MIDDLETOWN, Pa. — At Penn State Harrisburg, students have an extra resource to turn to for help with basic advising questions — their fellow peers. Lion Guide Peer Advisers are students trained to help their fellow students with a host of basic advising and advising technology questions — making advising services more accessible and ensuring they are better utilized.
The Lion Guides Peer Advising program, started in 2017, aims to increase the capacity of the Lambert Undergraduate Advising Center — freeing the professional advisers to provide the higher-level, in-depth guidance that is critical to student success, while the Lion Guides can support students on a range of other questions, according to Jessica Mosley, assistant director of the advising center.
The Lion Guides help their peers schedule appointments; develop initial schedules using the “what if” report and suggested academic plans; answer frequently asked questions; and refer students to other campus resources. They can also help with exploratory questions about academic paths. The program has grown from five peer advisers at its start to eight today.
Mosley said there’s an increasing need for high quality academic advising, and today’s students also expect on-demand services that are more accessible and engaging.
“The Lion Guides Peer Advising Program seeks to adapt to this climate by preparing student leaders to support their peers in the beginning steps of the advising process,” she said. “Peer advisers help students ‘humanize’ university services and increase students’ utilization of these services.”