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INFO for NACADA Beth Yarbrough, Auburn University Are We Singing the Same Song? Rethinking the Prescriptive/Developmental Continuum Code 105 2012 NACADA Annual Conference [email protected] 334.844.5744

Prescriptive Advising

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Page 1: Prescriptive Advising

INFO for NACADA

Beth Yarbrough, Auburn University Are We Singing the Same Song?

Rethinking the Prescriptive/Developmental Continuum

Code 105 2012 NACADA Annual Conference [email protected] 334.844.5744

Page 2: Prescriptive Advising

ARE WE SINGING THE SAME SONG? RETHINKING THE PRESCRIPTIVE/DEVELOPMENTAL CONTINUUM

Beth Yarbrough

Page 3: Prescriptive Advising

Introduction

Two major styles of advising have been proposed: prescriptive and developmental.

Prescriptive advising is a behavioral approach, based on “telling” the student what to do. The student is told what to do and expected to follow the advice

Developmental advising is based on a more holistic view of the student and uses student developmental theories as a foundation. Advisors and students work together to develop goals, plans, and actions.

Page 4: Prescriptive Advising

Existing Measures of Preference Academic Advising Inventory (Winston & Sandor,

1984) measures preference for prescriptive/developmental advising along a single continuum. Students cannot prefer both styles simultaneously.

Answers toward the left reflect increasing preference for prescriptive advising, while answers toward the right reflect increasing preference for developmental advising.

2. My advisor tells me what would be the best schedule for me.

OR

My advisor suggests important considerations in planning a schedule and then gives me responsibility for the final decision.

 

Very Important

    SlightlyImportant

  Slightly Important

    VeryImportant

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Preference for Prescriptive Advising?

Although developmental advising is widely preferred over prescriptive styles, research indicates that students do not necessarily feel the same way. Smith (2002) found that younger students expressed a preference for prescriptive advising.

WHY? Are they “on-demand” type people? Just give me

what I want and let me go? Have their parents made all the decisions and they

don’t know how? Do some students simply need more direction?

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Situational Leadership

Hersey and Blanchard’s (1988) Situational Leadership Theory argues for two types of leadership, task and relational. These are not considered a continuum, but two separate dimensions.

The amount of these dimensions of leadership needed by an employee depends on the employee readiness to perform a task.

Readiness is defined as: Ability (knowledge, experience, skills) Willingness (confidence, commitment, motivation)

Page 7: Prescriptive Advising

SLT Applied to Advising

Parallels can be drawn to students as “employees” and advisors as “leaders”.

We are attempting to help students adjust to a new set of tasks, responsibilities, and expectations. We are here to guide students into a successful working relationship with the university.

Student’s readiness to address the tasks before them may define the types of help they need from their advisors. Students with low readiness will likely struggle with new responsibilities and students with high readiness may not need an advisor’s help at all.

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Readiness as Related to Leadership Needs

The less ready (ability and willingness) someone is the greater their need for task-direction.

Think about your first 6 weeks as an advisor. Just the facts, ma’am.

As people become more ready, they still need task-direction, but begin to need relational-direction as well.

Now you know more answers, but need help with relationships – who are the go-to contacts, who can get help get things done

People who are even more ready begin needing less task-direction, but relational needs increase.

You know the answers unless it’s really unusual or complex. How do you take on more responsibility, develop your leadership skills, understand and navigate office/university politics

People who are very ready need little direction of any kind. They can work independently almost indefinitely.

I got this.

Page 9: Prescriptive Advising

THE CHART! (Proposed)

Freshmen(Low Readiness)High Task, Low

Relational

Sophomores(Mid-Low Readiness)

High Task, High Relational

Seniors(High Readiness)

Low Task, Low Relational

Juniors(Mid-High Readiness)

Low Task, High Relational

TaskRelational

Page 10: Prescriptive Advising

The Purpose

The current measurement of advising preference is a continuum, but there may actually be 2 dimensions to advising style preference– task and relational.

The current measurement (AAI) does not allow a student to express preference for both prescriptive and developmental styles simultaneously.

This study attempted to investigate whether the AAI is an appropriate measure of advising style preference.

Page 11: Prescriptive Advising

Method

Research question: Is the currently accepted measurement of

prescriptive/developmental advising as a continuum appropriate?

Cross-sectional survey methodology Sample of 119 undergraduates enrolled in Public Speaking Instruments

Academic Advising Inventory, existing instrument Prescriptive/Developmental scale, developed by the

researcher Confirmatory and exploratory factor analyses were

conducted for the prescriptive/developmental scale, as well as reliability measures on all scales.

Page 12: Prescriptive Advising

Development of Prescriptive/Developmental Scale

Scale items were developed by the researcher and given to experts in the field for feedback, confirmation of developmental or prescriptive nature, and suggestions for additional items.

Changes were made based on expert feedback and the resulting items were given to advisors to rate as prescriptive or developmental in nature. Items which were not unanimously categorized were eliminated.

The final scale is 16 items, 8 testing prescriptive preference and 8 testing developmental preference.

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Example Questions from P/D Scale

  Strongly

Agree

Agree Neither Agree nor

Disagree

Disagree Strongly Disagree

1. My ideal advisor would tell me what to do. ○ ○ ○ ○ ○

2. My ideal advisor would tell me which classes I should take.

○ ○ ○ ○ ○3. My ideal advisor would

talk to me about career opportunities.

○ ○ ○ ○ ○4. My ideal advisor would

be interested in my life outside of school.

○ ○ ○ ○ ○

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Confirmatory Factor Analysis: Model 1

Developmental

pd3

e1

.31

pd4

e2

.46

pd5

e3

.32

pd8

e4

.63

pd9

e5

.70

pd12

e6

.62

pd15

e7

.44

pd16

e8

.51

Prescriptive

pd14

e9

.83

pd13

e10

.76

pd11

e11

-.12

pd10

e12

.37

pd7

e13

.14

pd6

e14

.41

pd2

e15

.04

pd1

e16

.03

.64Chi Square: 278.6CFI: .569RMSEA: .120

Page 15: Prescriptive Advising

Confirmatory Factor Analysis: Model 2

Developmental

pd3

e1

.31

pd4

e2

.45

pd5

e3

.32

pd8

e4

.63

pd9

e5

.70

pd12

e6

.62

pd15

e7

.44

Prescriptive

pd14

e8

.86

pd13

e9

.75

pd10

e10

.36

pd6

e11

.42

.62

pd16

e12

.51

Chi Square: 110.83CFI: .810RMSEA: .097

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Mysteries…

Why did 4 prescriptive items not load? 1, 2, 7, 11 all loaded poorly on prescriptive scale.

My ideal advisor would tell me what to do. My ideal advisor would tell me which classes I should take. My ideal advisor would plan my schedules for me. My ideal advisor and I would only talk about academics.

Mysterious Number 9: My ideal advisor would talk to me about my interests and abilities to help me plan classes. 9 is developmental in nature, but data analysis indicated a

correlation with the prescriptive scale. Inclusion in both scales makes the model fit better than

including it in either single scale or eliminating it.

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Mysterious Number 9: Model 3

Developmental

pd3

e1

.29

pd4

e2

.49

pd5

e3

.36

pd8

e4

.64

pd9

e5

.43

pd12

e6

.62

pd15

e7

.48

Prescriptive

pd14

e8

.84

pd13

e9

.76

pd10

e10

.35

pd6

e11

.42

pd16

e12

.55

.50

.38

Chi Square: 98.76CFI: .846RMSEA: .088

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Exploratory Factor Analysis

Results from CFA indicate that my interpretation of the scale is not a great fit with the way students answered.

An exploratory factor analysis was conducted to see what factors are a better fit for the way students answered.

A five-factor solution resulted from the EFA.

These factors are more focused on the advising situation or need of the student, rather than the style of the advisor.

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Five Factors

Practical Advising: Rules and Requirements My ideal advisor would tell me about policies that may affect

me. …would talk to me about my interests and abilities to help me

plan classes …would tell me about important deadlines

Directive Advising …would tell me what to do …would tell me which classes I should take

Skill Development …would help me with study skills and time management …would teach me how to make decisions for myself

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Five Factors, Cont.

Holisitic Advising …would be interested in my life outside of school …would talk only about academics

Long Range Planning …would talk to me about career opportunities …would talk with me about my goals

Students seem to focus on the advising situation or their advising need, rather than any style or approach that their advisor takes. This indicates that a more complex approach to examining advising preferences is warranted.

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Where Do We Go Next?

Students do score highly on both prescriptive and developmental scales which the AAI does not allow. If we plan to continue to talk about prescriptive or developmental styles, the AAI may not be the most appropriate measure.

Do we want (as a field) to continue to talk about these styles?

Additional study of advising style preferences – particularly as related to advising situation or function. Does preference change with a change in advising situation?

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References

Hersey, P., & Blanchard, K. H. (1988). Management of Organizational Behavior: Utilizing Human Resources. Englewood, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.

Smith, J. S. (2002). First-year student perceptions of academic advisement: A qualitative study and reality check. NACADA Journal, 22(2), 39-49.

Winston, R. B., & Sandor, J. A. (1984). The Academic Advising Inventory. Athens, GA: Student Development Associates.