Peer Advising

What is CEL Peer Advising?


 

Want to make an impact in your community and aren’t sure where to begin? Schedule an appointment with Community Engagement & Leadership (CEL)! Our peer advising appointments connect interested students with a student staff member to learn about how to get involved with CEL, or explore one of the aspects of the Leadership Identity Model (Strengths, Values, Socially Conscious Leadership, and Pathways of Public Service and Civic Engagement). In this one-on-one setting, discover your unique leadership style and identity so you can engage more intentionally at OSU and in the broader Corvallis community.

Step 1: 

Complete the Pathways of Public Service & Civic Engagement Diagnostic Tool (10 minutes)

The purpose of this survey is to provide you with an option to explore social issues that are important to you and different ways of addressing these issues. Your results may confirm what you already know about yourself and your interests. This tool will provide you with additional information about your public service preferences, giving our staff the information they need to connect you to local and regional opportunities. Your responses are anonymous!

Please add your OSU email at the end of the tool.  

Complete Pathways Tool

Step 2: 

Step 2: Schedule a Peer Advising Appointment (50 minutes)

This consultation is with one of our staff members. During the meeting, our staff will discuss your survey results with you and will connect you with community and campus partners.

Schedule a Consultation

The six pathways included in our programs and services are:

  1. Community Engaged Learning and Research: Connecting coursework and academic research to community-identified concerns to enrich knowledge and inform action on social issues.
  2. Community Organizing and Activism: Involving, educating, and mobilizing individual or collective action to influence or persuade others.
  3. Direct Service: Working to address the immediate needs of individuals or a community, often involving contact with the people or places being served.
  4. Philanthropy: Donating or using private funds or charitable contributions from individuals or institutions to contribute to the public good.
  5. Policy and Governance: Participating in political processes, policymaking, and public governance.
  6. Social Entrepreneurship and Corporate Social Responsibility: Using ethical business or private sector approaches to create or expand market-oriented responses to social or environmental problems.

*Adapted from Pathways of Public Service, in partnership with the Haas Center for Public Service, Stanford University.