lot of students are undecided about what they want to spend the rest of their
life doing, one of my go-to pieces of advice is for students to take a year off
to travel or to work abroad (even if it means just tending bar somewhere)
before committing to a career path, as my own experience working abroad
after finishing my master’s helped solidify my desire to do a PhD and
become a researcher.
2
A colleague who teaches at a liberal arts college further advises the
following.
1. It helps to learn a few of your department’s rules of thumb that
consist of good advice about classes or the order in which classes
should be taken—think of things that do not usually show up on
the registrar’s page. For example, that it may be better to take
intermediate micro before
taking intermediate macro, even
though the former is not a prerequisite for the latter. Or that if you
are interested in applied econometrics, it might be wise to take a
labor economics class. As an advisor, you can usually learn these
rules of thumb from your more senior colleagues.
2. You should know what things the professional advisors or the
advising center (if your institution has either or both) can handle
for you, and be sure to forward advising issues to them.
3
At some
institutions, students have both a faculty advisor and a college-
level advisor.
3. The benefit you can provide from simple check-ins can mean a lot
to a student, making them feel like someone knows that they are
actually a student and cares about their well-being. Even if you do
not
give any useful advice, a simple “How are your classes
going?” in the hallway can go a long way toward making a
student feel like they belong.
Another colleague at a SLAC notes that an important part of an advisor’s
job is to help facilitate student contact with the alumni network. To that
effect, advisors generally have to know where their former students work,
and they often connect current and former students.
That colleague also
notes that advising and mentoring at a SLAC can be an intensive task, as
advisors are often expected to have students over for dinner at their house,
or to attend their students’ extracurricular events. In such cases, it is
important to define and enforce healthy boundaries while still having a
close mentoring and advising relationship with students.
Dostları ilə paylaş: