Metadata
Title
Advising
Category
general
UUID
0668d9be6d2c49d4b012b07d1008c25a
Source URL
https://csadvising.seas.harvard.edu/advising/
Parent URL
https://csadvising.seas.harvard.edu/firstyear/
Crawl Time
2026-03-09T03:27:32+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown
# Advising

**Source**: https://csadvising.seas.harvard.edu/advising/
**Parent**: https://csadvising.seas.harvard.edu/firstyear/

Need advice or information for navigating Computer Science at Harvard and
beyond? There are several resources available to you.

#### Directors of Undergraduate Studies and the DUS Team

The DUS team is the Directors and Associate Director of Undergraduate Studies
for Computer Science, plus the Undergraduate Program Administrator. The DUS
team can help advise any Harvard student, including concentrators,
secondaries, pre-concentrators, or anyone else interested in Computer Science.
They are especially knowledgeable about concentration requirements and
administrative issues, and can serve as backup advisors for things like
releasing advising holds. See the  for how to contact
the DUS team, including drop-in office hours.

#### Concentration Advisors

Every Computer Science concentrator is assigned an advisor from the [Computer
Science
faculty](https://seas.harvard.edu/computer-science/people?role[]=46&advisor[]=1),
shown in the [my.harvard](https://my.harvard.edu/) Advising Network with the
role “Ind Concentration Advisor.”

Your concentration advisor is there to help guide you through your CS degree.
They are your faculty point of contact, and they are responsible for releasing
the [advising hold](https://registrar.fas.harvard.edu/enrollment#holds) placed
on your record each term during registration. But they are not just there to
release the hold. We encourage you to consult with them about different areas
of CS, research and summer opportunities, and your plans for Harvard and
beyond.

Concentration advisors have different advising styles and strengths. We assign
advisors to students, including newly-declared concentrators, at the beginning
of each term. We try to maintain continuity from term to term, but faculty
sometimes go on leave or change their advising capacity, so students can
change advisors. When you declare, or if you want a new advisor, you can
express your advising preferences by [filling in this
form](https://goo.gl/forms/2bVz8qwl3s28l3IE3) well before term time.

Here are some general guidelines for contacting your concentration advisor.

- You should meet with your advisor at least once per term. Most students do
  so during preregistration.
- Some advisors will proactively schedule advising meetings, but others expect
  students to reach out to them.
- Advising conversations around registration go more smoothly when students
  have done some homework first. Add a couple courses to your Crimson Cart
  before meeting with your advisor—or add a *ton* of courses that seem like
  they might be interesting—so your advisor has something specific to
  discuss. You can change your Cart even after the advising hold is lifted.
- A consistently effective way to meet your advisor is to show up at their
  office hours. Faculty generally post their office hours on their personal
  web pages. If you’re not sure of your advisor’s office hours, email them;
  contact their faculty coordinator (visible as “staff contact” on their [SEAS
  faculty
  page](https://seas.harvard.edu/computer-science/people?role[]=46&advisor[]=1));
  or contact the .
- Concentration advisors know a lot about their area of CS expertise, and
  about computer science, both at Harvard and more generally. They may not
  know about, say, the best gen eds available this term. Of course you can ask
  them anyway—they may have heard from other students!

#### Peer Concentration Advisors

Peer Concentration Advisors (PCAs) serve as peer advisors for current CS
concentrators and pre-concentrators. As fellow undergraduates, they know a lot
about the Harvard undergraduate experience. They provide valuable perspective
and can help students discover additional resources and opportunities.
Students can reach out to meet with PCAs with similar academic, career, or
extracurricular interests.

More information is on the .

#### Online Resources

Answers to many common questions and issues are available on this website. Other resources (such as online guides and the Piazza CS student forum) are listed [on the Resources page](/resources/).

#### Harvard College Advising Programs Office

The Harvard College [Advising Programs
Office](https://advising.college.harvard.edu/) is charged with
coordinating, supporting, and facilitating academic advising programs
for all undergraduates and, as such, works with students, faculty, the
First-Year Experience Office, the Houses and other Harvard College and FAS
offices on all aspects of pre-concentration and concentration advising.

#### CS Feedback

This is a form for anonymous feedback, for your ideas for CS to consider, or to let us know how you’re doing. [CS Feedback](https://forms.gle/UcsjJxxD9x1akUyWA).