Chicago Guides to Academic Life
ebook
(0)
The Graduate Advisor Handbook
A Student-Centered Approach
by Bruce M. Shore
Part of the Chicago Guides to Academic Life series
You're advising students to help ensure their success-but who's going to advise you?
With university budgets shrinking, graduate advisors find their workloads increasing. A professor emeritus of educational psychology at McGill University with more than forty years of advising experience and several teaching awards, Bruce M. Shore provides a practical guide here that demystifies the advisor-student relationship and helps both parties thrive. Emphasizing the interpersonal relationship at the heart of this important academic partnership, he reveals how advisors can draw on their own strengths to create a rewarding rapport.
The Graduate Advisor Handbook moves chronologically through the advising process, from the first knock on the door to the last reference letter. Along the way it covers:
• transparent communication
• effective motivation
• cooperative troubleshooting
• touchy subjects, including what to do when personal boundaries are crossed and how to deliver difficult news-with sample scripts to help advisors find the right words for even the toughest situations
A valuable resource, The Graduate Advisor Handbook has the cool-headed advice and comprehensive coverage that advisors need to make the advising relationship not just effective but also enjoyable.
ebook
(1)
What Every Science Student Should Know
by Justin L. Bauer
Part of the Chicago Guides to Academic Life series
I am often amazed at how much more capability and enthusiasm for science there is among elementary school youngsters than among college students... . We must understand and circumvent this dangerous discouragement. No one can predict where the future leaders of science will come from.
Carl SaganIn 2012, the White House put out a call to increase the number of STEM graduates by one million. Since then, hundreds of thousands of science students have started down the path toward a STEM career. Yet, of these budding scientists, more than half of all college students planning to study science or medicine leave the field during their academic careers.
What Every Science Student Should Know is the perfect personal mentor for any aspiring scientist. Like an experienced lab partner or frank advisor, the book points out the pitfalls while providing encouragement. Chapters cover the entire college experience, including choosing a major, mastering study skills, doing scientific research, finding a job, and, most important, how to foster and keep a love of science.
This guide is a distillation of the authors own experiences as recent science graduates, bolstered by years of research and interviews with successful scientists and other science students. The authorial team includes former editors-in-chief of the prestigious Dartmouth Undergraduate Journal of Science. All have weathered the ups and downs of undergrad life and all are still pursuing STEM careers. Forthright and empowering, What Every Science Student Should Know is brimming with insider advice on how to excel as both a student and a scientist.
Showing 1 to 2 of 2 results