1 / 28

Richard Špaček, SAS Retention Programs Coordinator

Richard Špaček, SAS Retention Programs Coordinator. Writing & Study Skills. Individual tutoring by appointment Drop-in hours Grammar Hotline Textual and online resources Custom services for faculties Regular small group workshops (Student Success Workshops). Tutoring/Workshop Topics.

talen
Download Presentation

Richard Špaček, SAS Retention Programs Coordinator

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. Richard Špaček,SAS Retention Programs Coordinator

  2. Writing & Study Skills • Individual tutoring by appointment • Drop-in hours • Grammar Hotline • Textual and online resources • Custom services for faculties • Regular small group workshops (Student Success Workshops)

  3. Tutoring/Workshop Topics • Academic writing • Study skills: • Time management • Note taking • Effective reading • Study systems • Exam preparation • Presentations

  4. Identifying Students Who Need Help • Removing Study Help Stigma 3. Removing Writing Help Stigma

  5. The Problem • Only 35% of full-time university students finish their degree in 4 years (U.S.) • Potential is rarely the problem • Application is

  6. Study Skills Deficit • “Colleges should be aware that even their high-achieving applicants may lack the skills necessary to succeed” (Balduf, 2009) • Many who soared through HS respond to high challenge and low reward with avoidance

  7. Success: No Preparation • “students who had previously experienced academic success encountered situations in college wherein low motivation contributed heavily to underachievement” (Baslanti, 2008) • “Gifted underachievement may be a far more widespread occurrence than was previously considered” (Balduf, 2009)

  8. Recommendations: (1) develop their existing study skills, (2) adopt strategies to help students regulate their level of commitment to the task at hand (e.g., by goal setting) (Balduf, 2009)

  9. How to Tell When a Student Needs Help Eyebrows raised Quizzical Look Mouth Open Students may not ask for help even when they need it (hint: may look like Seth Rogen)

  10. More Importantly . . . • Many students may show no external signs—but may have weak performance • They may not know why they are having trouble • We can help them locate the source of the problem—if they come to us

  11. Problem of Stigma • Some students would rather fail than seek help • Why? • They don’t want to look stupid • Behavior evident as early as grade 2 • Many are very intelligent

  12. Remove Stigma • Develop strategies for referring students without activating resistance • Recognize that a referral can appear to be an attack on competence or commitment

  13. Study Skills Strategy 1 • Frame the problem as a specificskill deficit • Emphasize the need to develop appropriate skills for the current context

  14. Study Skills Strategy 2 • Frame the problem as a potential/performance gap • Emphasize the unrealized potential • Help seeking as restoration not remediation

  15. Study Skills Strategy 3 • Frame the problem as an economic issue • Point out that they’ve already paid for the Writing and Study Skills program

  16. Writing Issues • Strategies for overcoming stigma in seeking writing help

  17. Strategy 1 • “it’s not you; it’s the language”

  18. “GH” as in COUGH “TI” as in ATTENTION “O” as in WOMEN English and its ills: Irregularity GHOTI CEL UNB Fredericton

  19. English and its ills: Irregularity “GH” as in COUGH “TI” as in ATTENTION “O” as in WOMEN F I SH 9/1/2014 CEL UNB Fredericton 19

  20. Irregularity • Irregularity undermines confidence • Some international students feel the language is a trap . . . • . . . so do some Canadian students

  21. Strategy 2 • “It’s not your writing; it’s your editing”

  22. The Nature of Reading • We see what we expect to see; • We interpret as we read; • We are probably our own worst editors • We know communication is robust—and so we are sometimes careless

  23. Memorabilia

  24. Word May Not Help!

  25. Word May Not Help!

  26. Locations • C. C. Jones, Rooms 16 – 17 (daytime) • Booked appointments • HIL Learning Commons (evenings) • Engineering Library (evenings) • Sign-up system • Help us advertise!

  27. Weekly Workshops • Student Success Series • Tuesdays 6:30PM • Wednesday 12:30PM • Workshops for classes, residence groups on demand

  28. Information & Resources • Our website: go.unb.ca/wss

More Related