Share this
What if the Only Thing Missing in Your Adult Learner Program is Adult Learners?
by Carlo Bertolini on Sep 07, 2022
Adult learner advocates would probably agree that an office bearing a sign that includes 'adult students' is, well, a good sign. Sure enough, the Office of Adult Students and Evening Services (OASES) at UNC Charlotte is home to a multi-award-winning adult learner completion initiative for adult learners. The 49er Finish Program is just one of many successful resources OASES hosts for adult learners. UNC Charlotte is part of the University of North Carolina System, a CAEL institutional member.
But as advocates of adult learning will also tell you, adult students, despite disparate schedules and multiple demands on their time, maintain a strong sense of community. Most are happy to share their "real world" perspectives, grounded in prior learning and experience, for the benefit of classmates of all ages. At the same time, as recent CAEL research has shown, adult learners also value connecting with each other. Without those connections, they themselves can be an ironic missing link in the otherwise-optimized programs designed around them.
Fortunately, OASES was attuned to that need for community. "Feedback from adult students showed a yearning for a sense of belonging and connectedness to other adult learners on campus," said Alison Mackie, an academic advisor with OASES. But it can be challenging to foster that culture on large campuses like UNC Charlotte's.
So when a mini-grant became available through Transition and Success Initiatives, part of UNC Charlotte's Division of Student Affairs, Mackie and her colleagues saw an opportunity. In 2021, after being awarded new-program grant funding, OASES launched the Adult Student Ambassador Program on a one-year pilot basis.
OASES had long hosted in-person and virtual events geared to adult learners. Still, resonating with adult learners, who comprise 10 to 15% of UNC Charlotte's student population, amid an extensive enrollment environment, can be difficult.
"What we were excited about when we formed the Ambassador Program was that instead of it being OASES staff members leading adult learner events, there were going to be actual adult students informing us of what type of events they wanted, and be the faces and the leaders of those events," said Mackie.
For example, Adult Student Ambassadors staffed kickoff events in the fall and spring for new students. The Ambassadors welcomed incoming adult learners and gave them the inside scoop about OASES offerings and other campus resources, like career and veteran services. They even handed out swag.
A particularly effective role for Ambassadors has been story panels, said Mackie. "Student stories seem to be something that really lands well with other adult students, they just want to hear somebody else relate their experiences." During the virtual events, Ambassadors detail their academic journeys, what they are pursuing at UNC Charlotte, and the keys to their success.
Often, adult learners need to witness their peers benefiting from those success factors to feel included, said Mackie. "They don't necessarily feel like the services and resources are available to them, although they are absolutely available to them and even targeted toward them. Walking into a tutoring center, with people who aren't your age, or maybe don't have kids beside them, doesn't feel as comfortable. Connecting with other adult students who use these services is super meaningful. It tells them that without a doubt, this place and these programs are for them."
On the other hand, the growing diversity of the adult learner population has prompted an ironic pivot in perspective back to "traditional" student needs. UNC Charlotte counts many true freshmen among its adult learners. While staying mindful that student schedules may be fraught with external obligations, OASES is also determined to make a wealth of university-based events available to adult learners who can participate in them.
More and more of them do. "These are students who have never been to college and may be separating from the military, or may have gotten a late start because they worked first," said Mackie. "So we're not just catering to adult students who are working with families or older students who are looking for that next career phase. We're also catering to this group of students looking for some of those really traditional experiences. "
The Ambassadors lend a "nontraditional" face to those traditional experiences. "It's really just about making sure that adults can experience some of the same things traditional students want," said Mackie. "These are times to get together, see one another, and connect."
Any adult student (24 or older) in good academic standing can join the Ambassador program. They complete a training session and agree to participate for at least two semesters.
The program application offers a choice of four focus areas: providing a sense of belonging, networking and leadership, meeting other adult students, and assisting with planning events. More than half of the applicants joined because they wanted to help other adult students, Mackie said.
Knowing that taking on yet another responsibility can be a challenge, OASES only asks Ambassadors to commit to two events (online or in-person) during their one-year tenure. "We want as many people to say, 'Yes, we want to be involved,' as possible, and we'll try to figure out where they can fit,' said Mackie.
It turns out many more found a way to fit the program in their schedules than Mackie had anticipated. When launching the pilot, she was hoping for 10 to 15 volunteers per semester. Today, she has about 45 Ambassadors.
That resounding response helped promote the program from pilot to permanent status. OASES is ensuring its impact extends beyond the students the Ambassadors serve today and generates systemic benefits. "We wanted to make sure that if we had this great group of adult students that we also elevated their desires and needs, and in terms of what it was that could help propel them to cross the graduation finish line," said Mackie of the Ambassadors' suitability for functioning as an adult learner focus group.
OASES arranged meetings with the Ambassadors to identify the factors that were helping and hindering their progress toward degree completion. "We can say things all day long," said Mackie. "But when you have 45 students saying, 'These are all the things that are super helpful to us and these are things that keep me from graduating, that's really impactful, too.'"
Share this
- Adult Learner Success (110)
- CAEL Members (73)
- Success Stories (72)
- Workforce Development (59)
- Credit for Prior Learning (55)
- Best Practices (48)
- Career Pathways Support (31)
- Impact (31)
- Strategic Partnerships (29)
- Work-based Learning (29)
- Trends in Higher Education (25)
- Upskilling and Reskilling (21)
- DEI (19)
- Q&A (19)
- Curation (18)
- Retention and Completion (18)
- Talent Management (17)
- Adult Learner 360 (15)
- Policy (13)
- Short-term Credentials (11)
- Competency Based Education (CBE) (10)
- Adult Learner Academy (9)
- Military-connected Learners (9)
- Student support (9)
- Enrollment (8)
- Transfer Students (8)
- Research (7)
- Student Stories (7)
- Experiential Learning (6)
- Featured (6)
- HSIs (6)
- In the news (6)
- NACTEL (6)
- Online Learning (6)
- Case Studies (5)
- Community colleges (5)
- EPCE (5)
- Education Benefits (5)
- Guest blog (4)
- Wraparound Support (4)
- Apprenticeships (3)
- COVID-19 (3)
- Future of work (3)
- Structural Approaches to Learning (3)
- Accelerated Program (2)
- Credit Predictor Pro (2)
- HBCUs (2)
- Tuition (2)
- Skills-based hiring (1)
- Student parents (1)
- November 2024 (2)
- October 2024 (8)
- September 2024 (7)
- August 2024 (10)
- July 2024 (9)
- June 2024 (8)
- May 2024 (11)
- April 2024 (5)
- March 2024 (7)
- February 2024 (5)
- January 2024 (7)
- December 2023 (9)
- November 2023 (7)
- October 2023 (3)
- September 2023 (4)
- August 2023 (3)
- July 2023 (5)
- June 2023 (8)
- May 2023 (9)
- April 2023 (5)
- March 2023 (6)
- February 2023 (5)
- January 2023 (3)
- December 2022 (4)
- November 2022 (7)
- October 2022 (7)
- September 2022 (6)
- August 2022 (6)
- July 2022 (4)
- June 2022 (6)
- May 2022 (4)
- April 2022 (4)
- March 2022 (3)
- February 2022 (5)
- January 2022 (5)
- December 2021 (4)
- November 2021 (2)
- October 2021 (8)
- September 2021 (4)
- August 2021 (4)
- July 2021 (2)
- June 2021 (6)
- May 2021 (5)
- April 2021 (9)
- March 2021 (8)
- February 2021 (5)
- January 2021 (4)
- December 2020 (4)
- November 2020 (3)
- October 2020 (6)
- September 2020 (2)
- August 2020 (1)
- July 2020 (4)
- May 2020 (2)
- April 2020 (1)
- March 2020 (2)
- February 2020 (3)
- January 2020 (3)
- December 2019 (2)
- July 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (1)
- February 2019 (1)
- January 2019 (1)
- October 2018 (4)
- September 2018 (1)
- August 2018 (1)
- July 2018 (1)
- May 2018 (1)
- April 2018 (2)
- March 2018 (1)
- February 2018 (2)
- September 2017 (1)
- August 2017 (2)
- July 2017 (5)
- June 2017 (4)
- May 2017 (3)
- March 2017 (1)
- February 2017 (4)
- December 2016 (3)
- November 2016 (1)
- October 2016 (3)
- August 2016 (8)
- July 2016 (2)
- June 2016 (2)
- May 2016 (5)
- April 2016 (2)
- March 2016 (6)
- February 2016 (9)
- January 2016 (4)
- January 2015 (2)