Monthly publication 

July 2001 Issue

IN THIS ISSUE:

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Welcome to the LCN.

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Management Strategies and Tips.

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Supplemental Instruction (SI).

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Internet Resource of the Month.

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Conferences.

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Take Advantage of the Quiet Summer.

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MS Word Tip of the Month.

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Be Thankful.

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On the Lighter Side.

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Quotes.

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Last Issue.

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Submission Guidelines.

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Feedback.

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About the Authors.

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Subscription Info.

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Welcome to the LCN

Welcome to the July issue.   This month we have excellent articles including part II of the SI series and a management tip from Frank Christ.  This is a slow time of the year and almost half of our subscribers are off for the summer.  For those of you who are still around Susan Palau is taking you for a virtual tour of the outdoors via cyberspace.

Because of the reduction in the number of readers this issue is lighter than usual.  We will go back to full throttle when fall semester begins.

Enjoy the new issue, and don't forget to pass its web address to colleagues and fellow staff members.  

Mon Nasser
Editor  

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Management Strategies & Tips

By Frank L. Christ
Email: flchris@mindspring.com 

Tip #13: Learning Support Center Outreach to Online Students

The Chronicle of Higher Education ( 7 January 2000) reported that a recently completed U.S. Department of Education survey found that 1,680 institutions offered 54,000 online courses in 1998, with 1.6 million students enrolled -- and those numbers have since had two more years to grow.

How involved is your center and your staff in supporting  student learning in online courses? Check your involvement in supporting online students against the following list of possible learning center activities.

1. Partnering with your campus course development office to insure that student learning support is a part of online course design.

2.  Acting as a course virtual learning skills specialist in cooperation with a course instructor so that students may interact with you on their study problems.

3. Offering online support to online students with a link from your learning center web site to course and study skills tutorials and information that is especially relevant to online study and assignments.

4. Offering the services of your center for F2F assistance with any online student that lives nearby regardless of the institution in which they are enrolled in an online course. This may be a fee-based service.

5. Encouraging your staff to enroll in an online course to experience the difference between it and traditional courses and to understand the special needs of online students.

Providing outreach services to online faculty and students will not only increase your center’s  visibility but will also demonstrate your leadership and initiative in supporting campus retention and student satisfaction.  

Editor’s Note: Frank Christ will be directing a seminar on July 20 in Santa Clara at Syllabus 2001 entitled:  Increasing Retention, Satisfaction, and Success of Distance Learners with On-line and Campus Academic Support Programs and Services.

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Supplemental Instruction (SI)

Department to SI Program Dynamics (2nd in series)

By Barbara Stout and Jeanne Wiatr, SI Supervisors, University of Pittsburgh

Email: bstout@zbzoom.net and jwiatr+@pitt.edu

Although students entering our undergraduate programs appear to be ready to face the challenges of college, faculty is often met with students having ineffective study strategies who struggle and fail many introductory courses.  Faculty attempt to reach out to students through office hours and appointments but are thwarted by limited number of hours they are available to see students individually and student hesitancy to approach a professor. Professors are eager to hear of assistance that enhances their courses and allows them to maintain their high course standards.   Supplemental Instruction (SI) is the tool easily adopted to address faculty desire for support.

If you have an idea of which courses are high-risk (as defined in our last article) approaching administration/faculty would be the next step to establishing SI.  Understanding what support is currently available for the subjects involved is important. As a start, showing how SI could enhance the assistance available or better yet establish academic support for students in targeted courses is a great introduction.  Assurances that SI is a cost-effective tool usually peaks the administrations interest.  Establishing that SI groups involve larger numbers of students within the same time one or two students would be seen during tutoring sessions or office hours makes an impression.  Pointing out the long-term benefit of retention and reenrollment of students who succeed with SI support also appeals to efforts involving retention issues.  When discussing funding with administrators be prepared with a list of funding sources, as suggested in the manual from UMKC.  Becoming part of a tutoring budget, considering work-study programs, free credit options, fee waivers, internships and other possibilities are all creative options for student compensation.  Writing a grant for a pilot can even get you up and running and the potential for contributing to research is very attractive in many institutions.  Once you have administration on board approaching faculty is next. 

Faculty want to see their students achieve and should not have to compromise their course standards to see students succeed.  Providing a thorough explanation of the SI model is critical to a solid foundation for SI support with faculty. Soliciting assistance from professors for the purpose of referring students as possible leader trainees offers them an active role in establishing SI for their course.  Care must be taken not to promise a specific student will get the position (covered in the recruiting article) but gathering information for several students is good.  If faculty feel they have a handle on the program and involvement (stress the communication loop) with the leader and supervisor it is not difficult for a professor to agree piloting SI in their course.  Once they understand that SI is not a response to inadequate teaching but a tool used to improve inadequately prepared students, faculty generally welcome the opportunity to offer their students assistance unique to their course.  Stressing the fact that the burden of work rests mainly with the program helps to ‘sell’ the concept.  Reiterating the importance of their ongoing approval and cooperation further provides a sense of control.  After a pilot takes off your faculty will be your best source of public relations to new faculty and administration.

Starting small with one or two supportive faculty members and the cooperation of your academic support or tutoring program can go a long way with the administration.  Once administration sees SI as a winning situation for all involved you are on your way to joining a dynamic international program.

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Internet Resource of the Month

By Susan Marcus Palau
Director, Learning Center, Purchase College/SUNY
Email: Susan.Palau@Purchase.edu

White Flower Farm

Forgive me, faithful readers, but I cannot motivate myself to write about academic issues this month.  Instead, I am dreaming about being outdoors as I sit for hours at my desk and computer.  So I will allow myself to share this lovely, albeit “off-the-topic” website with you – “White Flower Farm”.

The homepage is quite colorful with a number of pictures of flowers that are currently on sale.  There is an easy to find and use “Garden Search” along with a plant index that allows you to browse.  The “Garden Catalogue” enables you to visit sites on “Plants and Bulbs”, “Only On the Web”, “Gift Ideas” “Tools and Accessories”, “Garden Decor”, “Kitchen Garden”, “Seeds” and “White Sale”.  Of course this last site intrigued me – I did not know what to imagine, but I discovered that this site offers, not the latest in towels and sheets of course, but a hodgepodge of good sale items, like clematis, delphinium and point weave baskets.

On the “About Us” page, we learn that White Flower Farm is a family-owned nursery located in Litchfield, Connecticut.  They have been in business since 1950 and offer the full range of annuals, perennials, bulbs, and vines throughout the United States.  They grow the majority of the plants in their own greenhouses and import the finest bulbs from Holland.  They are also proud supporters of “The Hole in the Wall Gang” camp, started by the actor Paul Newman, that offers a wonderful camping experience for children suffering from cancer and other serious illnesses.

The “History” page was quite interesting.  White Flower Farm was started in the 1930’s by a husband and wife writing team who relocated to Connecticut but soon discovered that nature was more seductive than writing.  They became zealous gardeners and quickly exhausted the available gardening resources in the area.  So by 1950, they started there own nursery and combining their gardening passion and writing skills also wrote “How-To” gardening books.  This has now morphed into the “Garden Wisdom” portion of this website with “Amos Says” providing new gardening tips weekly.

To get a chance to go “outside”, visit this website at http:/www.whiteflowerfarm.com/

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Conferences

National Conference on Student Retention
July 25-28, 2001
New Orleans, LA 

www.noellevitz.com/ncsr_index.asp

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TechEd 2001 
September 24-26, 2001 
Chicago, IL 

   http://techedevents.org/chicago/index.asp    

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NCLCA Annual Conference 
October 3-5, 2001 
Evanston, IL 

The keynote speaker is Bunk Spann. The mission of NCLCA is to support learning assistance professionals as they develop and maintain learning centers, programs, and services to enhance student learning at the post-secondary level.  More information about the conference is available on the NCLCA website:

    http://www.eiu.edu/~lrnasst/nclca/index.html

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ArkADE Annual Conference 
October 4-5, 2001 
Hot Springs, Arkansas 

For more info about the Arkansas Association for Developmental Education national conference, contact Sandra Kerr, ArkADE President at skerr@mail.eacc.cc.ar.us

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American Council on Education Conference 
October 18-20, 2001 
Cincinnati, OH

    http://www.acenet.edu/programs/omhe

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3rd National Conference On Research In Developmental Education
October 24-28, 2001
Charlotte, NC, MA

The conference theme is "Research 2001: Integrating Theory and Practice".  The will focus on this integration for the purpose of highlighting current research in the field, sharing research-based classroom techniques, validating current instructional methods, and networking among professionals. 

    http://www.ncde.appstate.edu/ 

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LAANE 18th Annual Conference
October 26, 2001
Burlington, MA

The Learning Association of New England (LAANE) will have its annual conference at the Northeastern University in Burlington, Massachusetts.  The theme for this year's conference is "Student Retention!"  LAANE supports educators in meeting the academic and interpersonal needs of under-prepared, at risk, and nontraditional students.  This also includes students with disabilities and those for whom English is a second language.

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8th National Conference  on Students in Transition
October 27-30, 2001 
Oak Brook, IL

    http://www.sc.edu/fye/

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Let us know about conferences not listed here by emailing lcn@attendance-tracking.com

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Sponsor Corner

Take advantage of the quiet summer

OK, you probably rather be outside enjoying the sun and the fresh air.  Unfortunately you have to work!  The summer is a quiet time since many of your students are off.  So what do you do with your spare time?  Reading this newsletter is a great start, so is taking a look at some tools that will prepare you for the upcoming and traditionally busy fall semester.

Start by investigating the new tools available to help you manage your center.  If you haven't done so already, look into automating the process of tracking the attendance and usage of services at your center.  Here are some reasons why you want to do this:

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Report to funding source or to obtain new  grants.

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Prove the utilization and show the need for your center to upper management.   

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Improve services by observing activity and collecting feedback from your visitors. 

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Promote your center by targeting students who need your services but haven’t heard about them. By knowing where your current visitors come from, you can target others with similar needs.

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Report on attendance to instructors.

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Analyze traffic: This will help you optimize the usage of your resources.  For example, find out your peak hours and put more staff into them or find out whether it is worth it to be open on Saturdays.

I'm sure you can think of other benefits. Of course if you automate the tracking and reporting process, you can do all of the above with a click on a mouse button.  This means you will be dealing with accurate, up-to-date, and live data rather than having to rely on manual tabulation of numbers from sign-in sheets.  This automation will save you and your staff a lot of manual work and will speed up the sign-in process for your students.

If you work with appointments, also check out how to computerize appointments management.  With the right software, finding an open slots for your students becomes an easy and quick process.  Also your students can enjoy the ability of scheduling and canceling their own appointments via the Internet.

OK so what software will do all of the above for you and much more?  Since this is the Sponsor's corner you know we are taking about AccuTrack.  But don't take our word for it; download the free 30-day evaluation and use some of your quiet summer hours to see what this software can do for you.

Visit AccuTrack's web site http://www.attendance-tracking.com/AccuTrack.htm  for detailed information and the 30-day free trial.

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MS Word Tip of the Month

 Using Images Efficiently 

In last month's Windows tip we showed you how to capture screens for use in your documents (manuals, instructions sheet, tests, etc.)  We also said that you can take the captured images and paste them directly to your Word documents.  This is an easy process, but if you include a lot of pictures you will notice the size of your documents will increase significantly.  The large file size might make it hard to share this document with others via email or floppy or it might slow down your printer.  Luckily there is a trick you can do to greatly reduce the file size.

Click on an image in the document to select it.  Cut the picture (click on the cut icon in Word's bar, or select "Edit" - "Cut" from the menu, or ctrl-x on your keyboard).  Next click on "Edit" - "Paste Special" from the menu and select "Picture" then click on "OK".  In MS Word the Picture format takes least space to store and prints the best quality.  If you do this to all the images in your document you will find that its size will be much smaller.

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Be Thankful

For the taxes that I pay, because it means that I am employed.

For the mess to clean after a party, because it means that I have been surrounded by friends.

For the clothes that fit a little too snug, because it means I have enough to eat.

For my shadow that watches me work, because it means I am out in the sunshine.

For a lawn that needs mowing, windows that need cleaning, and gutters that need fixing, because it means I have a home.

For all the complaining I hear about the government, because it means that we have freedom of speech.

For the parking spot I find at the far end of the parking lot, because it means I am capable of walking and that I have been blessed with transportation.

For my huge heating bill, because it means I am warm.

For the lady behind me in church that sings off key, because it means that I can hear.

For the pile of laundry and ironing, because it means I have clothes to wear.

For weariness and aching muscles at the end of the day, because it means I have been capable of working hard.

For the alarm that goes of in the early morning hours, because it means that I am alive.

And finally....... For too much e-mail, because it means I have friends who are thinking of me.

[Author Unknown]

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On the Lighter Side

Secrets of the Rich

A young man asked an old rich man how he made his money. The old guy fingered his worsted wool vest and said, "Well, son, it was 1932. The depth of the Great Depression. I was down to my last nickel. I invested that nickel in an apple. I spent the entire day polishing the apple and, at the end of the day, I sold the apple for ten cents. The next morning, I invested those ten cents in two apples. I spent the entire day polishing them and sold them at 5 pm for 20 cents. I continued this system for a month, by the end of which I'd accumulated a fortune of $1.37. Then my wife's father died and left us two million dollars." 

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Quotes

"If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail."
- Abraham Maslow

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Have no fear of perfection- you'll never reach it.
- Salvador Dali

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"Our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we often might win, by fearing to attempt."
- William Shakespeare

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One of life's most painful moments comes when we must admit that we didn't do our homework, that we are not prepared.
- Merlin Olsen

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"Do anything better than it was ever done before and you'll get rich."
- Walt Disney 

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"It is important to acknowledge a mistake instantly, correct it, and learn from it. That literally turns a failure into a success. Success is on the far side of failure."
- T. J. Watson (1874 - 1956), founder of IBM

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Last Issue

The June issue of the Learning Center Newsletter featured:

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The premier of the Supplemental Instruction series..

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A management tip by Frank Christ on program visibility.

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A student study skills tip from Lucy MacDonald on task management.

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Martha Maxwell's review of the book "Eminent Educators : Studies in Intellectual Influence." 

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James MacGregor Burns Academy of Leadership by Susan Marcus Palau.

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A utility that will DOUBLE your web download speed!

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A computer tip on capturing screens fast.

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How to use fields in MS Word.

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And more.

To view the June issue, click here.

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Submissions Guidelines

Get involved in the learning-assistance community via The Learning Center Newsletter by:

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Submitting articles of interest to learning-assistance professionals.

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Reviewing books and other learning-assistance resources.

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Informing us about conferences and other happenings.

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Nominating your favorite learning center professional for the Person of the Month column.

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Sharing resource information with your peers: web sites, publications, etc.

The average article length is one page written in 12 points size and single line spacing.  If the article is long, we might put it in a separate page and show the first few paragraphs in the newsletter with a link to the full article.  Send your articles in ASCII text or MS Word format.  We will take care of the html conversion.  If you want to include images with the article, the preferred format is jpg or gif, but we will convert images in other formats if needed.  

The newsletter is usually released during the first week of each month.  The deadline for each issue is the 25th of the previous month, so if you would like to submit an article for the next issue, we need to receive it by the 25th of this month.  By submitting articles, you give us the right to publish and edit them if needed.  

The subject of submitted articles must be of interest to learning-assistance professionals.  The editor of this newsletter reserves the right to reject articles at his discretion.  

Submitting your article will make you more famous and will help your colleagues worldwide!  E-mail your submissions to:

        newsletter@attendance-tracking.com

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Feedback

We certainly hope you find this newsletter useful and entertaining.  We welcome your suggestions and improvements ideas.  To send in your comments,  simply click here.

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About the Authors

This newsletter is sponsored by AccuTrack and edited by Mon Nasser from Engineerica Systems, Inc.  My thanks to this month's contributors: Frank Christ, Susan Marcus Palau, Barbara Stout and Jeanne Wiatr.

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Subscribe / Unsubscribe Info

Subscription to The Learning Center Newsletter is free for learning-assistance professionals.  To subscribe simply fill-in the quick subscription form at this web site:

        http://www.attendance-tracking.com/join_lcn.htm

Only those who subscribe to The Learning Center Newsletter receive notifications of new issues .  If you wish to unsubscribe, e-mail to:

        unsubscribe@attendance-tracking.com

Note that the process of tracking members and emailing them is currently handled by humans.  If there is an error in your subscription, please email us.

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Last Modified: January 13, 2004 10:22:39 AM