e. dedicated & determined) • How experiences prepared them for the civilian work force (i.e. accountability & responsibility) • How to sell themselves to prospective employers (i.e. experiences applicable to job being sought) • How their experience(s) can credit/serve for salary purposes (i.e. teaching subjects, supervising others, etc.)

  36. Some Best Practices • University of South Florida http://www.veterans.usf.edu/ • Texas A&M Website for Veterans http://counseling.tamucc.edu/?n=Information.Veterans • University of Colorado at Boulder http://www.colorado.edu/studentaffairs/VA/ • University of Minnesota http://onestop.umn.edu/veterans/benefits/index.html

  37. Other Useful Websites • GI-Bill Information: http://gibill.va.gov/post-911/ • Military Education and Careers www.education.military.com/education-home • Forming a Campus Student Veterans Group www.studentveterans.org • Resource Directory – National, State, Local for Service Members and Families • www.nationalresourcedirectory.gov

  38. The only thing harder than being a Soldier.. Is loving one.  

  39. Thank You • Questions • Discussion Items

More Related