Welcome to College Student Mentoring Matters. I am launching this blog to share the insights, experiences, and resources I have gained over my 25+ years of formally and informally mentoring college students in the hope that this material will be of value to my readers. I am at an interesting crossroads in my own life. As an Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Portland State University, I have traded in my tenured teaching role for a new position as a consultant offering support for colleges and universities that are trying to develop mentoring programs to facilitate their students’ higher education success and degree completion. My new book, Developing Effective Student Peer Mentoring Programs: A Practitioner’s Guide to Program Design, Delivery, Evaluation and Training, published by Stylus Press, is due out in August, 2015.
I also have developed a complimentary website that provides some background on mentoring, why mentoring can help address issues of degree completion, and my own approach for using mentoring to promote college student success. With this blog I hope to be able to share my thoughts on these and other important higher education issues, as well as connections to useable resources.
As a newbie to the blogosphere, I initially wasn’t sure exactly how to proceed. I have plenty to say (just ask my family, friends or students), but where should I start so that all the different pieces fit together and make sense? Then I got some assistance. I was having breakfast with a friend right after my website went live and his feedback was that in order to help readers understand what they would gain from following my blog, I need to answer three BIG questions.
Three Big Questions
- Why is the issue of college student degree non-completion important?
This area includes topics such as what exactly is the purpose of 21st Century higher education? How does college provide students with the skills they’ll need for future occupational success in a changing world? What is the value of a college degree? Do all groups of students have equal opportunities to succeed at college? How does the percentage of young people with college degrees in the United States compare with rates from other industrialized countries? Why do so many students who begin college take longer than planned or fail to complete their degrees? What are some of the adjustment issues all students must address to succeed at college? What are additional adjustment issues faced by first-generation students, student veterans, and international students?
- How is mentoring relevant for addressing higher education issues?
Specific topics in this area include what are the differences between hierarchical and peer mentoring? What are some mentoring-associated benefits for college students? How can mentoring help address adjustment issues faced by all college students? How can mentoring help address group specific adjustment issues faced by first generation and international students, and student veterans? What are best practices for design, delivery, determining program content, developing mentor training, and program evaluation form effective programs?
- What are some of Pete Collier’s ideas for using mentoring to improve college student degree completion?
This area includes topics I am most looking forward to sharing with my readers including how does perceived credibility impact the relative effectiveness of different mentoring approaches? How can models of role mastery, decision-making and expertise development inform mentor program design and delivery? What are the best ways to package program content to facilitate student learning? How can mentoring help students better understand and appropriately respond to expectations associated with the culture of higher education? Why should service be an important part of mentor program content? What should be included in an effective mentor training curriculum?
These three big questions will be the main threads that connect the different posts on my blog.
My plan is to share a new post every couple of weeks. I also plan on weaving into my posts connections to other resources I have discovered as I put my practioner’s guide to program development together. I welcome your comments and will endeavor to respond in a timely manner.
Next: What is the purpose of 21st Century College Education?
I just posted part 2. Thanks for your feedback
Thanks for your comment. I am not currently on Twitter but will let you know if I decide to open an account. Right now I’m trying to increase the frequency of my posts
Highly descriptive post, I loved that a lot. Will there be a part
2?
Crystle
Just posted part 2. Thanks for your feedback
I think that what you wrote was actually very reasonable.
But, what about this? what if you added a little content?
I mean, I don’t want to tell you how to ruun your website, but suppose yoou added something to maybe get people’s attention?
I mean College Student Mentoring Matters: 3 Big Questions | Dr.
Peter J. Collier is a little plain. You should gpance at Yahoo’s home page
and wtch how they create post titlpes to grab people interested.
You might add a video or a related picture or two to get people interested about what you’ve got to
say. In my opinion, it would mke your blog a little livelier.
Thanks for the feedback. I’ll look into added more varied content.
Dean
It is fine to quote my posts as long as you credit my posts or the sources that I credit in my posts. thanks
The site was designed by Lynda Ferris at Ferris Graphics. Here is a link to her site
lyndaferris.com
I’m using WordPress
I had Lynda Ferris, from Ferris Graphics, develop this website for me. Here is a link to her own website
lyndaferris.com
hope this helps
Thanks for your feedback. I just posted some more background info on mentoring I hope will be useful.
Yes. I will be posting a continuation of this thread as well as some comments on what mentoring can realistically accomplish with regards to promoting college student success. thanks for the response.