[NIFL-FOBASICS:1328] Re: New Student Orientation

From: Barbara Garner (b.garner4@verizon.net)
Date: Wed Mar 16 2005 - 09:39:19 EST


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Subject: [NIFL-FOBASICS:1328] Re: New Student Orientation
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A program in Fairfax, VA, designed and implemented a comprehensive
orientation program a few years ago. Marti Giese described it in "Focus on
Basics" Volume 4, Issue A, page 11.
http://ncsall.gse.harvard.edu/fob/2000/giese.html
It might give you some ideas.
Barb Garner
Editor, Focus on Basics

-----Original Message-----
From: nifl-fobasics@nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-fobasics@nifl.gov] On Behalf Of
Woods
Sent: Wednesday, March 16, 2005 9:08 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: [NIFL-FOBASICS:1327] Re: New Student Orientation


----- Original Message ----- 
> Katrina Hinson wrote:
> I have to come up with something for New Student Orientation into the
> Anyone have any ideas, beyond the "rules and regulations" that students 
> need
> to know or that they find is helpful to know.

Several things you probably already thought of:
Which meeting room or classroom
Where the bathroom is
Who are the teachers
How to get help if it is needed
Telephone numbers
Emergencies, what to do in case of fire, etc.
Give out a brochure or catalog or list of course offerings and tell how to 
add or drop courses
Q&A period
What to expect
And finally a very important part of our orientations is an individual 
student self-assessment in which we ask students what they have done in the 
past; we ask about their likes and dislikes, hobbies, favorite reading, we 
ask what they would like to learn, what are their strengths and needs, what 
do they need to work on, where do they see themselves in five years, what do

they want to accomplish by enrolling with us.

This info serves several purposes. It is helpful in creating a highly 
individualized program for the student. It gets the student thinking about 
these questions, maybe for the first time. It also gives the student a 
voice, a chance to direct the course of his or her own learning. In our 
school, which has 16 different sites, some teachers do an individual 
orientation, others have a regularly scheduled orientation that new students

attend as a group. It works both ways. My personal preference is for the 
individual orientation. Although I spend a little more time doing it, I feel

I know each student better, and I feel the student gets more individual 
attention that way. I incorporate it into other tasks such as academic 
screening, asking about possible prior disabilities, course registration, 
etc. so it really doesn't take up a lot more time to orient a student 
individually.

Tom Woods
Community High School of Vermont 



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