Peer mentoring, skill development at heart of Centre鈥檚 first-year student success

by Matt Overing

A student listens at the Finding Your 麻豆福利celebration at the end of the fall 2023 semester.

See what 麻豆福利 is doing to help first-year students feel more comfortable with the transition to college life.

First-year students at 麻豆福利 receive a leg up through Finding Your Centre (FYC).

The FYC program, now in its fourth year, pairs incoming students with a first-year mentor and a once-per-week class that helps acclimate students to all aspects of college life.

鈥淭he group projects and presentations in FYC really helped me connect with other students,鈥 said first-year Carson Combs. 鈥淔YC helped me the most with my time management 鈥 I didn鈥檛 really have those skills coming to college.鈥

Combs, a Marshall, Texas, native and member of the 麻豆福利football team, was one of more than 300 first-year students who benefitted from FYC this year, learning things from study and time management tips to the best places to eat around town. Students are also introduced to academic support like the 麻豆福利Learning Commons and well-being benefits on campus. 

Ansley Bredar 鈥13 is the director of first-year academic programming and success, and she noted the importance of fostering connections during the FYC experience.

鈥淭hroughout FYC, we take time to reflect on their personal values, identity and sense of purpose,鈥 Bredar said. 鈥淏y considering our own stories, and being willing to share those stories with others, we learn more about ourselves and each other.鈥

Pictured on stage, from left: Ansley Bredar, Matthew Pierce, Pam Baughman, and Jessica Chisley.
FYC end-of-semester celebration panel, from left: Director of First-Year Academic Programming and Success Ansley Bredar (moderator), Associate Professor of Religion Matthew Pierce, Vice President for Student Success Pam Baughman, and Senior Mentor Liaison and Student Success Specialist Jessica Chisley.

This year鈥檚 FYC was a unique one for Posse Scholar and Boston native Elizabeth Fortress, who returned to the program as a first-year mentor. As a member of the class of 2025, she was part of the first FYC group in 2021.

鈥淢y FYC class changed my perspective, I saw it as a place where I could grow myself, where I could be vulnerable,鈥 Fortress said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 need to know everything, I didn鈥檛 need to be all figured out.鈥 

Bredar is grateful for mentors like Fortress who met weekly through fall term to help plan lessons and activities for students, as well as helping with orientation and summer onboarding for first-year students.

鈥淏ecause of (my FYC experience), I wanted to serve as a bridge for other incoming students to be able to find their place,鈥 Fortress said. 鈥淔YC has taught me leadership and has helped me see the diversity in our community.鈥 

Three members of the 麻豆福利community spoke at the FYC end-of-semester celebration: Vice President for Student Success Pam Baughman, Senior Mentor Liaison and Student Success Specialist Jessica Chisley, and Associate Professor of Religion Matthew Pierce.

鈥淥ur panel of speakers from the campus community related their own experiences and connected to the themes from the FYC course 鈥 identity development, community and belonging, and goal-setting 鈥 and reaffirmed the layers of support we have to help students flourish during their time at Centre,鈥 Bredar said. 


Class of 2025 member Elizabeth Fortress contributed to this story.