糖心Vlog

On call: how much support should academics give students?

Round-the-clock demands from students can take a toll on lecturers. With a THE survey highlighting rising expectations, Anna McKie asks where the line should be drawn between professional and private life

Published on
November 15, 2018
Last updated
November 15, 2018
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What would you do if one of your students asked for academic advice on a course that you didn鈥檛 teach? For most, it seems, offering up some words of wisdom doesn鈥檛 seem too much of a strain. What if it was a question about your own course but it was 8pm on a Saturday? What if the student demanded an immediate reply? What if they wanted you to map out their essay plan? Or what if they wanted you to advise them on deeply personal issues but you had no mental health first aid training?

Quandaries like this are confronting academics in the UK, US and elsewhere with increasing frequency in an era of high fee-paying, digitally native students who expect instant responses to their problems. This attitude is also being encouraged by politicians who regard students as akin to consumers. In the UK, the universities minister, Sam Gyimah, has called for universities to be in听loco parentis to ensure that they are offering students 鈥渁ll the support they need to get the most from their time on campus鈥. In response, critics have said that this infantilises students when they should be learning to be independent adults.

They also question the burden that it places on academics, and fear a collapse of the boundaries between professional and private life.

The scenarios sketched above are taken from a survey conducted by 糖心Vlog on the subject of academic support for students. It finds that 74 per cent of the 152 respondents feel that universities expect academics to do more to support their students than they did 10 years ago, while 80 per cent report that students also expect more support than they did a decade ago.

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Some of the student requests that they report range from the faintly ridiculous 鈥 such as urgent queries made on deadline days and demands for responses to emails within 24 hours during the holidays 鈥 to the outrageous 鈥 including demands to amend a grade 鈥渂ecause they got A grades at school鈥 or to 鈥済o over all the lecture and seminar content they had missed while off on a ski trip鈥. One senior lecturer in the UK writes that a student insisted that 鈥淚 read a book he had written, to 鈥榰nderstand him鈥, before looking at his work for assessment. When I said it was not relevant, he then refused to speak to me directly.鈥

More often, students make requests for help outside office hours. One senior lecturer reports having received an email from a student 鈥渁t 3am demanding an answer to a past exam question, followed by an aggressive complaint at 7.30am that I hadn鈥檛 responded鈥, while another relates that 鈥渕y students email me all the time, at all hours of day and night, often about things they could answer for themselves鈥.

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Technology means that emails 鈥 and messages posted on social media 鈥 are always accessible via smartphones. They can arrive from students at any time of the day, and a rapid response is often expected, academics tell THE.

鈥淚t鈥檚 undoubtedly true that students now have higher expectations of the sort of support that they might expect than they had in the past,鈥 says Helen O鈥橲ullivan, pro vice-chancellor (education) at Keele University. 鈥淭here鈥檚 this feeling of being constantly available, the blending of professional and private life. A lot of colleagues are on Facebook and Twitter, so how students access academics has really changed.

鈥淭he barriers [to accessing academics] are so much lower than when I was a student,鈥 O鈥橲ullivan adds. 鈥淚f I wanted to talk to an academic, I had to find them in their room.鈥

A report by the charity Student Minds into student mental health and the role of academics, published in January, found that academics feel that they have 鈥渓ittle ability to protect their time and limit student engagement to fixed hours鈥.

鈥淓mails present a particular challenge,鈥 it says. 鈥淪tudents can send emails at any time of the day or week and often seem to expect a reply outside of working hours.鈥

So is today鈥檚 generation of students less independent than previous ones? They are often portrayed in the media as delicate snowflakes unable to cope with the pressures of adulthood or the stress of a demanding higher education, and some of the answers to THE鈥檚 survey lend credence to this view, with 62 per cent of respondents stating that students expect too much support from their tutors.

鈥淪tudents arrive with the expectation that they will be told what to write in the exam,鈥 says one male senior lecturer from the UK. 鈥淭hey are only concerned about passing the assessment with the highest mark, but seem unwilling to put in even minimal work.鈥

鈥淪tudents are less able to manage their own learning,鈥 writes a female senior lecturer. 鈥淚 think the school system has contributed to this 鈥榦nly the right answer will do鈥 culture. It impedes learning and teaching in higher education.鈥

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O鈥橲ullivan agrees. 鈥淭here is this perception that students are coming to us less well formed as independent learners, and I suppose that鈥檚 probably true,鈥 she says.

鈥淏ut I鈥檓 not sure there was a golden age where students rocked up as fully formed independent learners. It鈥檚 just that it was a lot less obvious, because of the way society has changed, the way family dynamics have changed and the way parental involvement is more common now,鈥 she explains.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e more likely to get a parent saying to their child 鈥榳hy don鈥檛 you go and see your tutor about that?鈥, whereas, 10 to 15 years ago, students just had to make their own way.鈥

Early in their courses, universities must instil in undergraduates the concept of developing as independent learners, O鈥橲ullivan says. 鈥淲e need to make things explicit that perhaps were previously implicit. That鈥檚 where the biggest change is going to come in the next few years. Today, there is much more of a sense from the student that 鈥業鈥檝e paid my fees, therefore it鈥檚 reasonable to ask certain things from my university鈥 鈥 though, of course, that鈥檚 not the whole picture.鈥

Graph: which of these requests from students are reasonable?

However, the phenomenon is not apparent everywhere. Bret Stephenson, senior research fellow at the Centre for 糖心Vlog Equity and Diversity Research in Australia鈥檚 La Trobe University, observes that expectations around student support in the UK and the US are markedly different from those in Australia. 鈥淯nlike our English-speaking cousins, Australia does not have a tradition of personal tutoring or academic advising,鈥 he says. Hence, 鈥渢here are fewer opportunities, relatively speaking, for Australian students to feel that they are being nurtured or over-nurtured by their institutions.鈥

In the past 10 years, a number of studies and reports have highlighted the very low levels of student-staff interaction in Australian universities when compared with the US and Canada, in particular, he explains.

Instead of a robust and formalised system of personal tutoring, there is a 鈥渉odgepodge of often short-lived trial projects aimed at offering more targeted support to students in need鈥, he says. Some universities will build intervention programmes aimed at particular demographic cohorts 鈥 such as first-in-family students, Stephenson explains, whereas others use learning analytics to identify when academic intervention is needed, such as failure in an assessment. 鈥淏ut very few, if any, of these programmes are anything like what students in the UK would recognise as personal tutoring,鈥 he says.

Some respondents to THE鈥檚 survey believe that the pressure on academics in the US is higher than in the UK. 鈥淚 have taught in the US, and students there expect much more from their lecturers 鈥 too much, in my opinion,鈥 says Megan Davies Wykes, a lecturer in engineering at the University of Cambridge.

One American male professor in the social sciences writes that 鈥渟tudents have increasingly become less independent. Rather than struggle with intellectual questions for a while, they more quickly seek an answer from the professor.鈥

Darren Linvill, associate professor at Clemson University in South Carolina, says that it is 鈥渃ertainly true鈥 that student expectations around pastoral and academic support are higher now than when his father was a college professor. 鈥淛ust because a student has an expectation, however, doesn鈥檛 mean we are required to honour it. It is up to faculty to establish clear rules of the road with their students,鈥 he says.

鈥淭here is certainly a perception among many faculty that the commoditisation of higher education has changed the faculty-student dynamic and鈥ot necessarily for the better,鈥 Linvill adds. However, student expectations in the US vary hugely depending on the type of institution 鈥 private or public, research- or teaching-focused, large or small, he adds.

In the UK, the near-trebling of most undergraduate tuition fees in 2012 was a watershed moment for student expectations,听according to several of our survey respondents. Asked why modern students expect more from academics, one respondent sums it up in a single word: 鈥淔ees.鈥 鈥淓xpectations are mismatched with the reality of higher education learning,鈥 he continues. 鈥淎s consumers, students expect a 鈥榮ervice鈥 without really knowing what that 鈥榮ervice鈥 should look like.鈥

Nick Hillman, director of the 糖心Vlog Policy Institute, believes that the UK鈥檚 鈥boarding school model鈥 of 鈥渉igher education away from home鈥 鈥 which differs from that in countries where students attend their local institution 鈥 contributes to the sense that universities must offer more support. 鈥淎cademics were up in arms about Gyimah鈥檚 comment about in听loco parentis, but it has some truth to it 鈥 even if not perhaps in the way that he meant it,鈥 Hillman says.

鈥淭echnically, we say that people are adults at 18; but in terms of student finance, we don鈥檛 treat them as adults until they are 25,鈥 Hillman says, referring to the age at which parental income often ceases to be relevant for student support. 鈥淚t certainly adds to the confusion about how independent they are.鈥

Understanding that university is, for many undergraduates, a period of transition before adult life proper begins is helpful for everyone, he continues. 鈥淚nstitutions have a duty of care to people who do not feel that they are fully formed adults 鈥 it鈥檚 not about 尘辞濒濒测颅肠辞诲诲濒颈苍驳,听it鈥檚 about helping them make that jump to independence.鈥

Some scholars, however, believe that the pressure on academics to fulfil outsized expectations comes from above, not below. Roger Seifert, professor of human resource management and industrial relations at Wolverhampton Business School, says that it comes 鈥渇rom senior managers, rather than students鈥.

Although academic support for students has not changed in its nature, it has changed in its intensity, Seifert says. 鈥淧astoral care has become more embedded in all activities, and administrative burden 鈥 such as uploading essays, marking reviews, tutorial times 鈥 has grown rapidly and to our detriment.鈥

Pie charts: supporting students

Academics are also keenly aware of their universities鈥 desire for good results in comparative sector-wide exercises such as the teaching excellence framework and the National Student Survey, one female UK lecturer says in her survey response. The NSS, which feeds into the TEF, puts the emphasis on student satisfaction, and the pressure to do well is high among UK institutions. 鈥淭here are a bunch of additional duties of a pastoral nature being demanded of the academics despite institutions鈥 having dedicated professional student services available,鈥 she says.

Gregor Gall, a former professor of industrial relations at the University of Bradford who is now an affiliate research associate at the University of Glasgow, agrees that 鈥渢he demands on academics are now greater than at any time before鈥.

鈥淭he trajectory of increased student demands on staff as a result of students鈥 being consumers of higher education 鈥 as a result of paying fees 鈥 has been added to by technological developments. It is leading to intolerable pressure on staff, because they are almost inherently predisposed to want to help students, but often without seeking increased resources to do so,鈥 says Gall, who believes that universities must make clear to students what they can rightly expect in terms of response times, so they do not unwittingly besiege staff.

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O鈥橲ullivan agrees. 鈥淸Universities] have a duty of care towards our students but also a significant duty of care to our staff. If you are an academic answering loads of emails from students at the weekend, that鈥檚 going to be incredibly stressful and put a lot of pressure on you.鈥

And while it is 鈥渘ot unreasonable for today鈥檚 students to expect that instant response鈥, universities need to 鈥渉elp academic colleagues understand different ways of working and how to put barriers in place. We probably don鈥檛 do that as well as we should across the sector,鈥 O鈥橲ullivan reflects.

Eunice Simmons, deputy vice-chancellor of Nottingham Trent University, agrees that staff feeling that they have to reply instantaneously to student requests is 鈥渃ounterproductive for the staff member鈥檚 well-being, but also for the student鈥檚 preparedness for the world of work鈥.

鈥淛ust because we have instant communication does not always mean that an instant response is appropriate or necessary 鈥 that鈥檚 the same in the workplace. It makes everything feel as if it needs to be solved and resolved now, but that鈥檚 really unhealthy.鈥

Immediate replies might also be less considered and constructive, argues Simmons, with messages taking on an 鈥渆xasperated, last-minute鈥 tone rather than the more reflective and thought-through nature expected from academics.

鈥淭utors have to plan when they are going to be available for responding 鈥 they should be actively working that out in their week, because otherwise everything becomes very rushed,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got some very fine tutors here, but I need them to be able to focus predominantly on the academic support to students to ensure that [the students] achieve their best.鈥

With this in mind, she says, Nottingham Trent is developing a programme to encourage effective personal tutoring. 鈥淏ut we do not agree that staff should be on hand 24/7,鈥 Simmons says. Indeed, knowing 鈥渨hen to step back and let the student do things for themselves is a huge part of [tutoring]鈥.

According to Ron Iphofen, a former director of postgraduate studies at Bangor University, 鈥測ou have to begin with a kind of nurturing attitude, but then gradually students need to learn to be independent.鈥 This approach is much easier at a postgraduate level,听however, because at undergraduate level 鈥測ou simply don鈥檛 have the time鈥 to do this for each individual student.

Encouraging traditional independent learning has become 鈥渋ncreasingly complicated鈥 now that the internet affords such easy access to information, Iphofen adds. Independent learning is no longer about spending hours in the library searching for the right text because now the desired information is at students鈥 fingertips. 鈥淭hey expect different things, and that is why it is challenging to be a good educator these days; you have to move with the times otherwise you miss understanding how your students learn.鈥

Supporting the learning of students working unsocial hours presents a particular challenge for academics. As many universities鈥 libraries are now open 24/7 and are packed late into the evening, the solution could be user-friendly digital resources. Indeed, O鈥橲ullivan says, Keele is now looking at 24-hour support that is less heavily reliant on academics 鈥渂ecause obviously there鈥檚 a limit to what you can provide around the clock, so it鈥檚 important to set expectations of students鈥.

Replies to frequently asked questions should, for instance, be placed online because 鈥渋t鈥檚 not reasonable for an academic to be answering the same question from 70 students individually鈥, O鈥橲ullivan says.

Keele is keen to help 鈥渙ur academics to wean themselves off that sort of personal support, where it could be better provided in another way, and then saving our academics for where their intervention is really valuable is important鈥, she adds.

The importance of drawing boundaries regarding student support is a key theme among responses to our survey. On the question of what is reasonable to offer students, many academics state that the scenarios cited (from offering extra one-to-one tuition to lending a student some money if they were desperate) are unacceptable. 鈥淚 maintain a very firm boundary,鈥 writes one female engineering lecturer.

However, most survey respondents admit that extending extra support to students is an inevitable and often positive part of the job. The problem for many is that the additional work it involves is poorly recognised by their employers.

Many survey respondents indicate that they regularly go beyond what their institutions expect of them, with offers of cups of tea and biscuits whenever students want them, phone calls if they are unable to attend campus and even extra tutorials.

Those staff who are perceived as approachable, often women, are most likely to find themselves with bigger workloads related to pastoral care, says the Student Minds report. But such work also exacts an emotional toll, and that should be recognised by institutions as well, it adds.

鈥淭his emotional labour may be asked of all staff, but it鈥檚 usually expected as a given for women, particularly junior ones,鈥 says Hannah Murray, a teaching fellow in early American studies at King鈥檚 College London.

Pillar with neon light around it

The blurring of the line between academic and pastoral care is clearly a huge part of the issue. One interviewee in the Student Minds report explained that they had 鈥渟tarted getting way over-involved, I had a student who had lost housing and I said I鈥檇 be her guardian鈥.

The paper adds that there is a lack of clarity about the exact meaning of the term 鈥減astoral鈥. 鈥淥ur participants expressed the view that academic and pastoral responsibilities cannot be easily separated as academic problems almost always have a non-academic cause,鈥 the report says. It explains that the confusion around role boundaries was felt to be structural and maintained at an institutional level. Many academics feel that they are being asked to perform tasks that are beyond their remit and for which they are not equipped, Student Minds adds.

The report recommends that academics receive active support to 鈥渦nderstand, maintain and communicate appropriate boundaries to their students鈥, online and on campus. 鈥淐ommunications to students from their university should reaffirm these boundaries,鈥 it concludes.

Boundaries and support are especially difficult issues when it comes to student mental health. Many respondents to THE鈥檚 survey feel that they are the 鈥渇ront line鈥 when it comes to students鈥 psychological well-being, and while, overwhelmingly, they wish to help, they have no expertise to deliver mental health advice.

鈥淭here can be an expectation that we offer pastoral support that goes beyond academic mentoring, and we are not trained to carry out this role,鈥 explains Charlotte Burns, a professorial fellow in politics at the University of Sheffield.

That is not to say that students in need should be turned away, but rather that academics should direct them to the appropriate university support services, says Simmons at Nottingham Trent, who adds that it is imperative that institutional signposting is kept up to date. 鈥淪ome of the help that students need is more than just the common-sense answer, so the correct action by the tutor is to help the student track down the expert advice they need.鈥

Academics need to know their university and the services on offer so that they can steer students to the right place quickly and accurately, she says.

鈥淚 get the sense that some tutors feel that they have to be everything and do everything鈥ut they can鈥檛 give [so much],鈥 Simmons adds.

However, guiding students to the correct service is useful only if the support is actually available. The number of first-year undergraduates reporting a mental health concern has increased fivefold in the UK in the past decade, according to a report last year from the IPPR thinktank. However, universities have reported growing waiting lists and overwhelmed support facilities. Student services need to be well resourced, and the communication between the services and academics improved, Student Minds says in its report.

鈥淢ental health services within and outside higher education are woefully underfunded, so there is often nowhere for the students to go beyond your immediate support,鈥 Murray of King鈥檚 explains. 鈥淚 have counselling training, but I am not a mental health professional.鈥

Another female lecturer 鈥渙nce had a suicidal person ring me daily, but my institution could offer me no support in coping with being a helper other than an outsourced phone line. I was fine in myself, but I need to talk, share and get reassurance, and there was nothing to help me help them.鈥

Her experience echoes that faced by thousands of academics across the world, who feel an urge to assist students seeking help but also recognise that an element of self-preservation is critical.

鈥淎cademic staff need support to support students,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 mind being the voice of help, but we need time and space to help properly and to take care of ourselves in the process.鈥

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Reader's comments (11)

I had a student personally threaten me because he had to be aware of some maths on a module I was teaching. He followed me to my car and was particularly aggressive. My university did nothing to support me after I reported the incident and the student essentially got away with sexual harassment.
Coming from a background in Further Education, I find personal tutoring in 糖心Vlog is lagging far behind. Yes, students should be becoming ever more independent in their learning, but they are still human beings and all of us sometimes need help or a listening ear. Academics do not know the answers to everything, but we need to become good at finding out, or at least knowing where to send a student in need. As my specialism is in online learning, I'm as much of a digital native as they are and you will find me online at the weekends... but I sleep at night :) Part of the journey towards becoming an independent learner includes getting pointers on how to go about it - it doesn't come easy to everyone. So the advice I give is often a hint as to where to find the answer they are seeking, rather than providing it outright.
To follow up on this comment, a student just dropped in to my office to ask about details of the report he'll have to write on his final year project. (I run the module, but each student is assigned to a member of staff who supervises them.) I showed him where to look on our VLE for the information he was after, told him that his supervisor was the best person to ask about the precise structure of the report depending on the project... and generally left him happier than he was when he came in. He knew where to look and who to ask if he had any further questions. Job done :)
I have been a teacher and lecturer for over 25 years. The support given to students in university in no way matches those very high standards in schools or colleges. So Keele wants to reduce student reliance on academics really, after taken a postgraduate course at Keele I can only say that support will become negligible and unprofessional. I made a formal complaint it was investigated and got my money back. It took a year. Post script that year using an F.O.I. I found out that only 4% of postgraduate students filled in their survey, I then saw that they to great acclaim said 94% of postgraduates thought their university was satisfactory. Come on Keele clean up your act!
They are supposed to be adults... that's the difference.
Here in Scotland, where there are no tuition fees for Scottish undergraduate students, we're possibly less affected than others. While I do receive occasionally peremptory and out of hours communications from students, I feel no inhibition whatsoever in responding only during office hours and when it it is appropriate in terms of my other commitments. I am neither a social worker nor a shortcut to information they usually already have. I think much of the problem here is academics pandering to them when we shouldn't feel shy about saying, 'no, do it yourself' or 'no, I am entitled to evenings, weekends and holidays'. I had one student email me last week to ask about a deadline he'd already been given. I replied, 'I made all of this clear during meeting 1. I reiterated this in an email sent on 12th October, did you not receive this?'. To the student's credit, he replied 'I did receive this. Sorry to waste your time'. I don't want to resort to 'man up' and 'tough love' cliches on everyone, but come on people ... resist!
Some heads of dept are only to keen to help students who big up their books and publications by referencing them! Some students have actually had their PhD's supervised by family friends - that should not be possible -so why are no checks being made or why are those in useful positions being allowed to do this for the kids of friends.
I provide support and a willing ear but set clear boundaries, particularly around final assessment time. The students are advised the deadline of when they can lodge questions and the window I will respond. Anything outside that window (except for real life emergencies outside of the student control) are not answered. Students respect the boundaries - and it is better preparing them for workplaces where there are stated expectations on both sides.
I'm clear from day one with students that I'm an employee who is paid Monday to Friday and work 9am-5pm and will never read their emails or questions at evenings or weekends - none of them have ever had problems with very clear blunt boundaries.
I use a plugin for my Mac mail program with which I can delay the sending of some of my emails to 9am on the next working day (https://www.mailbutler.io/?ref=09e03f25-a2c2-4383-bbe4-f9c459f292cd). Then I can write the answer without opening the student email twice, while avoiding lengthy back-and-forth email exchanges in evenings and weekends. I also don't raise wrong expectations.
It's not only academics who are under this pressure to respond to emails out of working hours - subject/liaison librarians are too.

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