Students want clarity and direction in their academic journeys. Research shows that a lack of structured guidance—not a lack of options—is a key reason students struggle to make progress (Bailey, Jaggars, & Jenkins, 2015). Surveys confirm this: students across community colleges, HBCUs, and other institutions report a strong need for better planning tools and clearer academic pathways (Inside Higher Ed & Generation Lab, 2024).
Structured pathways—across K–12, higher education, and career contexts—improve credential attainment, advising, and career-connected learning, especially in environments where high student-to-counselor ratios limit personalized support (Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation).
Advisor.AI Edition 2 addresses this gap, giving advisors and administrators the tools to turn student aspirations into actionable, personalized pathways, scale evidence-based guidance, and transform student outcomes.
Advisor.AI Edition 2 transforms career and academic interests into structured, multi-year plans aligned to courses, experiences, and key milestones—all in minutes. Students receive a clear roadmap for their academic journey, including suggested experiences, courses, and goals tailored to their chosen pathways.
The platform helped me explore multiple interests at once. I’m passionate about both business and science, and for the first time, I could see what careers look like when those fields intersect. It gave me a clear picture of the possibilities, helped me prioritize my goals, and made me excited about planning my next steps.
— Alicia, Undergraduate Student
Students can visualize their progress through intuitive dashboards, track completion of milestones, and set new academic or career goals. Advisors can monitor engagement and identify intervention points in real time, ensuring that guidance is proactive and timely.
There are so many great features of Advisor AI. Students can get answers instantly from the interactive advising assistant, saving time for them and the advisors. It's intuitive, fun, and easy to use for students and requires little training for advisors. But my favorite feature is that it incorporates career exploration and readiness, helping the student, advisor, and career services team make sure milestones are being accomplished in a timely manner.
— Alan Beaudrie, Academic Advisor with 20+ years of advising experiences
Advisor.AI Edition 2 enables seamless sharing of plans and goals across advising teams. Advisors can provide timely, comprehensive feedback, leave notes, and collaborate on student pathways directly in the platform, making the advising process more coordinated and evidence based.
What has excited me most about Artificial Intelligence is the promise and possibility that it has to free up time for advisors to focus their time and attention on building relationships rather than completing low impact tasks.
— Dr. Jennifer L. Bloom, Co-founder of Appreciative Advising and Appreciative Education
After interviewing and running experiments with advising and workforce teams nationwide, our team at Advisor AI has compiled this repository of the most relevant research on student success. The insights presented are grounded in a wide body of external research and institutional practice. The sources below draw on peer-reviewed studies, national surveys, philanthropic initiatives, and documented case studies from higher education institutions and workforce organizations. We gratefully acknowledge the researchers, associations, and institutions whose work continues to inform and advance evidence-based approaches to student success and excellence in higher education.
Inside Higher Ed & Generation Lab. (2024, July 26). Survey: Students want more clarity
Bailey, T. R., Jaggars, S. S., & Jenkins, D. (2015). Redesigning America's community colleges: A clearer path to student success. Harvard University Press.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. (n.d.). Pathways Gates Foundation.
Community College Research Center (CCRC). (2015–present). CCRC Guided Pathways
Critelli, J. E., Propst Cuevas, A. E., & Bloom, J. L. (2022). Development of the Appreciative Advising Success Inventory (AASI). Journal of Appreciative Education.