Scaffolded Student Support
When I think about student support on campus, I like to envision the analogy of scaffolding. Think of every student support initiative on your campus as a stage of scaffolding. Scaffolding is used to support either a structure, or those working on the structure. Scaffolding is deployed for a specific purpose to accomplish a focused task. And when that task is complete and the scaffolding is no longer needed, it is removed. If our students are the structure in the analogy, and student support initiatives are the scaffolding, it is easy to begin to see how student support mechanisms throughout a student’s career can be deployed, scaled, and brought down throughout the student’s time in college. Sometimes the scaffolding is meant to directly bolster structural integrity, while other times it provides a platform from which a professional can do his or her work alongside the ‘structure’. Some students require multiple layers of scaffolding for extended periods of time in college – they struggle at first to find a major, struggle to meet the rigor and pace of college study, need focused attention to bolster their study skills, or require tutoring to keep pace. Other students do not struggle early in their college career, but find difficulty in more senior courses that require more theoretical skills or require more advanced and detailed academic writing. Still others may not struggle, but may need the inspiration to take their talent to the next level be it in projects, portfolios, or academic research and writing. Supports for all these situations take different forms and are deployed at specific points along each student’s time at the institution.
Predictive Analytics Platform and Apps Identify Risk
Our Civitas Learning partners have access to robust predictive analytic platforms that allows them the opportunity to best identify which students need scaffolding and where. Our Student Insights Engine™ and core app Illume help identify when to offer support. This makes the most of the available data so that partners can direct the right kind of resources and scaffolding to the right students at the right time. Each deployment of resource and support, or intervention outreach, can be laser-focused because the identification of risk or engagement, and the level of it, is informed by analysis of student data. Most institutions have a storehouse of scaffolding at the ready to deploy for students who are at risk. It is not uncommon that students require multiple scaffolds at one time, or numerous pieces of scaffolding throughout their student career. Fortunately, making a mere guess about a student’s risk is no longer left to conjecture. Predictive modeling can help better focus support initiatives, and the robust learning layer built by Civitas Learning can identify the efficacy of specific student supports to determine the effect of such interventions on student persistence. This proves beneficial to both the student and the institution. Deploying scaffolding can now be timely, and provide students the kinds of support they need when they need it most, which also allows for non-essential scaffolding to be used elsewhere.Celebrating Successful Completion
Whenever a great construction or restoration project is complete, all the scaffolding is brought down from the structure. Everyone is finally afforded the opportunity to celebrate the project’s completion, and see the fully finished structure. In the case of our students, successful program completion means our students received the support they needed to complete their certifications or degrees, and we can all celebrate that achievement with them as they receives valuable college or university credentials.Top Banner Photo: Scaffold Tower by Stephen Boisvert used by permission CreativeCommons BY- 2.0.