“…Partially in response to student dissatisfaction expressed during the past 20 years with respect to academic advising (Habley & Crockett, 1988;Habley & Morales, 1998;Hanson & Huston, 1995), newer methods have emerged. For example, academic advisors have been called on to express certain advising competencies, such as teaching and observational abilities (Fiddler & Alicea, 1996), and more recently, approaches to the advisor-student relationship have embraced "liking" students as interesting people willing to engage in friendly, meaningful conversation (Barnett, Roach, & Smith, 2006;Yudof, 2003). This milieu provides an environment supporting the reemergence of the development-oriented paradigm expressed by Crookston (1972) and is consistent with advising as teaching-learning (Hemwall & Trachte, 2005;Uhlik, 2004).…”