Tech Not a Cure-all in Student Advising

college student meeting with adviser

A recent effort to use technology more consistently in the college student advising process resulted in few changes over the status quo.

The study, described in an interim report from MDRC, was an offshoot of the program known as Integrated Planning and Advising for Student Success, or iPASS. The institutional participants in iPASS get technical assistance from a coach provided by Educause or Achieving the Dream, as well as access to training in-person and online, to revamp their advising and student support services.

Three of the schools, the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, California State University, Fresno and Montgomery County Community College in Pennsylvania, were particularly interested in assessing the impact of technology enhancements to their advising practices — as an enhanced version of iPASS. Those three institutions increased the emphasis on providing timely support, boosted their use of advising technologies and used various administrative and communication strategies to increase student contact with advisers.

The study found, however, that the changes "generally produced only a modestly different experience for students in the program group compared with students in the control group." Neither Fresno State nor UNCC saw "statistically significant effects" on their students' short-term educational outcomes.

MCCC, however, experienced an unintended consequence. Prior to the study, each college had required that certain groups of students see an adviser before registering for classes in the next semester. As part of participation in the pilot, each institution expanded this preregistration requirement to include all students in the study's program groups. At MCCC that requirement contributed to a small reduction in earned credits. The "mechanics" of the registration hold may have negatively impaired enrollment in seven-week courses that began mid-semester. If a program group student with a registration hold attempted to register for one of these courses, the student would have had little time before the add/drop deadline to contact the adviser to remove the hold.

Yet staff members involved in the project were still positive in their feedback, suggesting that iPASS and the enhancements made in advising at their institutions were "important steps toward a stronger system to support students and help them succeed."

The complete report is openly available on the MDRC website.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • row of digital padlocks

    2026 Cybersecurity Trends to Watch in Higher Education

    In an open call last month, we asked education and industry leaders for their predictions on the cybersecurity landscape for schools, districts, colleges, and universities in 2026. Here's what they told us.

  • Abstract digital cloudscape of glowing interconnected clouds and radiant lines

    Cloud Complexity Outpacing Human Defenses, Report Warns

    According to the 2026 Cloud Security Report from Fortinet, while cloud security budgets are rising, 66% of organizations lack confidence in real-time threat detection across increasingly complex multi-cloud environments, with identity risks, tool sprawl, and fragmented visibility creating persistent operational gaps despite significant investment increases.

  • glowing brain above stacked coins

    The Higher Ed Playbook for AI Affordability

    Fulfilling the promise of AI in higher education does not require massive budgets or radical reinvention. By leveraging existing infrastructure, embracing edge and localized AI, collaborating across institutions, and embedding AI thoughtfully across the enterprise, universities can move from experimentation to impact.

  • Wireless network and connection abstract data background with wifi symbol

    Georgetown Partners with Cisco on Large WiFi 7 Rollout

    Georgetown University is working with Cisco on a multi-year network revamp that will implement WiFi 7 across the institution's classrooms, dorms, stadiums, and beyond.