September 19, 2022
Next in our āAccording to Facultyā series is BIOS 101 instructor Marianna Burks. Marianna weighs in on helping your instructor understand your needs, finding ways to be flexible with students, and creating communities in classes.
Building connections with faculty members can be an incredibly valuable part of your college experience. Yes, theyāre experts in their fields, but theyāre also endlessly great resources for real-world connections, internships, mentoring, and so much more.
And at 51°µĶų, we have some of the best.
Weāve spoken to a handful of 51°µĶų faculty members about best practices for building student-faculty relationships and why you should seek them outāāāeven if their class isnāt your favorite.
Next in our ongoing According to Faculty series is Marianna Burks of the College of Arts and Sciences. Marianna is teaching both lecture and lab sections of BIOS 101 this fall. She spoke to us about how connecting with faculty members helps students be successful, the importance of being upfront with your needs, and so much more!
On why students should seek relationships with their faculty: help them help you
āBuilding relationships with faculty is important because it allows the instructor to know what the studentās needs are,ā says Marianna.
āThey feel more relaxed, and when theyāre relaxed, theyāre willing to communicate whatās going on in their lives and their schedules. I can be more flexible with students by understanding where students are in life and what they might needāāāthe more we know students, the more we as faculty can be accommodating and help students be successful.ā
Life happensāāāfaculty can be flexible if you communicate your needs
āYes, youāll have deadlines. But, if a student says, Mrs. Burks, I have to go back home to harvest,ā thatās important to that student, and I want to make sure I can meet the needs of their life and their families. I want students to feel like thereās room to get done what they need to get done both inside and outside of class.ā
A simple email can go a long way
āA lot of students will communicate with me through email, at first. When we make that initial contact, I find that those students are more willing to come in for office hours. This is because I can say, āHey, thereās a quiet, inviting space here in my office for you to work on your assignments and ask me or TAs questions.ā By the end of the semester, Iāll have groups of students sitting at the table in my office and working on their assignments together, with myself and TAs right there as a resource.ā
College is hardāāāfaculty want to make sure youāre taking care of yourself
āI do reflections with my students. I have a little in class activity where I sit them down and weāll say, āIām tired,ā āIām sleepy,ā āIām exhausted,ā āIām excited,ā āIām just trying to get through the weekāāāāitās been a really good exercise for students to balance their wellbeing with academia. It doesnāt always have to be so heavy on the content when weāre meeting or having classāāāwe can focus on other things that help students be successful, too.ā
Keep an eye out for more insights and advice from our āAccording to Facultyā series!