Learning Skills Workshops Supporting First-Year Courses

Student Services support, including learning skills assistance, can be integral in empowering learners.  First-year students are expected to be self-directed in their learning, yet may have neither been challenged nor experienced negative consequences for a lack of perseverance. Academic skills pro...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sheilagh Grills
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2017-06-01
Series:Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching
Subjects:
Online Access:https://celt.uwindsor.ca/index.php/CELT/article/view/4731
Description
Summary:Student Services support, including learning skills assistance, can be integral in empowering learners.  First-year students are expected to be self-directed in their learning, yet may have neither been challenged nor experienced negative consequences for a lack of perseverance. Academic skills professionals can be partners with teaching faculty in student success by helping to build transferable learning skills, especially for high-fail introductory courses. In this paper, I report on supplementary workshops developed to target fundamental skills with course-specific examples.  This partnership included incentivizing academic support with both carrots and sticks; instructors in introductory biology strongly urged students receiving D grades or below on the first test to approach Student Services for support, while sociology faculty incorporated workshop attendance into the introductory course with participation grades. Following such incentivizing of learning skills, workshop attendance increased by 45%. In both courses, first test scores and high school averages for students attending workshops did not differ from students not attending workshops. However, students who attended learning skills workshops had significantly higher course grades, persistence, sessional grade point averages (GPAs), and cumulative GPAs than students not attending workshops. Controlling for high school average, each learning skills workshop attended was associated with a 0.11 to 0.27 increase in sessional GPA on a 4.3 point scale. 
ISSN:2368-4526