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Faculty involvement is vital to the success of the program. As scholar-practitioners in their fields you are well positioned to assess the relevance and value of a possible co-op experience, and are often the best source of employer contacts. You coach students in the specific tasks of their position, and ensure that the co-op is a learning experience rather than just a part-time job. For the program to be effective, you must fulfill an administrative role as well as a mentoring one.
Administrative Tasks
Each academic department decides how best to administer its work-integrated learning experiences, but there are several tasks that are common to all.
- Syllabus. Every department must have a syllabus for its experiential education courses. This should describe the learning objectives, the duration of the experience, grading policy, and requirements for papers, outside readings, and/or presentations.
- CORR Forms. If a department anticipates that a student will apply for a co-op in the upcoming semester then they need to submit a Course Offering Room Request (CORR) form through their respective deans to the records office.
- Position Approval. Before a job can be considered a co-op it must pass an academic review. All potential co-op jobs should be submitted for approval through the Co-op Office to the appropriate academic department chair. 150 clock hours per semester equates to 3 credit hours. 300 hours equates to 6 credit hours.
- Student Approval. The Co-op Office will notify the appropriate academic departments of all students applying for participation in the Co-op Program. The academic department is responsible for ensuring that the student is qualified to participate.
- Registration. The Records Office will not register students for a Co-op without a completed contract. Once the contract is complete, the faculty supervisor or academic advisor approves the student’s registration.
- Supervision. The department chair assigns a faculty supervisor for each student. It is the supervisor’s responsibility to assess student learning, communicate with the employer, and submit a grade at the end of the semester.
Mentoring Tasks
The dean, department chair, academic advisor, faculty supervisor, and Co-op Coordinator all must work as a team to coach and guide the student. Faculty members are uniquely qualified to do this in several ways.
- · Advising. Faculty Advisors know their students the best. The can assess a particular student’s strengths and areas of challenge and help identify the right experience for them.
- · Job Coaching. In many cases a student may be exposed to new situations on the job. The faculty supervisor can be a great resource to help the student work through tasks that they are doing for the first time.
- · Supervision. Over the course of the semester the faculty supervisor meets with the student to check their learning and offer assistance. They also communicate with the employer to monitor student performance.
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