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Thursday June 19, 2025 8:45am - 9:30am EDT
TBA
Academic librarians usually do not seek out struggling students. Instead, struggling students seek us out. However, fewer students are coming into the library seeking help. With some seminaries dealing with declining enrollments, seminary librarians should consider proactively responding to students who they know are at risk. If we can get to these students in time, we may be able to prevent their failing and dropping out, thus helping to stabilize enrollment.
The question is, “How do we reach out to at-risk students?” Some seminaries have systems for identifying borderline students when the grading system puts them in an “on-warning” status. The student’s advisor is then notified, and with the student's cooperation, an intervention process can begin, often with a student success coach.
Other seminaries, like mine, do not have an on-warning system. We have developed our own system, and it includes the librarian as a student success coach. The faculty directs academically challenged students to contact the librarian for assistance. While this includes traditional roles of helping with their research and writing, it often involves much more.
I will provide anecdotes about our successes and a few failures (while protecting the real identities of students). I will also provide a strategy for engaging the faculty and administration in expanding the librarian’s role into a student success coach.

Learning Outcome

First, those attending this presentation should realize that they have an opportunity to help with the current enrollment crisis in seminaries. Second, they will have a plan on how to become student success coaches for at-risk students. Third, they have a realistic understanding of what is possible and what is impossible when trying to help struggling students.

Audience Engagement

It will include a strategy for setting up a student success process within the library and with the cooperation of faculty. It will rely on anecdotes of particular students (identities of real students will be protected) and why some interventions succeeded and others did not.
Speakers
avatar for Ed Hughes

Ed Hughes

Director of Library Services, Memphis Theological Seminary
I have worked in both academic and public libraries since the early 1980s. I started my current position as Director in January 2020. I started in academia but left in 2000 because I was certain that everything in university and college libraries would shortly move to an entirely... Read More →
Thursday June 19, 2025 8:45am - 9:30am EDT
TBA

Attendees (9)


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