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How to use an academic advisor, or, popular myths about advising
Academic Advisors
- The advisor is your key to learning what is available here for you
to use and how to make the most of these opportunities. This is a person
you can turn to for help when you need direction, advice in planning your
elections, evaluation of your study and time management skills, or help
in approaching a college instructor. Your advisor is the logical person
with whom to discuss your thoughts about possible majors, academic and
career goals, or any uncertainty that you might have about where you want
to go and what you want to do. Together you can plan how to make your LS&A
degree truly a personal design, not just a formula degree.
A general academic advisor will:
- Inform you about degree requirements and college policies and procedures.
- Describe course options and useful campus resources.
- Help you learn better study and time management skills.
- Help you decide upon a concentration best fitted to your skills, interests,
and future goals.
- Help you plan strategies to achieve your goals.
- Help you handle any academic difficulty you may encounter.
- Be a skilled contact in making the university work for you.
A concentration advisor will:
- Explain the concentration requirements.
- Determine what transfer credit (including "departmental"
credit) can be applied toward the concentration.
- Waive concentration requirements or require additional course work
depending on the background and experience of the individual student.
- Assess what courses are still needed to complete the concentration
plan.
Review residency requirements for transfer students who may wish to complete
some remaining courses out-of-residence.
An Academic Advisor Cannot:
- Make your decisions for you – tell you what you should concentrate
in or what classes you should take. Advisors can describe logical options
for your circumstances and your aspirations and give you the information
you need to make logical, informed decisions.
- Tell you what is a "good class." What makes a class "good"
depends entirely upon your skills, interests, and goals. What's "good"
for one student is not necessarily "good" for another.
- Help you very much with specific problems or situations if you wait
too long to discuss them. Problems don't go away when you ignore them;
they only get worse. Usually there are more options available to correct
or improve a situation the earlier you address it.
Meeting with your advisor
You have been assigned a general advisor who will meet with you during
Orientation and act as your advisor on general academic matters during your
time as an LS&A student. You are encouraged to meet with your advisor
on a regular basis. Meeting with the advisor a couple of times each term
is best just to touch base, to talk about how you are doing in your courses,
and to consider all the academic options available to you. Never hesitate
to ask a question, to seek clarification about a requirement or a policy,
or to discuss the academic expectations placed upon students in the class
room here.
When you want to speak to your advisor, the normal protocol is to make
an appointment. You can do this by calling
(734) 7640332 or coming in to the Advising Center in Angell Hall to secure
a time to talk. You can also ask some "quick" questions by sending
your advisor an electronic message. Your advisor will be in regular email
contact with you through out the year to provide information on academic
deadlines, suggestions of resources on campus, tips on how to be a successful
student and lots more.
The LS&A Advising Center has several academic resources located in
the residence halls. Advisors from the Center hold regular office hours
in the residence halls each week beginning the first full week of class.
Even if the advisor in your residence hall is not the one assigned to you,
it is perfectly appropriate for you to stop in and ask your questions of
that
advisor if it is more convenient for you. Also, an Academic Peer Advisor
(APA) lives in each residence hall. This person is an experienced student
who has been trained in basic academic information and who can give you
good perspectives based upon what it feels like to be a successful student
on campus.
As you begin to explore concentrations (and, especially, once you decide
on a concentration) you will begin to meet with a concentration advisor.
This is an advisor from the department you have chosen who will help you
understand the requirements of the concentration itself and learn about
the activities and resources within the department. You usually add the
concentration advisor to your list of helpful resources.
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