I worked with a first year in his first semester. We connected at an advising session and it
was clear he had many questions. As the
first in his family to go to college, how to navigate this
experience and negotiate all
this freedom was clearly a lot to take on.
I offered to help and he accepted.
He listened to advice and made an informed decision about how to
organize his time. As an advisor, it
became my responsibility to teach him about strategies to succeed, and also let
him know HE was in control. I could only
provide him the opportunity to learn but it was his responsibility to put decisions
into action. I also assured him HE COULD
DO IT. That ability to assert for a
student that they are capable is KEY.
You can, you will, and he certainly did.
Heading into finals, he has knocked out several lingering assignments,
is ahead of schedule with paper writing and is starting to square away his
study schedule for final exams. It may have
helped to discuss strategies but it was more important to assure him that he
had the ability to JUST DO IT.
As parents and educators, we must provide students with the
freedom to choose and all the necessary information for them to make a
decision. We can serve as external
guides to the process, but ultimately must place the decision in their hands. Empowering them is essential. Through the process of empowering, students
can develop self confidence that affords them the ability to persevere through
difficult situations. Whether they
succeed or fail, they know they have made the decision and are capable of doing
so again. In many cases, it can be as simple
as instilling that confidence in them to ask for help from available resources,
like faculty, advisors, tutors, peers... the list goes on and on.
So go out there… teach students about the freedom they have,
the ability they have to make informed choices, and the realities of facing
those consequences, whether good or bad.
The growth and learning that occurs through this process will enable them
to be more confident. Ideally, instilling
some of this thinking prior to their college career would certainly better
support them in their unique transition to higher learning.
No comments:
Post a Comment