Transformative
Theory in Academic Advising
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Resources for advising undecided students
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Overview of issues surrounding
advising undecided students using transformative theory
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Read More About It! Annotated
bibliography of resources dealing with this issue
Using
the Transformative: Applying Transformational and Self-Authorship
Pedagogy to Advising Undecided/Exploring Students
Kerry
Kincanon, Head Advisor
University
Exploratory Studies Program
Oregon
State University
I
am a music fan in the truest sense of the word being short for
fanatic. This obsession drives me to keep close eyes and ears
on the world of independent and innovative music, looking for
trends and seeking out the next creative force that will occupy
space on my iPod. I’m also a fan to the degree where ideas and
concepts related to music occasionally start to seep into my thinking
about advising, and there is a phenomenon that has recently resonated
on this frequency for me. The “mashup,” mixing two or more existing
songs together to create a new song, is not necessarily a new
practice, but it has gained great momentum and visibility in the
past few years. A major player in this genre is Girl Talk, the
stage name adopted by a biomedical engineer turned music producer
and laptop wizard named Gregg Gillis. Girl Talk songs and albums
are entirely constructed from pre-existing recorded material,
much of which is highly recognizable pop and hip-hop music. A
single album may have elements of over 300 different pre-existing
songs. Some might question the artistry (or the legality) of such
an endeavor, but Gillis enjoys enormous critical praise for his
intricate constructions and collages. Gillis has described his
songs as “transformative” (Schaefer, Regateao, Wise, and Meyer,
2008). He provides touchstones for the listener in that his work
retains the recognizable elements of the original songs yet his
presentation gives the listener something that is amazingly novel
– familiar, but original. Gillis assimilates, analyzes and reflects
on all those songs and his experiences with those songs and he
ultimately constructs something that is new from the process.
I
see a metaphorical connection between the mashup and the major-decision
making and meaning making processes. Advisees come to advisors
with life experiences that shape their context for interpreting
and understanding their learning. For advisors, these stories
inevitably contain recognizable themes or tropes, yet the familiarity
of these experiences ultimately gives way to something entirely
new and unique in each student. This is not to imply that advisors
create or manipulate something in their students in the same way
that Gillis does with his transformative songs, but we are positioned
to facilitate a transformative experience for students -- to help
them make meaning around how the accordance or discordance of
previous and current learning relates to their educational goals
and aspirations. Students are ultimately the arbiters of their
journey, but, to borrow a metaphor from Kegan (1994), advisors
can serve as a bridge to higher order thinking in which students
can frame new or pre-existing thoughts about educational choices
and pathways. The learning that occurs through such a process
is transformative.
Transformation,
Self-Authorship, and Adult Learning
Many
advisors believe that academic advising is an educational transaction
with a curriculum and learning outcomes like classroom teaching
(The NACADA “Advising is Teaching” bumper sticker has a visible
presence in many advising offices on my campus). Many of those
same advisors have a common goal that students leave their institutions
as educated adults who perpetually assimilate their learning,
reflect upon it, and are in a position to join the larger societal
discourse in a meaningful way. In other words, advisors want students
to be capable of and actively practice sound information processing,
ongoing critical reflection and contextually-based decision making
. This is squarely where the core concepts of transformative
learning reside, and there is much literature in the arena of
adult education and cognitive-structural development that explores
it. Mezirow (1995, 2000) discussed the aforementioned italicized
attributes as paramount in adult education, and he noted the important
role that adult educators play in engaging learners in discourse
that facilitates transformational learning. Kegan (2000) made
a compelling distinction between informational and transformational
learning in that the former only accommodates changes to what
one knows while the latter accommodates both changes to
what and how one knows. Glisczinski (2007)
criticized systems of learning that are purely informational as
“unreliable for navigating the current dynamics of postmodern
life” (p. 319), and he argued that utilizing transformational
learning systems in higher education will better situate students
to negotiate the complexities of the postmodern world. Based on
her important longitudinal research with college students, Baxter
Magolda (1992, 1999, 2001) posited a theory of intellectual development,
the Epistemological Reflection Model, and a related pedagogical
model, the Learning Partnership Model, that are aligned with transformational
learning. The Learning Partnership Model employs methods that
“validate students as knowers, situate learning within the student’s
experience, and define learning as a mutually constructed activity”
(2001, p. 191). Students whose learning experiences include these
attributes move toward self-authorship and contextual knowing,
the culminating stage of Epistemological Reflection Model.
Transformation,
Self-Authorship, and Academic Advising
It
not surprising that these explorations have begun to spill over
directly into advising literature as well. Drawing on liberation
learning theory and pedagogy elucidated by Friere (1993), Hemwall
and Trachte (1999) called for advisors to consider their work
as a form of praxis . The advisor and advisee engage
in meaningful dialogues that lead the student to critically self-reflect
on his/her experiences and the experiences of others. The student
ultimately acts upon this learning experience to shape his/her
goals and aspirations. Elsewhere, Hemwall and Trachte (2003) recall
Kegan when they shared an advising curriculum organized around
constructivist learning principles that facilitate higher order
thinking. Pizzolato (2006) argued that the CAS standards for academic
advising could best be realized through educational practices
that promote self-authorship. She fleshed out Baxter Magolda’s
Learning Partnership Model to demonstrate advising methods that
provoke students away from being externally defined toward self-authorship.
Baxter Magolda and King (2008) then tied the process of self-authorship
directly to the transformational learning concepts articulated
by Mezirow and argued that, “academic advising is a key venue
through which educators can assist students through this transformation”
(p.8).
Applying
the Theory to Undecided/Exploring Students: An Advising Mashup
The
advisor toolbox has a space for transformation and self-authorship
theories, and they are particularly useful in working with undecided/exploratory
students. For many students, the process of deciding on a field
of study can amount to a significant transformation in that it
provides definition and clarity to their undergraduate pathway
and beyond. Effective major decision-making is
an active process of gathering information and making meaning
of that information relative to the self – i.e. “how do the attributes
of this area of study correspond to my like and dislikes and my
skills and talents”. Effective major decisions often
move students from a place where they are externally defined to
where they are internally defined – i.e. ‘I’m pursuing this major
because it is the right fit for me, not because the market demands
it or my parents or friends or mentors told me to do it”. Advisors
are greatly indebted to Gordon (1987) for her developmental model
for working with undecided/exploring students. Congruence exists
between this model and transformation theory. A compelling relationship
can be made between it and Mezirow’s (2000) description of the
phases inherent in transformational learning and the process of
“meaning becoming clarified” (p. 22) (see Table 1):
Table
1.
Virginia
Gordon’s Model for Advising Exploring Students (1987) |
Jack
Mezirow’s Phases of Meaning Becoming Clarified toward Transformation
(2000) |
- Help students analyze their
situation
- Help students organize a
plan for exploring (information gathering)
- Help students integrate
the information they have collected
- Support students while they
make decisions
- Help students initiate an
action plan
- Encourage future contact
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- A disorienting dilemma
- Self-examination with feelings
of fear, anger, guilt, or shame
- A critical assessment of
assumptions
- Recognition that one’s discontent
and process of transformation are shared
- Exploration of options for
new roles, relationships, and actions
- Planning a course of action
- Acquiring knowledge and
skills for implementing one’s plans
- Provisional trying on of
new roles
- Building competence and
self-confidence in new roles and relationships
- A reintegration into one’s
life on the basis of conditions dictated by one’s new
perspective
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Mezirow
(1995) suggested that, “The central function of adult educators
is to facilitate and precipitate critical reflection by the individual
learner.” (p.59). Gordon’s model integrates the advisor as facilitator
into the transformative experience. In the spirit of Gregg Gillis
and Girl Talk, here is my mashup -- a synthesis of these lists
that exemplifies transformational learning concepts and their
relevance to developmental advising:
- Advisors can help students negotiate
the disorienting dilemma of being undecided about a major.
- Advisors can help students examine
what their undecidedness means in terms of their identity and
experiences, inside and outside of the classroom, and assess
assumptions, predispositions, or anxieties they might have which
may enhance or inhibit change.
- Advisors can help students explore
available and pertinent information that may influence their
decision and position them to take on a new role and/or identity.
- Advisors can help students explore
situations where they can try on new roles and build confidence
as they move toward their decision.
- Advisors can help students reflect
on their learning and synthesize information into a concrete
decision about major.
- Advisors can help students to
transition into their new role and can continue to serve as
a resource for students as they encounter other possible transformations.
Transformative
and Self-Authorship Advising Strategies
These
concepts can ultimately manifest as tangible advising activities.
The advising appointment itself is a natural space where meaningful
dialogues and critical reflection can occur. And while it is unrealistic
to think that advisors can neglect the prescriptive elements of
advising, time must also be allocated for topics relating to the
students’ learning. Strategic questioning can determine progress
in decision-making, can illuminate misinformation or misunderstanding,
and can point out direction for future inquiry. Engaging students
in active learning exercises like simulated conversations (mock
interviews/role playing) or writing pro-con lists or “minute”
papers can also achieve these ends. In her research, Pizzolato
(2006) has pointed to two common advising experiences among students
who have achieved self-authorship and internal definition: goal
reflection and volitional planning. Her elaboration on the Learning
Partnership Model included several excellent questions and conversation
tracks that advisors can employ in helping students toward transformation
(p. 43). Likewise, Baxter Magolda and King (2008) offered a useful
list of questions that advisors can use to prompt students to
reflect and make meaning of their experiences (pp. 9-10).
The
face-to-face appointment is only a part of transformative advising.
Strategically prompting undecided/exploring students to analyze
their situation prior to and after the advising appointment is
important as it can enhance immediate and/or future interactions
the advisor might have with them. Advisors can help exploring
students prepare for an imminent appointment by providing an advance
e-mail or intake form with questions that the student can respond
to prior to the appointment. This allows the student to reflect
and anticipate questions the advisor will ask during the appointment.
Examples of pre-appointment questions might include:
- What are some new things you’ve
experienced this term? Have you had any significant experiences
inside or outside the classroom, which have influenced your
thoughts on major?
- Think about the types of classes,
subjects, and learning environments you’ve encountered thus
far and respond to these prompts.
Questions
like these can serve as a platform for a more robust discussion
about goals and aspirations during the appointment. That conversation
should culminate in a to-do list that synthesizes key points from
the conversation with action items and/or lines of inquiry that
the student can pursue after the appointment.
Employing
these strategies with exploring students will situate them to
continue their journey towards transformation and self-authorship.
It also situates advisors to witness a process akin to a Girl
Talk mashup. Advisors get to see how students can take the recognizable
themes associated with the decision-making process and mash them
up to create a compelling story – familiar, yet amazingly original.
References
Baxter
Magolda, M. B. (1992). Knowing and reasoning in college: Gender-related
patterns
in students' intellectual development. San
Francisco : Jossey-Bass.
Baxter
Magolda, M. B. (1999). Creating contexts for learning and
self-authorship: Constructive-developmental
pedagogy. Nashville :
Vanderbilt University Press.
Baxter
Magolda, M. B. (2001). Making their own way: Narratives for
transforming higher
education to promote self-development. Sterling
, Va: Stylus.
Baxter
Magolda, M.B. and King, P.M. (2008) Toward reflective conversations:
An advising approach that promotes
self-authorship. Peer Review, 10(1);
Friere,
P (1993). Pedagogy of the oppressed: Newly revised 20 th Anniversary
edition. New
York: Continuum
Glisczinski,
D. (2007). Transformative higher education: A meaningful degree
of understanding. Journal
of Transformative Education. 5 (4), 317-328.
Gordon,
V. N. (1995). The undecided college student: An academic and
career advising Challenge
(2nd ed.). Springfield,
IL:
C.C. Thomas.
Hemwall,
M. K., & Trachte, K. C. (1999). Learning at the core: Toward
a new understanding
of academic advising. NACADA Journal . 19 (1), 5-11.
Hemwall,
M. K., & Trachte, K. C. (2003). Academic advising and a learning
paradigm.In M.K. Hemwall &
K.C. Trachte (Eds.), Advising and learning: Academic advising
from the perspective of small colleges and universities (Monograph
No. 8 [National Academic Advising Association]; pp. 13-19).
Kegan,
R. (1994). In over our heads: The mental demands of modern
life. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University
Press.
Kegan,
R. (2000). What “form” transforms?: A constructive-developmental
approach to transformative
learning. In J. Mezirow & associates, Learning as transformation:
Critical perspectives on a theory in progress (pp. 35-69).
San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.
Mezirow,
J. (2000) Learning to think like an adult: core concepts of transformation
theory. In
J. Mezirow & associates, Learning as transformation: Critical
perspectives on a theory in progress (pp. 3-33). San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.
Mezirow,
J. (1995) Transformation theory of adult learning. In M.R. Welton
(Ed.), In defense
of the lifeworld: Critical perspectives on adult learning (pp.
39-70). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press
Pizzolato,
J. E. (2006). Complex partnerships: Self-authorship and provocative
academic-advising
practices. NACADA Journal . 26 (1), 32-45
Schaefer,
J., Regateao, G., Wise, B., & Meyer, J. 2008, Oct. 10. The
sample life, WNYC
Soundcheck. Podcast retrieved
from http://www.wnyc.
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/soundcheck/2008/oct/10/
org/shows/soundcheck/2008/oct/10/
Additional
Resources on Transformation Theory, Pedagogy, and/or Exploratory
Students
hooks,
b. (1994). Teaching to transgress: Education as the practice
of freedom. New
York: Routledge.
In
this powerful book, bell hooks explores ideas around transformative
pedagogy. She examines how educators can employ strategies in
traditional and non-traditional classroom settings to help learners
shape their voice.
Cranton,
P. (2000). Individual differences and transformative learning.
In J. Mezirow. & associates, Learning as transformation:
Critical perspectives on a theory in progress
(pp. 181-203). San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.
This
is another outstanding chapter from the Jack Mezirow text I cite
multiple times. Cranton discusses the relationship between Jung’s
theory of psychological type and transformational learning. Advisors
utilizing assessments like the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator that
have their foundation in this theory would find this essay very
useful.
Darling,
R., & Woodside, M. (2007). The academic advisor as teacher:
First-year transitions.
In M.S. Hunter, B. McCalla-Wriggins, & E.R. White (Eds.),
Academic advising: New insights for teaching and learning
in the first year (Monograph No. 46 [National Resource Center];
Monograph No. 14 [National Academic Advising Association]; pp.
5-17). Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina, National Resource
Center for The First-Year Experience and Students in Transition.
In
the opening chapter of this recent monograph, Darling and Woodside
examine the “advisor as teacher” metaphor. They provide two compelling
models for advising first-year students, both of which are student-centered,
developmental, and share attributes with transformational theory.
Gordon,
V.N. (2007). Undecided students: A special population. In L. Huff
& P. Jordan (Eds.),
Advising Special Student Populations (Monograph No. 8
[National Academic Advising
Association]; pp. 187-222).
In
this monograph chapter, Gordon provides a wonderful overview of
undecided/exploratory students as a distinctive population. Included
is a discussion of several different theoretical insights that
may help advisors. Among these theories are Cognitive Information
Processing theory and Constructivist theory, both of which intersect
with transformational theories. She also highlights exemplary
programs engaged in intentional and meaningful advising with undecided/exploratory
students.
Ignelzi,
M. (2000). Meaning-making in the learning and teaching process.
In M.B. Baxter Magolda (Ed.). Teaching to promote intellectual
and personal maturity: Incorporating
students' worldviews and identities into the learning process
. New directions for
teaching and learning, no. 82. (pp. 5-14). San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.
Ignelzi
unpacks the complex theory of meaning-making developed by Robert
Kegan and discusses how educators in collegiate environments can
utilize his ideas to help facilitate transformation and self-authorship
in students.
McDonald,
M., & Steele, G.E. (2007), Adapting learning theory to advising
first-year undecided
students. In M.S. Hunter, B. McCalla-Wriggins, & E.R. White
(Eds.), Academic advising: New insights for teaching and learning
in the first year (Monograph No. 46 [National Resource Center];
Monograph No. 14 [National Academic Advising Association]; pp.
185-201). Columbia , SC : University of South Carolina , National
Resource Center for The First-Year Experience and Students in
Transition.
McDonald
and Steele use this monograph to explore how attributes associated
with learning theory can aid advisors. Specifically they focus
on how advisors can use these theories to help undecided students
better process the varied and complex information they encounter
in their first year and lead them to an informed major decision.
Cite
the above resource using APA style as:
Kincanon,
K. (2009). Translating the Transformative:
Applying Transformational and Self-Authorship Pedagogy to Advising
Undecided/Exploring Students. Retrieved -insert today's
date- from the NACADA Clearinghouse of Academic Advising Resources
Web site:
http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Clearinghouse/AdvisingIssues/Transformative-Theory.htm
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