Student Success and Engagement Team
(SSET) Mission Statement
The Student Success and Engagement Team (SSET) is charged with supporting students academic well-being, academic engagement, and student belonging. The SSET aims to encourage a help-seeking culture among students to develop resilience, support achievement, and self-advocacy among students and helps develop and execute support plans for students. Faculty and staff will utilize the same form used to report to CARE Team.
Instructions to Issue a Concern
The SSET team monitors Navigate cases to foster student engagement with support services. SSET intervention is designed to ensure more Navigate case outcomes involve connecting students with the support they need. Additionally, if you are seeing multiple supports needed for a student or want to refer a student directly to SSET you can do so via Navigate. Here is a quick guide on referring a student to SSET.
Click here to log into Navigate and issue a Student Concern for SSET
How is SSET different than CARE Team?
SSET works parallel with CARE Team; the chair of SSET is a CARE Team member. CARE’s focus is on concerning behavior, threats to self, and threats to others, while SSET’s focus is situated more with academic success, skills, and supports. The teams collaborate with one another as needed. Faculty, staff, and students who engage CARE and SSET do not need to determine which form to use; these teams share one form and determine internally how to direct reports.
SSET Vision Statement
SSET takes a collaborative approach to supporting student success. Reports will be received, considered, acted upon, and followed up on within a timely matter. The team will create care plans for students that consider tutoring, success coaching, mentoring, counseling, and other campus resources that support personal and professional success.
SSET Values
- Student success
- Timely responses
- Teamwork
- Transparent practices
- Communication with reporting faculty, staff, and students
- Coordinated care for students, faculty, and staff
Examples of situations where SSET can help
- excessive absences
- low engagement
- challenges with tests or assignments
- non-violent or non-threatening classroom behaviors or other challenges.
- other behaviors that suggest the student would benefit from a caring and coordinated intervention
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Information:
If you or a loved one is feeling distressed, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. The crisis center provides free and confidential emotional support 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to civilians and veterans.
Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255
Text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 741-741