鈥淥ne of my best friends is the teacher I met when I was 18 years old,鈥 says John Kaag, associate professor in philosophy at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. Every morning at 6 o鈥檆lock, they would go jogging together, and the two would 鈥渢alk about all sorts of things鈥.
Kaag felt that the scholar 鈥渨elcomed me into philosophy and watched me grow up as an undergraduate. He became an adviser when I was a graduate student, and now we鈥檙e properly good friends. He is probably the single most important factor in my going into philosophy.鈥
For Kaag, the 鈥渆xclusivity鈥 of those early morning excursions was beneficial, and 鈥渉aving a friend at that level鈥 boosted his confidence. But he is well aware that replicating those runs with one of his own students would be 鈥減edagogically problematic鈥 because of the potential for real or perceived conflicts of interest and accusations of favouritism.
Such dilemmas are likely to be particularly acute at a time when students, at least in the UK, are paying far higher fees than their predecessors, and so are understandably sensitive to any signs of preferential treatment. So how should academics manage the boundaries?
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Some take a firm view that scholars and students shouldn鈥檛 be friends. Victoria Bateman, fellow and director of studies in economics at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, believes that 鈥渢he relationship between a student and an academic needs to be a professional one, rather than something more informal. I don鈥檛 think a student wants you to be a friend anyway 鈥 they have their peers for that.鈥 Students want good teaching and careers advice, and while it is important that academics 鈥渒eep a watch on their welfare鈥hat does not mean being a 鈥榝riend鈥欌.
During term-time, Bateman lives part-time in her college, where it is 鈥渘ormal鈥 for students and fellows to dine in the same hall 鈥 鈥渁lbeit at separate tables鈥. However, 鈥渓iving in college certainly doesn鈥檛 mean that you should expect or encourage students to knock on your door whenever they have a problem. I always communicate with them by email and expect them to do the same with me.鈥
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Friendships may even be detrimental to the learning process, argues Shahidha Bari, lecturer in Romanticism at Queen Mary University of London. As a student, she produced her best work for 鈥渢eachers whose admiration and praise鈥 she cared about, and she wants her own students, in turn, to strive for her praise. But 鈥渇riendship isn鈥檛 necessarily conducive to that鈥ou need a degree of formality [in the staff-student relationship], and friendship doesn鈥檛 permit that鈥. This perhaps explains why Bari refuses to join the ranks of scholars who bake for their students at Christmas: 鈥淚 know that鈥檚 a friendly thing to do, but I don鈥檛 [do it] because I think, I鈥檓 not your friend and I鈥檓 not your mother, and we鈥檙e going to read!鈥
Gerald Moore, lecturer in the School of Modern Languages and Cultures at Durham University, thinks that it is 鈥渂ecoming harder for academics and students to be friends鈥, in part because staff 鈥渢end to be a lot more wary of what could go wrong鈥. Worries about staff-student friendships are probably linked to the re-evaluation of sexual and romantic relationships between faculty and students that has taken place over the past few decades. The social mores of 1960s academia, where such liaisons were largely tolerated, have given way to a climate of concern over abuses of power.
Illustrating how different things could be back then, Moore says that he 鈥渨ouldn鈥檛 exist if it weren鈥檛 for university lecturers sleeping with their students鈥: his mother was taught by his father in the 1960s, and the couple married about a month after she graduated. But for 鈥渁nyone who was stupid enough to sleep with a student nowadays, it would be career suicide鈥. While sexual attraction between staff and students is unavoidable, acting on it these days could have grave repercussions, potentially exposing academics to accusations of sexual harassment. Many institutions have policies relating to 鈥渋ntimate鈥 relationships with students 鈥 and several prominent US universities have banned sexual or romantic relationships between undergraduates and faculty altogether (see 'Policing the boundaries: rules on student-staff relationships' box, below).
The explosive growth of social media has added another dimension to the issue, as students fire off 鈥渇riend鈥 requests to their lecturers on Facebook, and Twitter feeds blur the lines between professional and personal lives. According to a 2015 survey of 500 students by Jisc, a quarter of UK students now rely on social media to contact their teachers. Among students, the most popular channel for this is Facebook (which 85 per cent of students use), but just over a third (36 per cent) use Twitter for this purpose, and nearly a quarter (23 per cent) employ WhatsApp.
Like many academics, Emma Rees, professor of literature and gender studies at the University of Chester, follows a policy of not accepting undergraduates as 鈥渇riends鈥 on Facebook. However, once their studies are over, 鈥渇ormer students sometimes ask to 鈥榝riend鈥 me, and I feel as though I have to say 鈥榶es鈥 to all of them so that no one feels left out鈥.

Steelier scholars have found ways to avoid potentially acquiring every former student as a 鈥渇riend鈥. According to Bari, some have adopted 鈥減seudonyms or alternative online identities to secure a degree of privacy鈥.
There are some academics who believe that genuine friendship can help non-traditional learners adapt to the alien environment of the university (see 'Sharing stories: enriching lives' box, below). Yet Moore remembers when he was teaching at the University of Oxford and some colleagues there got 鈥渧ery worked up鈥 because a female student from a 鈥渨orking-class Northern town鈥, who was struggling to settle in, sent him a 鈥渇riend鈥 request on Facebook and he accepted. He believes that the student identified with him because of his Sheffield roots and his 鈥渧aguely Northern accent鈥 and points out that 鈥渨e knew each other better than I knew a couple of hundred Facebook 鈥榝riends鈥 I鈥檇 met once at a conference or hadn鈥檛 spoken to in 20 years鈥. But he also understood his colleagues鈥 objections and subsequently 鈥渦nfriended鈥 the student over concerns about privacy 鈥 although he reinstated her after she graduated.
PhD students who take on a teaching role face perhaps the biggest challenge when it comes to maintaining professional distance because those in their classes are often very close to them in age. Rees, who started lecturing while she was working on her PhD and was only two or three years older than her students, 鈥渉ad to work hard to set boundaries so as to maintain authority. Those boundaries are far easier to draw once you鈥檙e what many undergrads would consider to be positively ancient (ie, over 30),鈥 she says.
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PhD students may also experience difficulties determining the nature of relationships with their supervisors. A recent 糖心Vlog article, 鈥Should you be friends with your PhD students?鈥 (26 November 2015), described a paper based on interviews with 15 PhD supervisors and their students. The study found that 鈥渄octoral students鈥oped for and expected their supervisors to be concerned about them as persons in both personal and work-related ways鈥. Yet some academics were crystal clear about the limits of their role. 鈥淚f someone comes in and cries, for instance, about difficulties in their private life, however cruel it may sound, after a week I have to say that this belongs [elsewhere] and I will not listen to it for years,鈥 one supervisor said.
Despite all the concerns, there are some academics who adopt a more positive view of friendships between staff and students 鈥 in some circumstances, at least. Kaag takes the provocative view that 鈥渋t is much easier to be friends with a student if you鈥檙e male, in the sense that it鈥檚 easy to be avuncular鈥ut I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 necessarily possible for women to do the same鈥.
鈥淯niversities never seem to have policies on [platonic friendships],鈥 observes Benjamin Poore, a teaching fellow in the School of English and Drama at Queen Mary. He finds this 鈥渜uite weird, given that they have policies on pretty much everything鈥. Yet he wouldn鈥檛 necessarily welcome any official guidance, because 鈥渋ndividual disciplines construct relationships with students in certain kinds of ways鈥. He associates his own field with 鈥渁 particular moment, the 18th-century coffee house and that whole model of sociability鈥, while seminar teaching creates 鈥渁 sort of synthetic form of sociability, something that鈥檚 almost like a friendship but is not that as well鈥.
If the seminar model generates group sociability, then tutorials and field trips are where individual friendships may form. Tim Birkhead, professor of behavioural ecology at the University of Sheffield and a 鈥渟taunch defender鈥 of the tutorial system, says that 鈥渢he verbal interaction between student and tutor is absolutely vital for [undergraduates鈥橾 development鈥, adding that under such a system 鈥渙ne does develop a friendship with many of those students鈥. And while some tutors 鈥渢reat their PhD students as an extra pair of hands in the lab鈥, Birkhead prefers to be closely involved with what they are doing, seeing them all every day. 鈥淏ird-watching weekends and eating together鈥 all help to 鈥渇orge friendships鈥, he adds.
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For all the worries about staff-student relationships and 鈥渉ealthy鈥 boundaries, students often express their affection for academics in uncomplicated and creative ways. Kaag remembers some verse that a mature student, who was also a 鈥渂rilliant poet鈥, wrote for him and recited to the class. Moore recalls an occasion when he was living close to 鈥渢he most studenty street鈥 in the city. Having worked out that he was a near neighbour, two students hung from their window a banner with 鈥淕ood Morning, Gerald鈥 written on it. While his neighbours found the display 鈥渁 bit weird鈥, Moore thought that the banner was amusing, although he concedes that the student-artists were 鈥渋ncredibly clever and hard-working鈥 and that his attitude might have been different had it been the handiwork of 鈥渓azy, drunken, rugby-playing idiots who didn鈥檛 give a shit about work鈥.
鈥淭hat kind of thing is nice,鈥 he reflects, 鈥淚t means that you are having an effect, doesn鈥檛 it?鈥

Policing the boundaries: rules on student-staff relationships
A number of US institutions 鈥 Yale University in 2010, the in 2013 and in 2015 鈥 have placed outright bans on sexual/romantic relationships between undergraduates and faculty.
These have sometimes been criticised by students, who claim that it is their right, as adults, to have consensual sex with whoever they want to. But at least such guidelines are clear-cut. When it comes to platonic friendships, academics largely have to fall back on their own judgement.
鈥淧eople will always develop friendships when they are together for any length of time, and no organisation can legislate against that,鈥 says a spokesman for Universities Human Resources, the organisation that represents HR practitioners in UK and Irish universities.
鈥淢ost universities have policies for individuals who form academic/student relationships that go beyond normal friendship, [requiring them] to declare the attachment to the head of school and to avoid having sole responsibility for [the student鈥檚] academic assessment鈥 or other important decisions, the spokesman says. 鈥淗R鈥檚 role comes in establishing policies that help people maintain boundaries.鈥
The University and College Union echoes this advice, adding that 鈥渄eclarations [to heads of department] should be treated in confidence鈥.
In cases where staff are offering personal tutoring and academic support, the that boundaries 鈥渧ary between individuals based on the person鈥檚 personality, gender and culture鈥, so that there is 鈥渘o single right answer鈥 to what is appropriate. The guidance suggests that tutors should explain their role, how they can be contacted and the limits of their availability, and warns staff to 鈥渟tay within your own role and area of expertise鈥.
The University of East London, meanwhile, advises staff not to 鈥渓end money or offer accommodation鈥 to their students. Acting as a counsellor and dispensing relationship advice is also frowned upon.
Sharing stories: enriching lives
Friendships with academics may play an important role in building non-traditional learners鈥 confidence and shaping future aspirations, academics have found.
In her 2013 book Learning Trajectories, Violence and Empowerment amongst Adult Basic Skills Learners, an ethnographic study of 16 basic skills learners in the North West of England, Vicky Duckworth says that as well as 鈥渒nowledge gained in the form of outcomes and findings鈥elationships formed鈥.
Duckworth, a senior lecturer in further education and training at Edge Hill University, also lectured on the literacy courses that her research participants were taking and grew up in a neighbouring area. 鈥淚 consider myself to be a friend of the research group and, for a few, a good friend. These friendships have enriched our lives, enriched me as a person and are an important impact of the research,鈥 she writes in the book.
Duckworth, who appeared on BBC Radio 4鈥檚 Woman鈥檚 Hour in December with a former student who is now a staff nurse, says that when adults who have had negative experiences of compulsory education return to learning, there has to be a 鈥渟haring of stories鈥. Recounting her history to learners 鈥渨as a way of breaking down barriers and demystifying the process of getting an education鈥.
She adds: 鈥淭he idea of friendship in teaching and learning is one that receives very little theoretical and political attention, even though the importance of it in the quality of our lives is enormous.鈥
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Why can't we be friends?
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