First Year-Sophomore Academic Advising Center

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Revision as of 16:53, 18 March 2007 by Absentminded (talk | contribs)
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First Year-Sophomore Academic Advising Center (FYSAAC), located on the 4th floor of Lerner Hall is the more or less useless advising center for your first two years as Columbia students. FYSAAC is useless for a number of reasons. First, chances are excellent that you won't even have the same adviser for both years as the turnover rate at FYSAAC is pretty high. Second, because of the turnover rate, there's the distinct possibility that you will know more than your adviser, who will attempt to answer every question you ask by reaching for the appropriate school bulletin, saying "um" as they flip through it and realize the information is not there, and then tell you to write down your question so that they can email you when they figure out the answer.

Not all FYSAAC experiences are this bad, though the office does have a depressing factory-like atmosphere in the way that it operates. You show up, sign in, and wait for your adviser to come take you to their cut out cubicle office. You may even get lucky and get a veteran adviser.

On the off chance that you do develop a relationship with your dean, they can serve as your advocate when shit hits the fan. Relevant instances include getting caught cheating or plagiarizing, falling so miserably behind in a class that failure seems inevitable without the intervention of a dean on your behalf to buy some time with the professor, etc.

Columbia advising originally consisted of 4 different 'Class Centers', one for each year of college. Then someone had the brilliant idea of merging the first and last 2 years into separate offices, thus giving birth to FYSAAC and JSAC (Junior Senior Advising Center. It has yet to be explained what kind of 'advising' Juniors and Seniors need if it's not academic...) The underlying theory being that after you declare your major in the Spring of sophomore year, your departmental adviser will be more important, so you only need 2 years of continuous advising from Student Affairs. Of course this didn't seem to make much sense, and in Spring 2007 the CCSC passed a resolution encouraging reforms to advising that would include assignment to the same adviser for all 4 years (revolutionary!), doubling the number of advisers (brilliant!), and more field of study relevant guidance (no way!). [1]. Of course these obvious suggestions aren't going to be implemented anytime soon. Student Affairs administrators revealed that the changes would take at least 3 years , and that they has specifically asked the councils not to reveal these plans until they'd been finalized after the spring.[2]

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