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Guide to
Advising Undergraduates
Identify
the Major and download appropriate spreadsheet
Food Science and
Nutrition, B.S. in Food Science
spreadsheet
Food Business
Management, B.S. in Agriculture
spreadsheet
Nutrition, B.S. in
Human Nutrition
spreadsheet
"Select the tab, "Individualize
for Student" and begin customizing. You may wish to run a
"Degree Audit" to see what requirements the student has already
fulfilled.
As
you switch courses around, use the comments to see when classes
are offered and their prerequisites. Primary prerequisites are
listed in plain text, hidden prerequisites are in italics.
Generally, Food Science courses are offered once a year, with
only 401 and 636.01&.02 being offered in both Autumn and Spring.
It is extremely difficult for students to get around required
Food Science requirements. It is pretty much impossible to get
out of taking FST 696 for FSN and FBM, as it is the capstone AND
3rd writing course for both.
Run Degree
Audit
Go to
https://dars.osu.edu/secure/darsweb352adv/servlet/LoginServlet
- you will have to log in with your user name and password
Select AGR as the college and
click "connect"
Enter the student's SSN and click
"continue" (or search for them by name)
Under "Audits" select "Request New
Audit." This will call up the interface for running the audit.
You can select to either run the default (their current declared
major) or run a selected program (make sure you select the
proper radio button). The second feature is particularly useful
if you are helping the student consider new majors, even
switching from FSN to FBM. After you have indicated what you
want to run, click "Select a new audit" at the bottom of the
page.
Once it has completed running,
click "Open Audit" to view it. I personally select the option to
view all sections and print it out.
General rules for setting course order
For FSN, place the chemistry as
early as possible. It is never an advantage for the student to
wait a quarter to take it.
Get the Math in as early as
possible as well. The science classes require minimum competency
in math. The amount of math needed depends on the course.
Some courses require Biology, so
this should be taken fairly early in the second year.
Encourage students to take FST 401
as early as possible.
Every student must take 2 courses
to fulfill the International Issues requirements. This is done
by taking at least one Non-Western or Global course (* on
curriculum sheet) and a second course that is either
Non-Western* or a course that is Western, non-US course (◊ on
curriculum sheet). Many of the Social Sciences, Arts &
Humanities, and 2nd writing courses can be used to fulfill these
requirements if they choose carefully. Otherwise, additional
classes will need to be taken specifically to fulfill these
requirements.
Try to keep students below 18
credits each quarter and with no more than 4 classes a quarter.
It is possible to have 5 courses at 15 credits, which will
likely be more difficult than 3 courses at 15 credits.
Minors
Students sometimes become confused
in their survey course. Those pursuing a B.S. in Agriculture,
including Food Business Management majors, MUST declare a minor.
It is a college-wide degree requirement. However, this
requirement does not apply to our two tagged degrees (B.S. in
Food Science or B.S. in Nutrition), which is what our other two
majors receive (Food Science & Nutrition and Nutrition,
respectively).
Minors in the College
of FAES
Minors in Arts and
Sciences
The new
Interdisciplinary Entrepreneurship Minor
FST 589
- Food Science Internship
Students must complete an
internship. We do not provide placement services for them. As
Dr. Mangino is still in charge of this course, direct them to
him for further details, as well as to this
link. Basically, they need to get a job in the food
industry, broadly construed (or for FBM, something applicable to
the business side of the major), keep an events journal and
write a report. The hope is that they will be doing more than
moving pallets in the warehouse.
Transfer Credits
The policy for transferring
credits is explained at:
http://cfaes.osu.edu/future/transfer/classes/credits.html
Many courses at other universities
have been identified as equivalent. These are listed at:
http://oh.transfer.org/cas/index.jsp
Simply log in as a guest, click on
the Course Equivalency Guide, and select Ohio and The Ohio State
University as the institution being transferred into. You will
then be prompted to select the college from which you will be
transferring and you will see a listing of course applicability
between OSU and other colleges.
If you are helping students
determine what the OSU equivalent at another university or
college will be, it is often easier to find the course by
selecting the other institute as the one the courses are being
transferred to. If you select them in this order, the courses
will be listed by the OSU course numbers rather than the other
institute's.
Not all courses are obvious
equivalents. Your student may ask you if a course or courses
merit additional evaluation. If you feel that it does, the
student needs to contact the appropriate departmental Transfer
Credit Coordinator. He/she will need to present his/her Transfer
Credit Report and a copy of his/her transcript(s) to the
appropriate Transfer Credit Coordinator. He/she may also need to
present additional materials (course descriptions, syllabi,
titles of texts, notes, portfolio, etc.) if requested by the
Transfer Credit Coordinator. Although outdated, the list of
Transfer Credit Coordinators can be found at:
http://www.ureg.ohio-state.edu/ourweb/Transfer_Credit/TCC_List.html
Other considerations
Be aware that students often have
external sources of contradictory advice from other sources,
including parents, professors and peers. If you run into some
resistance from the student, try to find out where it is from
and help them develop a solution.
Remember that these students are
generally 18-21 years old. They often do not know what they want
to do with the rest of their lives. They should be encouraged to
explore options, even if it means leaving the department. They
should be encouraged to think about graduate school (if their
performance merits it).
If a student is struggling, try to
find out why. Too much work? Too much socializing? Unrealistic
course load? Unprepared for courses?
Student resources
New student struggling with all
their courses? Suggest they take ED P&L
259 Individual Learning and Motivation: Strategies for
Success in College. The course description is: Teaches learning
and motivation strategies to improve study skills and increase
college success. Students learn how to manage their time and
improve their grades.
If the student is struggling in
Math, The Mathematics
and Statistics Learning Center offers free tutoring for
almost all courses, from Elementary Algebra through Differential
Equations.
The
Writing
Center at Center for the Study and Teaching of Writing
offers free help with writing at any stage of the writing
process for any member of the university community, although
they do not offer proofreading as a service.
The
Younkin
Success Center offers a variety of services for students.
For students living in University
Housing, tutoring is offered in Math, Chemistry, and Physics.
Tutoring takes place on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday evenings
from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. in the following locations:
South Campus: Steeb, Smith,
Park, Stradley, Siebert, and Bradley Halls
West Campus: Morrill Tower
North Campus: Scott, Nosker,
and Houck Houses
The Office Of Minority Affairs
offers free
tutoring services for minority students.
Monitoring your Students
You will receive notice if your
student if they are placed on academic probation. If they are,
it is suggested you contact them to see if there is anything you
can do to help.
Ideally, once every quarter (about
2 weeks into the quarter), you should request an
advising report on each of your students and contact those
whose cumulative GPA has fallen into the 2.0-2.2 range and see
if they need any help. You may want to contact any students
whose grades have taken a sudden nose dive as well. |