NTLSN · Crash Course · First year

First-year success & belonging — a crash course

The first weeks decide who stays. Four short lessons on designing a first-year experience that builds belonging and skills — grounded in transition pedagogy — then a self-check.

The one thing to remember: most first-year attrition is about belonging, not ability. Students who feel connected and capable early, stay. Design the first weeks for that.
4 lessons~11 min read1 self-checkGrounded in Kift's transition pedagogy & FYE research

The lessons

1
Transition pedagogy by designFirst year is a curriculum problem

Transition pedagogy treats the first-year experience as something you design across the whole curriculum — not something support services bolt on afterwards.

  • Make expectations explicit: what good work looks like, how university differs from school.
  • Design the first weeks intentionally — they set habits and belonging.
  • Coordinate across the first-year program so students aren't overwhelmed in week three.
Grounded in
  • Transition pedagogy & the six curriculum principles (Kift)
  • First-year experience good practice
2
Belonging & connection earlyRelationships are retention

Connection — to peers, to staff, to the discipline — is one of the strongest predictors of persistence. Build it before content overwhelms.

  • Create early peer interaction and a reason to talk to each other.
  • Be visible and approachable; small signals of care matter most early.
  • Help students see themselves in the discipline and its people.
3
Scaffold academic skills in the curriculumEmbedded, not outsourced

Academic skills stick when taught inside the subject, on real tasks — not in a separate workshop students skip.

  • Embed reading, writing and study skills into the subject's own tasks.
  • Use early, low-stakes assessment so students learn the rules before they count.
  • Give exemplars and clear criteria from day one.
Grounded in
  • Embedded academic literacies practice
  • Early low-stakes assessment & assessment-for-learning
4
Early alert & reaching outCatch disengagement before it sticks

Most students who leave signal it first — through non-submission or non-attendance. Noticing early, and reaching out, changes outcomes.

  • Watch for the early signals: missed first task, no LMS logins.
  • Reach out personally and early — a short message can re-anchor a student.
  • Make the next step easy: name the support and how to use it.
Grounded in
  • Early-alert & learning-analytics-for-care practice
  • Students-as-partners in the first year
◇ Bring it together — from the NTLSN commons

Before week one — a quick self-check

I've made expectations and ‘what good looks like’ explicit.
Students have an early reason and way to connect with peers.
Academic skills are embedded in the subject's own tasks.
There's an early, low-stakes task before anything high-stakes counts.
I have a way to spot disengagement in the first weeks.
I know how I'll reach out, and to what support.
Source & attribution. Curated from transition pedagogy (Kift) and first-year-experience scholarship, plus sector good practice indexed by the NTLSN commons. Practitioner synthesis, not original research — follow the linked archive for the primary sources.
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