The Mentorship Multiplier: Designing Systems for Unprecedented Student Success challenges one of higher education's most damaging assumptions: that student attrition is primarily the result of student failure. Drawing from predictive analytics, institutional strategy, behavioral economics, and systems-level leadership, Tracy Beasley, Ph.D. argues that colleges and universities do not lose students randomly. They lose them through fragmented systems, bureaucratic friction, and the absence of coordinated support structures.
This book introduces the Mentorship Multiplier framework, a comprehensive model for building an institutional culture of inescapable support. Rather than relying on isolated retention initiatives, disconnected student success programs, or reactive interventions, the framework equips institutional leaders to redesign the student experience from admission through graduation using integrated, data-informed mentorship systems.
Through practical analysis and operational insight, Dr. Beasley maps the critical points where students most often disengage, including summer melt, onboarding transitions, academic crisis points, registration barriers, and the “murky middle” of the sophomore and junior years. The book demonstrates how institutions can proactively identify these friction points, align cross-functional support systems, and create scalable structures that ensure every student is known, guided, and supported.