ABSTRACT

The landscape of higher education (HE) has dramatically altered in the past 30 years and it continues to evolve and change. More students are entering HE and attending university or college on a global scale than ever before. Supporting and enhancing the undergraduate student experience across the student lifecycle, from first contact through to alumni, is a critical activity in higher education today not only to aid retention and progression but in a highly competitive HE market, the quality of the student experience is pivotal to an institution’s ability to attract students. The student experience encompasses all aspects of student life, i.e. academic, social, welfare, with the academic imperative at the heart of it. However, the increasing costs of delivering HE, a reduction in government/ state funding and constraints on resources means delivering a quality student experience has never been more challenging for those working in HE.

Staff at all levels, and across all areas within an institution, are developing and implementing initiatives to improve and enhance the student experience whether they are at the coal face or on the periphery thus making them a ‘Practitioner’ in the student experience. This could include the admissions administrator improving the information available for potential applicants; the academic improving his/her feedback to students or central welfare departments ensuring that their services are being advertised and supported within a student’s home unit (faculty/department/school/course).

In this book, the Editor, Michelle Morgan describes how her new student experience ‘Practitioner Model’ provides an organised and more detailed structure; guiding Practitioners in the identification of what they have to deliver, who they need to deliver it to and when they need to deliver it across her six key stages of the student lifecycle:

· First Contact and Admissions;

· Pre-arrival;

· Arrival and Orientation;

· Induction to Study;

· Reorientation and Reinduction (Returners' Induction)

· Outduction (preparation for life after undergraduate study).

 

The Practioner Model offers a new way of thinking in terms of delivering ‘interlinked’ academic, welfare and support activities at the home unit and university level to support the student in their university journey.

This book also provides working solutions to real problems in the form of exemplar case studies from the UK and internationally, including chapters from Liz Thomas, Di Nutt, Marcia Ody, Chris Keenan(UK), Mary Stuart Hunter, (USA), Kerri-Lee Krause and Duncan Nulty (Australia).

Good practice must be adaptable and transferable because one size does not fit all. It must also be cost effective. And here the authors shows how practitioners can adapt and customise the 40 case studies presented to help them not only improve and enhance the experience of their undergraduate students in their own institution (both full and part-time) but also to support their students’ progression and retention.

part 1|30 pages

Setting the scene

part 2|112 pages

The stages in the Student Experience Practitioner Model

chapter Chapter 3|19 pages

First contact and admissions

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

Pre-arrival

Bizarreness, collisions and adjustments

chapter Chapter 5|19 pages

Arrival and orientation

chapter Chapter 6|17 pages

Induction

chapter Chapter 8|17 pages

Outduction

Preparing to leave, graduation and beyond

part 3|75 pages

Core activities in the Student Experience Practitioner Model

chapter Chapter 10|15 pages

Supporting staff to be supporters

chapter Chapter 11|17 pages

Supporting learning and teaching

Improving academic enagagement

chapter Chapter 12|15 pages

Student evaluation and feedback