The Advising Success Network (ASN) is a dynamic network of five organizations partnering to engage institutions in holistic advising redesign to advance success for Black. Latinx, Indigenous. Asian, and Pacific Islander students and students from low-income backgrounds. The network develops services and resources to guide institutions in implementing evidence-based advising practices to advance a more equitable student experience to achieve our Vision of a higher education landscape that has eliminated race and income as predictors of student success. The ASN is coordinated by NASPA – Student Affair Administrators in Higher Education and includes Achieving the Dream the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, EDUCAUSE, NACADA: The Global Community tor Academic Advising, and the National Resource Center for the First-year Experience and Students in Transition.
Campuses are Increasingly turning to a collection of technology solutions to provide more efficient and effective planning and advising services, target students who need the most support, and ultimately improve student success, particularly for Black, Latinx, Indigenous. Asian. and Pacific Islander students and students from low-income backgrounds. Advising technologies can be used for performance measurement and management’ diagnostics; academic planning and audit; caseload management and communication; and alerts, signals and notifications.
Many campuses are turning to a variety of advising technology tools to make their outreach to students more sustained, strategic. integrated, proactive, and personalized, ultimately contributing to advancing the student success mission and student learning. However. successful implementation of advising technology depends on a complex combination of institutional readiness, the functionality of the tools themselves, and solution provider “fit” around campus conditions, vision. and expectations. This resource is the product of structured dialogues designed using the appreciative inquiry model and conducted with learning teams consisting of advising and IT staff from an institutional partner and staff from a solution provider. The findings described here are designed to support improved practice on the part of key internal stakeholders involved in advising technology implementation and use; these include executive and mid-level leaders in student services. academic affairs, IT, and institutional research (IR). It is also designed to promote learning and continuous improvement for solution providers as they partner with institutions. Specifically. this resource aims to (1) help institutions assess their readiness for quality implementation of advising technology, and (2) strengthen high-functioning collaboration between institutions and solution providers.
This project was completed in collaboration with Sova. Sova’s mission is to help America fulfill its social contract to provide real upward mobility for more people through higher education. Anchored in a commitment to improving the lives of working people, Sova works shoulder to shoulder with researchers. policymakers, and institutional leaders at all levels to close equity gaps in opportunity and outcomes for today’s learners. To learn more go to www.sova.org
While may be used effectively across the implementation life cycle, this resource is best used in the early stages of advising redesign. Institutions can use it to assess readiness for technology investment and orient teams to the general design features sought in advising technology, or when refining the implementation and use of a particular advising technology.
This resource can also be used in tandem with the Advising Technology Procurement & Planning Playbook, written by the Ada Center. Related sections in the Ada Center Playbook include “Build and Empower a Cross-Functional Procurement Team,” pp. 16—20, and “Interview End Users to Develop ‘User Stories’ pp. 26—29. Although there are overlapping themes, the playbook is focused specifically on the procurement process, whereas this tool provides a broader report on the synthesis of the learning teams’ conversations about ideal design features and campus conditions for successful implementation and adoption of advising technology.
As a readiness assessment tool, the examples of exemplary institutions and discussion questions are intended to signal the critical importance of campus conditions in the successful implementation of advising technology and to help teams build their overall capacity and consider the extent to which the institution, including its leadership, culture, and existing technology ecosystem, is ready for effective implementation of an advising technology solution. With respect to common features and functions of advising technology, this guide aims to orient teams to typical prioritized product capabilities and user experience considerations.
The appreciative inquiry discussion guide is also available in Section 4 for campus teams and solution provider partners who want to replicate this activity with their own context in mind. Ideally, the dialogues would take place between solution providers and campus teams; however, this process can be just as powerful when conducted with a wide range of functional and technical areas represented across the institution—to generate shared vision, identify capabilities that might need development, connect technology features with process and principles, and build on points of momentum within the campus.
The learning teams’ collaborative inquiry process produced a set of core principles that solution providers and institutions agree should orient the work of preparing for successful implementation of advising technology.
The following principles describe the features and functions of advising technology identified by the learning teams as critical to achieve the ideal implementation:
The following principles describe the campus conditions identified by the learning teams as critical to the ideal implementation:
These principles will be expanded upon With detail and discussion prompts throughout the rest of this resource.
This resource is the product of structured dialogues between eight learning teams, each composed of advising and IT staff from an institutional partner, and staff from a solution provider. A range of solution providers representative of the advising technology marketplace were asked to invite an institutional partner to engage in a series of three discussions conducted over a one-month period in late 2020. The process was designed using the appreciative inquiry model, an organizational development approach grounded in the research-based conviction that intentionally strengths-based, scaffolded, collaborative deliberation yields uncommonly rich insight into complicated issues.
Not only does the appreciative inquiry model promote shared understanding of complicated issues across boundaries, but the process itself 15 also an intervention. It is a vehicle for both generating knowledge and strengthening relationships, where the pace and quality of implementation are impacted by the quality of relationships between institutions and solution providers and between different functional units within an institution.
AdmitHub & Georgia State University
Anthology & Drew University
Aviso Retention & Linn-Benton Community College
Civitas & Austin Community College
Ellucian & Gateway Technical College
Jenzabar & University of Mary
Signal Vine & Missouri State University
Technolutions & Oklahoma State University Institute of Technology
The content of this resource was generated through the learning teams’ self-documented dialogue using the three structured dialogues.
DISCOVER
The first dialogue sought to capture “The Best Of What Is” through paired interviews and a joint Summary of high points related to technology functions and features, as well as campus conditions for successful implementation. |
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DREAM
The second dialogue was built on the first and on in “What Could Be.” In this session, learning pairs shared their concrete vision for an ideal world with respect to effective design and implementation of advising technology. |
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DESIGN
The final dialogue distilled lessons learned about critical capabilities and campus conditions for effective advising technology, particularly from the perspective of those closest to implementation, and invited learning teams to generate top 10 lists that describe “What It Should Be.” |
The documentation from the eight learning teams’ dialogues was then synthesized into a draft that was shared with participants for member checking and finalized into this resource.
The efficacy of advising technology often relies on the culture, campus conditions, and context in which it is placed. Without clean and robust data, a product may produce unreliable or inaccurate insights. Without a strong leadership team and the commitment and bandwidth to see a project through, initiatives can stall and falter. This section provides several guiding questions and considerations to help teams assess where they are set up for success and where there may be gaps needing remedy before they initiate a procurement effort.
EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIPTechnology implementations require levels of commitment and capacity, and it is executive leaders who set the tone for the institution. The president and core leadership team must understand the potential of the technology initiative and create space for those deeper in the institution to prioritize the work that comes with quality implementation. They must be prepared to engage in effective budget analysis and plan for the commitment of (including staff time), often in a resource-constrained environment. Advising technology implementation and change management benefit greatly when executive leaders act as sponsors and champions, actively participating in case-making for internal Stakeholders. |
At exemplary institutions. this typically includes the following:
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Given these considerations, what may need to be changed or improved? What steps might leadership need to take to develop a more involved and supportive role in advising redesign and advising technology initiatives?
CONSIDER: To what extent does your institution’s executive leadership exhibit an active commitment to an advising technology initiative?
MID-LEVEL LEADERSHIPAdvising technology implementations often involve a year or more of intensive, focused work, followed by a commitment to sustainability and continuous improvement. This makes strong implementation teams that attend to the functional and technical or administrative aspects of the work particularly vital to the success of an advising technology initiative. These implementation teams typically mirror or overlap heavily with the group of individuals the institution assembles to serve as the product procurement team. Early inclusion of mid-level leaders from across a wide range of functional and technical areas throughout the institution, and explicit care in developing a culture of transparency that invites feedback, can significantly improve the pace and quality of implementation. |
At exemplary institutions, this typically includes the following:
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Given these considerations, who at your institution should be included on the procurement/implementation team? If a team is already in place, is there evidence that it is exemplifying the tenets above? How could the team be improved or better supported?
CONSIDER: To what extent do you have mid-level leaders who can provide skillful procurement and implementation leadership?
Advising technology implementation relies on and touches facets of an institution. Advising technology can open access to insights, but it is up to institutions to use those data and insights with integrity and purpose. It is ultimately people, not technology, that make positive change for students; therefore, institutional culture has an enormous impact on the quality of implementation and ultimately on how the technology adoption improves student experience and outcomes.
At exemplary institution, this typically includes the following:
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DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
CONSIDER: To what extent does your institution have a widely embraced culture of evidence and the ability to manage effective silo-spanning coordination and collaboration?
Before launching into implementation, institutions must identify and work through any disconnects between the technology and the data ecosystem. Too often, institutions procure technology without considering whether the campus has the level of data hygiene required for implementation. “Dirty” data, such as duplicate records, incomplete or outdated data. and the inaccurate parsing of record fields from disparate systems, can slow or stall implementation. Likewise, unanticipated integration challenges due to the tendency of institutions to procure and stack new products without assessing the readiness of the campus’s technology ecosystem can derail implementation.
Solution providers and tech-savvy institutions both recommend performing the following checks. Typically, IR and IT are best positioned to weigh in on these considerations.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
CONSIDER: To what extent is your technology and data ecosystem ready for an advising technology implementation?
Once advising and institutional leaders feel ready to move forward with an advising technology initiative, one of the first steps in the planning process involves deciding what product might best achieve the student success and equity outcome(s) that the institution has articulated while also meeting the needs of various stakeholders. This can be an arduous process given the many competing perspectives across units. While product capabilities and preferences will ultimately vary by institution, this section provides an overview of some of the most common product requirements, organized by stakeholder.
Universally, advisors and other student support staff say they want a user-friendly “one stop shop” for all advising tools, a system that is streamlined and easy to navigate for even the most novice of technology users. They see this as a way to prioritize their efforts and maximize the impact of the time they have with students.
Specifically, these practitioners have most regularly called for the ability to:
Like advisors, students also frequently cite a need for a digital “one stop shop” to house all of the tools needed across the student experience, from billing and financial aid to course planning and tutoring. Most advising technology tools have a student-facing component, though it may be priced differently or separately from advisor- and support-staff-facing tools.
Students and practitioners who advocate for them frequently include the following product capabilities on their wish lists:
It is vital that institutions have both the proper data and the capacity to draw insight from finely disaggregated data to empower effective action for students. Using data effectively to empower students and those who support them is a critical piece of the puzzle. Some advising technology products offer more robust dashboards, while others prioritize usability. Whereas data dashboard features are often used by executive leadership, student success leads, and IR, they could also be used across a variety of stakeholders, depending on an institution’s data management and privacy/access policies.
Administrators and other leaders often asked for the following capabilities:
DISCUSSION QUESTION
In considering the points above, how ready are you as a campus to translate and use data to empower those who support students to make sound decisions and improve action?
INTRODUCTIONThe following pages include a structured appreciative inquiry dialogue process that is intended to support service providers and institutional partners in the identification of the key campus conditions, technology features and functions, and overarching agreements necessary for the successful implementation of advising technology in their particular setting. RECOMMENDED PARTICIPANTSAppreciative inquiry is most effective when a broad set of stakeholders is included; however, this resource was developed with input from smaller groups that included one to three campus representatives from advising, IT, and/or IR departments, as well as one to three solution provider representatives from leadership, research and development, or implementation support roles. |
This series of structured dialogues can be facilitated in three separate sessions of about 60 to 90 minutes or one extended session of about four to six hours. These sessions can be self-facilitated using the guide prompts, or a nonparticipating facilitator can be used to help guide the structure of the sessions and support synthesis of ideas.
The three structured dialogues include:
DISCOVER
The first dialogue captures “The Best of What Is” through paired interviews and a joint summary of high points related to technology functions and features as well as campus conditions for successful implementation. |
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DREAM
The second dialogue is built on the first and focuses on “What Could Be.” In this session, learning teams will share their concrete vision for an ideal world with respect to effective design and implementation of advising technology. |
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DESIGN
The final dialogue will distill lessons learned about critical capabilities and campus conditions for effective advising technology, particularly from the perspective of those closest to implementation. and will invite learning teams to generate top 10 lists that describe “What It Should Be.” |
While the Design session concludes with a distillation of critical capabilities and campus conditions for effective advising technology implementation. campus groups may want to schedule a final “What’s next” session to begin planning how to turn ideas into action.
Break into interview pairs, ideally including two individuals from different departments or organizations. In this exercise, focusing on what worked well, the interviewer will ask the interviewee the questions below. The interviewer will write down the key points shared by the interviewee, capturing the actual words used as much as possible. When all questions are asked and answered, roles will switch and the interviewee will become the interviewer, asking the same questions.
When taking notes, be sure to use the language of the interviewee to accurately reflect the message conveyed.
Interview Questions
Create a joint summary of the most important themes of the interviews as they relate to both technology functions and features, as well as campus conditions for successful implementation. This step can be completed by individual learning pairs, or, after sharing ideas with each other, learning pairs can gather into a large group and collectively identify the key themes from the interviews.
Review your notes from Session 1 and discuss the following questions. This step can be conducted in learning pairs or as a large group with a facilitator.
When taking notes, be sure to use the language of the interviewee to accurately reflect the message conveyed.
Interview Questions
Using your notes, create a joint summary of the most important themes of the interviews as they relate to both technology functions and features, as well as campus conditions for successful implementation.
Reflecting on Sessions 1 and 2, use this session to distill the lessons learned about the critical capabilities and campus conditions for effective advising technology. Be sure to spend time understanding the perspectives of those on the ground, closer to implementation.
When taking notes, be sure to use the language of the interviewee to accurately reflect the message conveyed.
Interview Questions
Using your notes, create a joint summary on page 3 of the most important themes of the interviews, ensuring that both sides Of the learning teams spend time understanding the perspectives of those on the ground, closer to implementation.
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