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...straight and make our goals and objectives very clear. We want to provide the Class of 2010 with the best advising possible!First, a little background: As a result of the recommendations in the Report of the Committee on Advising and Counseling, the College established the Advising Programs Office (APO) to help coordinate, facilitate, and support undergraduate advising efforts. The first initiatives are, among other things, to establish a peer advising program, recruit more non-resident advisers for the Board of Freshman Advisers, improve the orientation for those advisers, and coordinate electronic and printed information on advising. The very first...
...plus program hangs in the balance. Three weeks after this process was first questioned, Rinere explained that four to six people reviewed each application, and that no applicant was chosen solely on the basis of SAB recommendations. Nonetheless, Rinere told SAB members that the Advising Programs Office (APO) office would “do [its] best to accommodate your recommendations,” and Lambert-Sluder confirmed that SAB-recommended applicants were all either accepted or given an interview. This was not necessarily the case for applicants recommended by residential deans. It was clearly to an applicant?...
...Advising Planning Office (APO) received over 480 applications for the peer advising fellow program, Rinere wrote in an e-mail to The Crimson last Monday...
Brooks B. Lambert-Sluder ’05, an associate at the APO, said that the APO solicited recommendations from the student advisory board members both to save time and because “the Student Advisory Board knows what the program needs.” Applicants recommended by SAB members were either accepted or offered an interview, he said...
...Advising Programs Office (APO) received over 480 applications for next year’s 180 newly created peer advising fellow positions, Associate Dean of Advising Programs Monique Rinere was “thrilled” to announce in an e-mail yesterday. “That’s a lot of applications,” said APO associate Brooks B. Lambert-Sluder ’05. “It’s pretty incredible.” In comparison, the number of applicants for the Prefect Program “varies from...