Advising is Advising: Toward Defining the Practice and Scholarship of Academic Advising

2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janet K. Schulenberg ◽  
Marie J. Lindhorst

Academic advising has emerged as a distinct interdisciplinary field and profession, but the description of its role has recently relied on analogies and metaphors. While helpful in clarifying practice, their continual use obscures the uniqueness of academic advising and masks the importance of the scholarship that underlies its practice. We use the development of archaeology as a distinct profession and scholarly field to highlight critical developments in academic advising and draw examples of key aspects in the professionalization of academic advising from The Pennsylvania State University. The scholar-practitioner model must be nurtured for all who engage in academic advising and for a distinct scholarly identity to be established within higher education. Efforts must proceed at national and local levels. Relative Emphasis: theory, practice, research

1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harvey W. Wall

The JOURNAL continues its series on the development of academic advising in higher education with the second installment of an interview with Dr. Harvey Wall, who began his career in clinical psychology in the early 1950s. In March 1986, Dr. Wall retired from his position as director of the Division of Undergraduate Studies (DUS), an advising unit at Penn State University that enrolls freshmen and sophomores exploring a variety of majors and advanced students seeking advising assistance with changes in their academic plans. Dr. Wall was the first director of DUS, which started in 1973 with 800 students. It now enrolls 4,000. In many ways Dr. Wall's professional experiences parallel the development of academic advising nationwide. For those new to advising, Dr. Wall's remembrances of things past, although personal and local, should provide powerful insights into the present status and procedures of advising, regardless of location or type of institution.


1990 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-112
Author(s):  
Jack D. Burke ◽  
Robert W. Light

This paper examines industrial affiliate programmes, a type of industry–higher education linkage found at many research-orientated universities in the USA. Particular attention is devoted to focused or decentralized affiliate programmes, by far the most common type of linkage. The wide variety of activities supported by affiliate programmes as well as the benefits accruing to both the industrial and university partners are summarized. The paper examines in some detail the industrial affiliate programmes at one institution, The Pennsylvania State University.


Author(s):  
Ann Hamllton Taylor

Online learning in higher education has grown tremendously in the past decade. This trend has been particularly evident at The Pennsylvania State University, where the number of online-only learners now exceeds 20,000. The biggest challenge to institutions like ours is identifying, attracting, and retaining enough instructors who are qualified and available to meet the increased demand of online student enrollment. To help administrators and program chairs tackle these challenges, a research study was conducted to learn more about the incentives that attract and retain a specific workforce in higher education: adjunct faculty. The findings suggest that one size does not always fit all - context matters. Instead of making general assumptions about the motivations or needs of an adjunct faculty member, we need to get to know the individual first. This study sheds light on the specific extrinsic and intrinsic motivators that attract and retain each of five types of adjunct faculty to teach online, which can help program administrators be more effective in hiring and retaining adjuncts.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 57-63
Author(s):  
Harvey W. Wall

With Volume 7, Number 2, the JOURNAL presents the first in a series of interviews focusing on the development of academic advising in higher education. The first installment of an interview with Dr. Harvey Wall, who began his career in clinical psychology in the early 1950s, introduces the series. In March 1986, Dr. Wall retired from his position as director of the Division of Undergraduate Studies (DUS), an advising unit at Penn State University that enrolls freshmen and sophomores exploring a variety of majors and advanced students needing advising assistance with changes in their academic plans. Dr. Wall was the first director of DUS, which started in 1973 with 800 students. It now enrolls 4,000. In many ways Dr. Wall's professional experiences parallel the development of academic advising nationwide. For those new to advising, Dr. Wall's remembrances of things past, although personal and local, should provide powerful insights into the present status and procedures of advising, regardless of location or type of institution.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document