Issue 27(1)
Supplemental
Instruction: New Visions for empowering Student Learning.
(2006).
Marion E. Stone, Glen Jacobs (Eds.), Jossey-Bass,
120 pp., $29.00, (paperback), ISBN # 0-7879-8680-1.
Review by: Julie
Longmire
Academic
Advisor
College
of Education
, Health, and Human Sciences
University
of Tennessee,
Knoxville
Most academic advisors have worked
with students experiencing trouble in courses with notoriously
low pass rates. Advisors in this situation know that the standard
advice and tutoring referrals alone may not help. Supplemental
Instruction (SI) is one effective strategy many institutions
have implemented to deal with this common problem. SI "is an
academic assistance program that utilizes peer-assisted study
sessions. SI sessions are regularly-scheduled, informal
review sessions in which students compare notes, discuss readings,
develop organizational tools, and predict test items.
Students learn how to integrate course content and study skills
while working together" (University of Missouri-Kansas, 2006).
Today
in American higher education we enroll an increasingly diverse
student body. This changing nature of students requires that
colleges and universities take a proactive approach to educating
diverse learners. SI can help colleges and universities meet
student learning outcomes by offering students the opportunity
to learn and practice strategies that will teach them higher
order thinking skills. SI sessions are designed to "integrate
critical thinking and problem solving" into the course content
(p. 37).
Supplemental
instruction offers students the opportunity to learn and practice
challenging course content, while also helping them develop
learning strategies that can be applied to other courses. SI
is not only useful to session participants; it is also a tremendous
growth opportunity for the student leaders who facilitate the
sessions. Student SI leaders are taught effective learning strategies
and leadership skills that will be useful when they enter the
workforce.
Supplemental
Instruction is a must
read for faculty and staff interested in designing more effective
learning support activities. It provides valuable insights into
all facets of the SI program, including how to get administration
and faculty to buy in to SI, information on training peer leaders
and faculty, as well as concrete evidence that SI works. One
strength of this book is that it provides readers with case
studies that feature colleges and universities where effective
Supplemental Instruction programs have been implemented. These
case studies provide readers with the knowledge needed to implement
an SI program on their campuses.
Another
strength of the book is that it provides readers with a look
into how SI has evolved over the past thirty years. One such
evolution is that of Video-based Supplemental Instruction (VSI).
The authors explained how VSI can be used effectively to reach
a variety of audiences including high school students with no
access to dual enrollment courses and students in developing
nations. Both SI and VSI meet learners where they are, whether
the participant is an "at-risk" university student struggling
in a course or a young student in a small, rural village wanting
to learn more about the world.
This
book, like Supplemental Instruction itself, can be useful to
a wide audience. Administrators, faculty and staff interested
in developing a program to promote student learning will appreciate
the specific advice given as well as the anecdotal wisdom of
practitioners who have implemented successful programs. Specifically,
this monograph will help advisors understand the importance
of Supplemental Instruction and how it can both increase the
number of students who successfully complete challenging courses
and give students the necessary tools to become effective, life
long learners.
Reference
University
of Missouri-Kansas City. (2006). Overview of Supplemental Instruction.
Retrieved December 15, 2006 from http://www.umkc.edu/cad/si/overview.htm
.