Advisors have a unique understanding of the student experience that is critical to successful implementation. While some aspects of early planning may not directly impact the advising process, it is invaluable to have an advising representative on the leadership team. First, it helps the advising representative understand the full range of issues surrounding mathematics pathways and the local implementation. Second, it provides opportunities for the advising perspective to be integrated into the planning process.
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Advisors are strong advocates for students. They will fully commit to mathematics pathways when they understand how the pathways benefit students, including understanding the problems with the traditional approach and how pathways can address those problems. Advisors should be given the opportunity to engage in discussions with math faculty to share their insights and questions. It is also important for advisors to understand new courses, such as quantitative reasoning, so they can help students understand what to expect.
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The role of advisors is to help students enroll in courses based on recommendations and requirements from departments. If those recommendations are ambiguous, advisors are forced to make a judgment call, which often leads them to default to the most familiar selection—this reinforces the status quo. Changing normative practice so that students are routinely advised into the appropriate pathway and receive the appropriate supports requires clear, unambiguous requirements from programs. Given that information, advising coordinators can develop effective tools to support the advising process.
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Advisors and students have to understand a great deal of information. It is important to prepare strategically for how information will be shared. Once math pathways have been aligned to programs of study, advisors create tools to communicate with students. It is important to ensure that appropriate tools are designed to match the different methods of advising and registration. For example, a color–coded handout might be very effective for in–person advising but would not be effective for online advising and registration.
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One of the primary goals of math pathways is to help students prepare for and meet their academic and career goals. It is essential that those goals be the sole determinant of which math pathway is appropriate for a given student. Students who are underprepared should receive the necessary support to succeed within the pathway.
This approach, however, raises the challenge of advising students who have not declared a major. Advising departments should establish protocols for advising these students by determining their broad interests, or meta–majors. The most effective structure is a full guided pathways structure in which students select from a small number of two to six broad meta–majors. (See the Emerging Texas Math Pathwaysview full resourceView Full ResourceDownloadFile resource.) If an institution does not have guided pathways, the concept can be adapted to focus on math pathways as shown in the resource below.
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National data1 show that the majority of students are in programs that do not require Calculus. Therefore, the default pathway for undecided students should be one of the non–algebraically intensive options, such as statistics or quantitative reasoning.
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- Sample Student–Friendly Resources
1Chen, X., & Soldner, M. (2013). STEM attrition: College students’ paths into and out of STEM fields. Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics, https://nces.ed.gov/pubs2014/2014001rev.pdf