Your Support Network

The Behind the Scenes Cheerleaders

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As you transition to college, your support network of parents, caregivers, and others continues to play an important role in your success.

Their role may look different from what it did previously, but their support, encouragement, and perspective remain valuable as you build confidence, independence, and self-advocacy skills.

At URI, the goal is not to remove support; it’s to shift how support shows up, so that you can lead your experience, with others supporting you along the way.

In high school, support is often built in and coordinated.
In college, it is available, but access is granted if student-initiated.

High SchoolCollege (URI)
Instruction often includes built-in scaffolding and frequent progress monitoringCourses emphasize independent learning and critical thinking
Teachers guide both the content and the learning processProfessors are subject-matter experts
Family involvement is coordinatedCommunication is student-led
Supports are often coordinated automaticallyStudents must independently access campus resources
Regular reminders and oversight are commonStudents manage their own schedules, deadlines, and appointments

Accessing Campus Resources

Resources are available and ready to help, but they are not automatically activated.

At URI, resources include:

Academic advising
Tutoring centers
Assistive technology support
Counseling and mental health support
Medical and Pharmacy services
DAI staff consultation

As a student, you are encouraged to:

Scheduling appointments
Attending meetings
Following through on action plans
Reaching out if something is not working
Attend office hours & study groups
Showing up prepared and on time

Support exists. Engagement is student-driven.

What this means for You

A student stands smiling beside the University of Rhode Island’s Ram mascot, Rhody, in front of a branded URI backdrop, suggesting a welcoming campus environment and school spirit.

You are in the driver’s seat.

Your support network can still be a key part.

You decide when and how to involve them.

You are expected to

  • Attend and engage in classes consistently
  • Review syllabi and expectations carefully
  • Ask questions and seek clarification during office hours
  • Develop and adapt effective (sometimes new) study strategies
  • Use tutoring, coaching, or assistive technology when needed

These are learned skills.


What this means for the Support Network

As your student takes on a more active role, your role shifts to being a cheerleader, coach, and partner, at times.

cheerleader

Empower your student by letting THEM take the initiative

  • Encourage your student to advocate for themselves
  • Celebrate growth, effort, and independence
  • Reinforce that reaching out for help is a strength
  • Let them feel the discomfort of their consequences
coach
  • Encourage responsibility for daily living skills
  • Talk through time management and organization strategies
  • Support routines that help your student succeed
    • sleep
    • nutrition
    • structure
    • medication management
partner

Decrease awkward interactions

  • Help your student prepare for conversations or meetings
  • Ask guiding questions instead of stepping in
  • Support problem-solving without taking over
    • i.e., talk through how to write a professional email to a professor or DAI, rather than writing it for them.

This shift can feel significant. Your student is not receiving less support. It just looks different.

A student stands smiling beside the University of Rhode Island’s Ram mascot, Rhody, in front of a branded URI backdrop, suggesting a welcoming campus environment and school spirit.

You can help by

  • Encouraging your student to use available resources
  • Talking through options instead of directing decisions
  • Supporting consistency and routines without managing them

These shifts often show up in everyday moments. Here are some common situations and suggestions about how to navigate them.

“I don’t know what to do next.”
For you (the Student)

Start small. Reach out.
To DAI, to a professor, or to an advisor.

You don’t need to have everything figured out before asking for help.

For the support network

Help your student break things into steps or write down questions, but encourage them to send the email or make the call themselves.

“I forgot and missed a deadline.”
for you (the student)

Mistakes happen. The next step is to reconnect. Reach out to and make a plan moving forward.

for the support network

Focus on helping your student reflect and reset, rather than fixing the situation for them.

“I don’t feel comfortable asking them.”
for you (the student)

Self-advocacy can take time to build. Start in ways that feel manageable, such as email, short meetings, or connecting with DAI for support.

for the support network

Encourage and validate those feelings. Practice communication together, but let your student take the lead when it matters.

“I didn’t use that resource.”
for you (the student)

Resources are here for you, but it’s up to you to engage with them. Trying one small step (like attending office hours) can make a big difference.

for the support network

Ask open-ended questions like, “What’s one resource you might try this week?” rather than directing or insisting.