Barry said she owes her advising expertise to her students because they constantly needed her to evolve.
“Most of our students at Fayette are first-generation, almost all of them work, and most have some sort of serious family responsibilities such as caring for aging parents or siblings or have children of their own,” Barry said. “Any qualities I bring to the advising relationship have been learned through advising relationships with my amazing students.”
For Barry, those qualities include:
● Advising is a relationship. She said her role requires engagement, attention and effort of both parties to be successful. But Barry said it’s her duty to establish this relationship.
● Advising is multi-faceted. Barry learned to take a broad view of advising because each case is different. Her role is to aid students in scheduling, academic performance and finding a career path that suits the student.
● Knowledge is no good unless it is shared. Barry created a human development and family studies handbook and degree checklist to help students and others in advisory roles. She said these documents also help students clearly see a path to success. These materials, which are handed out at new student orientation, help students become an active part of decisions made during their college experience.
“This contains information for students at every level and is designed to help them see the ‘big picture,’ not just their coursework, but rather their path to graduate school or a career and beyond,” Barry said.
Janet Spearly