Keeping Human Contact in Student Services
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Why does human contact still matter in student services?
Poukisa kontak dirèk ak moun toujou enpòtan nan sèvis pou etidyan yo? Bon repons:
Human contact still matters because student problems are often unclear at the beginning. A student may ask about a deadline, but the real issue could be anxiety, financial pressure or confusion about academic rules. A trained person can hear hesitation, ask a follow-up question and notice when the stated problem is only the surface. Digital systems are useful when the task is defined, but many support needs become clear only through conversation. Human contact also gives students permission to explain a messy situation without forcing it into a fixed category too early. That matters because the quality of support often depends on discovering the problem accurately before offering the solution or directing the student elsewhere within the institution too quickly.
Kontak ant moun toujou enpòtan, paske pwoblèm elèv yo souvan pa klè depi nan kòmansman an. Yon elèv ka mande sou yon dat limit, men vrè pwoblèm nan ka enkyetid, presyon finansye, oswa konfizyon sou règ akademik yo. Yon moun ki byen fòme ka tande ezitasyon an, poze yon kesyon pou kontinye konvèsasyon an, epi remake lè pwoblèm yo di a se sèlman sifas la. Sistèm dijital yo itil lè travay la byen defini, men anpil bezwen sipò vin klè sèlman atravè konvèsasyon. Kontak ant moun bay elèv yo tou pèmisyon pou yo eksplike yon sitiyasyon ki dezòdone san yo pa fòse mete l nan yon kategori fiks twò bonè. Sa enpòtan, paske kalite sipò a souvan depann de si nou idantifye pwoblèm nan avèk presizyon anvan nou bay solisyon an oswa nou voye elèv la yon lòt kote nan enstitisyon an twò vit. What can technology do well, and where does it fail?
Bon repons:
Technology can handle routine information, booking, reminders and document submission very well. It can make services faster and more consistent, especially for students who already know what they need. For example, an online system can show office hours, submit an extension form or confirm whether a document has been received. It fails when the problem is ambiguous, emotionally difficult or outside the categories provided. A student who is close to dropping out may not know whether they need financial advice, academic guidance or wellbeing support. If the system only asks them to choose a category, it may miss the urgency. Technology works best for defined tasks; it is weaker at interpreting human complexity and escalating it appropriately when the situation is deteriorating.
How would you respond to someone who says digital services are more efficient for everyone?
Bon repons:
I agree that digital services can be more efficient for many routine tasks. Students often prefer not to wait for a person when they simply need to book an appointment, upload a document or check a policy. Digital access can also help students who study remotely or feel uncomfortable approaching an office in person. However, efficiency is not the only measure of good support. A service can process large numbers of requests quickly and still fail the students whose situations do not fit the form. My view is that digital systems should handle simple, predictable tasks, while human contact remains available for complexity, distress and decisions that require judgment about consequences for the student and their studies over time and under pressure.
What should universities avoid when moving student support online?
Bon repons:
Universities should avoid turning online support into a maze of forms, links and automated replies. Digital access is not real access if students cannot understand where to go or find a human route when the problem becomes complicated. A student should not have to know the university's internal structure in order to ask for help. The system should make common tasks easy, but it should also show clearly when and how a person can be contacted. Long term, a confusing online service can make students less likely to seek support early. They may wait until a problem becomes severe, which is worse for both the student and the institution, especially in academic or wellbeing cases where early action matters most.