Date post: | 18-Dec-2014 |
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Education |
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Developing Graduate Student Services
Christina Herrera, M.A.Coordinator for Graduate Student Services
The Learning CenterUniversity of North Texas
Part-
Time
53%
Full-Time47%
Enrollment Status
17%
57%
26%
1%
Enrollment by LevelPost-Bac Master Doctoral Special Professional
Graduate Student Characteristics,2012-2013 Academic Year
6,867 total graduate students~20% of the total student population
2.7% 0.7%
21.7%
11.9%
8.1%16.2%
7.1%
7.9%
13.0%
1.3% 8.4%
1.0%0.1%
Graduate Enrollment by College
Visual Arts & Design
Administrative Group
Arts & Sciences
Business
Public Affairs
Education
Engineering
Graduate School
Information
Merchandising, Hospitality, & Tourism
Music
Mayborn
Undergraduate Studies
Graduate Student Characteristics,2012-2013 Academic Year
Background
• Historically, student services at UNT focused heavily on undergraduate students
• Identified need to increase persistence and retention in the graduate student population
• Appropriation of student service fees to create positions in the Career Center and Learning Center and to increase support in the Writing Center
Institutional Needs Assessment
• In the 2012-2013 academic year, Toulouse Graduate School, Student Affairs, and The Office of Institutional Research & Effectiveness collaborated on a graduate student needs assessment focusing on 4 key areas:– Housing and Dining Options– Child Care– Health Insurance– Academic Needs
Institutional Needs Assessment
• Master’s Students1. Oral communication
skills2. Travel funding for
conferences/symposia3. Written communication
skills4. Connection to academic
service opportunities5. Research abilities6. Instructional/teaching
abilities
• Doctoral Students1. Travel funding for
conferences/symposia2. Research abilities3. Written communication
skills4. Oral communication
skills5. Instructional/teaching
abilities6. Connection to academic
service opportunities
Early Program Development
• Results of the needs assessment, personal experiences and observations, and conversations with graduate students resulted in the creation of two new workshop series:– Research Skills– Stats 101
• Collaboration with individuals in the Career Center, Library, and Toulouse Graduate School
Research Skills Series
• A series of workshops designed to enhance students’ understanding of the research process and skill development.
• Currently comprised of six independent workshops
• Repeated multiple times through the semester• Incorporates interactive elements when
possible and appropriate
Research Skills Series
• Finding Balance– Principles of time management with an emphasis on
balancing the requirements of graduate school with full-time employment, family, social obligations, etc. Also covers planning and managing large research projects and motivation.
• Developing Research Topics and Questions– How to work through the process of narrowing a
broad topic, elements of effective research questions, and the relationship of research questions to the literature review.
Research Skills Series
• Summarizing, Organizing, and Synthesizing Information– Teaches participants the process for synthesizing
information to create literature reviews, support arguments, develop research questions, etc.
• Writing Proposals– General overview of the proposal research and
writing process. Also includes tips for writing a grant proposal and writing the thesis/dissertation proposal.
Research Skills Series
• Effective Presentations– Discusses techniques for creating and delivering
engaging presentations. Includes use of technology, formatting, inclusion of interactive elements, and oral presentation skills.
• Navigating the IRB Process– Reviews requirements for IRB approval at UNT
including NIH training, application types, and consent forms.
Stats 101
• A series of 6 workshops that provide a review of basic statistical principles
• Provide examples from multiple disciplines• Participants work through the entire process of
statistical testing—writing hypotheses, testing, drawing and interpreting conclusions
• Follows the general sequence of basic statistics courses
• Workshop topics build on each other, but students may elect which weeks to participate
Stats 101
• Variance, Standard Deviation, & Z-Scores• Reliability, Validity, & Effect Size• T-Tests• Chi-Square• ANOVA• Regression
Σ(Χ-μ)σZ=
α < 0.05
Type I or II
Error?
Expanding Tutoring Options
• The UNT Learning Center currently has over 500 students serving as Volunteer Tutors
• Only 64 were graduate students in the 2012-2013 academic year
• Less than one dozen graduate courses made the list of courses we offers tutoring in
• Graduate Lead Tutors in Statistics• Graduate Student Assistants for Writing
Expanding Tutoring Options
• Recruitment strategies for the 2013-2014 academic year– Counts toward travel grant requirements– Appreciation events– Framing the position in terms of leadership and teaching
experience– Opportunity to certify through the College Reading and
Learning Association– Opportunity to apply for a paid Lead Tutor position after one
semester– Free t-shirt– Recruitment materials includes a list of courses identified as
“high need”
Individual Academic Coaching
• Expansion of the existing Connecting for Success program
• One-on-One consultations with graduate students to provide support with– Statistics– Departmental Issues– Time Management– Project Planning/Management– Other issues as needed
Marketing
• Direct marketing to students and graduate program advisors– Mass e-mails to students– Graduate Student Council & program-specific
graduate student associations– Advisor distribution list– Monthly advisor meetings
Current Assessment
• Research Skills Series– Satisfaction Survey
• Stats 101– Pre-Test/Post-Test– Satisfaction Survey
• Connecting for Success– Basic information tracking
Future Assessment Plans
• Continuing pre-test/post-test for Stats 101• Expanding the satisfaction survey to be more
of an evaluation and providing space for written feedback
• Tracking participants’ GPA and retention/persistence rates
• Connecting for Success follow-up
Challenges
• Getting them in the door• Scheduling• Marketing• Delivery options for distance-learners
Creating Services at Your Institution
• Assess needs– Graduate Students– Faculty and staff who work with graduate students– Are the needs programmatic or logistic?
• Review your resources– Could you adapt programs currently being offered? Or is
there a need to create new ones?– If creating a position to meet these needs is not
possible, are there individuals in your current structure who might be capable of developing and delivering programming?
Questions?Thank you for attending!