Helping Students by Looking for the Animating Principle in Their Work

After looking at many pieces of student’s work in a one-to-one setting, I’ve come to identify a kind of process of how my ability to help appears to work. What follows are some kind of reflective notes on this process. As my reflection proceeds I make recourse to a concept I am calling the ‘animating principle’ of the writing to try to describe what’s going on.

When working with a student the very first thing is to put the student at ease with a friendly introduction. Next I need to find out what they need help with. They may have quite a specific kind of issue, for instance they want to know how to be more critical in their writing, or it may be something more general like how to write more academically.

Knowing my own mind and abilities, I am aware it’s very important that the whole situation be relaxed. If tension exists in the system, this will impair my ability to read their work/understand their issue and hence to give any useful advice. Also since I now likely have to digest the issue, either from reading their work/brief/learning outcomes, I always feel I have to spell out that I’m now going to do some reading and thinking but that they shouldn’t worry about the silence. This is all about removing tension. I think it’s important to spell this out as, whilst it might seem obvious, if I don’t say it they may feel uncomfortable or even keep interjecting and neither of these are desireable —though interjecting might be later on.

For me, this initial reading may not be massively in depth. I am trying to keep my focus on reading carefully, whilst also taking note of how long the text is and also trying to bear in mind the issue they’ve asked me about. This can get more complicated because I may notice other problems with the writing. If these are outside the remit of the query, then there is something of an ethical dilemma. On the one hand I do not wish to gloss over aspects of the writing that need looking at, but on the other the session is finite, so if I begin to spread out into too many issues I may a) overwhelm the student with information and b) not cover the issue they came for in a satisfactory manner. The resolution of this may be to recommend another session or to check in with them as to what stage they are at in the writing —the student may be aware of some things and expect to pick them up themselves later on. Some form of acknowledging these issues is required though.

After this initial reading I may have a general sense of major issues and may be able to offer advice about the work. I am always aware (or rather I should be aware) that at this stage the student’s work will likely not have disclosed itself properly to me. So at this point I will relay my thoughts so far back to the student and talk to them variously about it. This will usually give me a deeper connection to what they want and let me see if I am working in the right area.

I will then make a second reading of the work. By now the work and the learning outcomes have seeped into me at a deeper level and I am able to see the work clearer. The areas of the work start to become clearer, the structural problems, the lacks of criticality. This stage will involve less intense silence, but there may well be some. Again if I am thinking for a moment I will let the student know, so they understand I am not just sat in silence.

It is around the stage of this second reading/talking that I find the truly fascinating part of the process occurs. What roughly tends to happen is that, if I have remained relaxed and open, absorbed the work/inquiry and applied thought to the issue (asking myself, what is needed here? what nudge does the work need to cohere?) the general solution/advice will disclose itself by a some means I do not pretend to understand. There is a moment when something clicks and then I have the strong sensation that the way forward is clear. From this opening, I will feel a sense of where the essential problems are in the work, and begin to work out advice on how they might solve them.

This does not mean I will not offer nuts and bolts writing advice. As stated, there is always a question about where do you should focus. However if we are trying to work on issues such as structure, criticality, analysis or flow, then though the individual problems may look extremely various, it is often the same fundamental issue that drives them. This is what I have elsewhere referred to as the lack of an animating principle in the writing.

The repeated readings and questions then, are probes that try to find the animating principle (or lack of one) in the writing. This is a kind of holistic approach, as the aspects we are taught about academic writing come much more naturally if the writing has an animating principle. Criticality for instance arises by itself if we are truly interested in the topic; our interest will make us question the veracity of statements in our desire for understanding. Likewise our logical coherence will flow, because we have a tale we are trying to tell and our rhetorical powers of persuasion (if appropriate) will also be improved because we are invested in the movement of the writing.

It is true that the animating principle is easier to track and utilise when the writing has hit a certain level. However at all levels there is still the question/title that has been set by the tutor. Engaged thinking about this question can help bring out an interesting perspective in a question that might appear quite uninspiring. Yes of course, there can be many issues that might need fixing at the level of grammar and spelling, but improving these details after engagement has been achieved (or even suffering them to some extent to work on over time) will still yield a better piece of work than simply mopping up the periphery.

The Importance of Editing.

Editing. The part always left until the end, the part we always dread – and most often, the part that is left out. It is a crucial fragment of the academic writing process yet is most often ignored due to lack of time management, panic or sometimes not recognising its importance.

Most often in my appointments, I find that the advice I give out time and time again is surrounding editing and the value of reading through your assignment with a critical lens. Students often doubt their work, not giving themselves the credit they deserve – my view: if you have the ability to write in depth about your subject knowledge, you know what you are talking about. Step one to the editing process is all about confidence, when you read through your work you have to imagine you are reading secondary material – would you use this yourself? Why not? That’s your starting point.

By identifying the gaps in your argument, you are able to make adjustments before the deadline allowing yourself to get better marks. A quick skim read an hour before the deadline will only create panic and anxiety if you notice the mistakes but have no time to correct them. Failing that, by not editing at all, the first person to see the mistakes is your tutor.

We can break editing into three parts: academic, grammar and what I like to call, ‘easy reading.’

1. Academic – this is arguably the most important reason to edit. In an essay you are being marked on how well you can articulate your academic knowledge, but also how well you can present your own ideas. When you read through your assignment as an editor, not a writer, you must focus on identifying your key ideas and whether the way you have presented them is clear to the reader. The best way to tackle this is to read aloud (maybe not on the library third floor – but at home, or to a friend) to make sure that it makes sense. By changing the way you read your own work, you will notice things that you would have missed previously. If it doesn’t make sense, or you would not contribute this idea in a seminar then it is time to either re-word or scrap it. (Be brutal.)

2. Grammar – whether you love it or hate it, grammar is a crucial part to any form of writing but especially within the academic world. While the first recommendation will always be to familiarise yourself with grammar rules, it is not always realistic – especially when its assignment season! There are plenty of tools to help you get acquainted with these pesky rules, the most accessible at any time of the day is online grammar guides. While googling ‘is it a semi-colon or a comma?’ may help you temporarily it is not a permanent fix and can often disrupt writing flow. Use a guide that breaks it down step-by-step, but one from an academic source (universities, recognisable websites from classes etc.). As tempting as it may be AVOID AI generated editors – they may do the work for you, but not always in the correct way (Not to mention the risk of an academic offence – remember you’re the one getting a degree, not your computer!).  As with academic tone, by reading your work aloud it will help you identify grammar mistakes, for instance if you are running out of breath you definitely need a comma! For more tricky issues, come and see us in Writing Development!

3. ‘Easy Reading’ – while this isn’t marked like academic argument and grammar, the way your work reads to the marker makes a massive difference in terms of how generous your marks are. This is mainly because if an assignment reads well, it is easy to identify what the student is saying. Well, what does ‘reads well’ or ‘easy reading’ really mean? There is no distinct way to define this, but essentially you want to make sure your work reads smoothly, with no clunky sentences, random capital letters or awkward spacing. This also includes following layout guides in your subject handbook. Fortunately, if you have taken the time to edit academic tone and grammar, this should naturally fall into place. The final stage of editing is to be able to read through and/or read aloud your assignment without having to pause due to awkward phrasing or clunky sentences. My top tip in this stage is to print your work and read it from paper rather than a screen – our eyes become adjusted to the laptop so much that sometimes they are unable to identify the mistakes that we spot on paper (our default settings!).

By following this step-to-step, and giving your work the editing it deserves, you should find that you will naturally benefit from a reduced word count, higher quality writing and clearer ideas which in turn generate higher marks. However, in order to get the most out of editing, you must factor in time to your writing process. Once you have finished writing your assignment, don’t look at it until the following day so you can then read it with fresh eyes. By not allowing enough time, you are not allowing yourself to edit properly – because if not properly, why edit at all?

Teaching the therapeutic relationship

It is, perhaps, not talked about much in academic circles how much we learn from students: what they teach us in a variety of ways and support the staff-student experience is, indeed, underrated. Yet during the Covid-19 pandemic when we picked up our newly acquired laptops and headed home for an uncertain future, when teaching online was a relatively unknown phenomenon and MS Teams was (virtually – pun intended) unheard of, I realised this crucial interrelationship.  At the start of the pandemic (almost) everyone struggled with MS Teams and Wi-Fi connection. Yet Teams slowly became liberating. It was a highly flexible, convenient, responsive solution to not being on campus. On the other hand, it formalised the working day. Gone, it seemed, were the informal ad-hoc get together meetings with colleagues; ushering in a new code of conduct where meetings could take place in an instant. How would I ever sound genuine talking to a screen? Sometimes we would present to hundreds of students without seeing any of them.

One of the major obstacles to begin with was to sound like you are in a real classroom talking to real people. In other words, making the virtual classroom an authentic place of learning. Can this authenticity be achieved in a virtual world and the subtleties of an-person meeting be replicated? It took a while to realise, but student nurses came up with the answer – meeting them via Teams taught me a lot about the softer side of teaching. When writing their assignments they often refer to the NICE guidelines and one of its guiding principles – the therapeutic relationship (NMC, 2018). They taught me how to teach online. It was a revelation to learn how one of the central practices of the nursing profession could help me teach: a door had been opened into a new perception of myself and my tutoring role. I was about to apply the nursing code of conduct in teaching.

Though it may be little discussed, students educating tutors is fundamental. The qualities such as being authentic, trustworthy, approachable and honesty lends itself to a 1-1 setting (Wright, 2021). Why is the therapeutic relationship, and more broadly the principles of nursing, so key in underpinning the tutor-student relationship? It empowers the student to carry out their studies. They believe they are being listened to – not just another student writing an assignment – but as an aspiring individual wishing to succeed in their studies. It individualises the conversation, adding value to the meeting. Such a rapport makes them believe in themselves, ultimately giving them empowerment. The therapeutic relationship becoming an empowering tool remains one of the core elements of the tutor-student relationship, particularly in the digital age when humans and technology are increasingly blended, and an authentic experience is sought and thereby defined.

References

Nursing and Midwifery Council. (2018). The Code: Professional standards of practice and behaviour for nurses, midwives and nursing associates. Available from: The Code (nmc.org.uk) [Accessed 13th February 2024]

Royal College of Nursing. (2024). Definitions and principles of nursing. Available from: Definition and Principles of Nursing | Royal College of Nursing (rcn.org.uk) [Accessed 13th February 2024].

Wright, K. M. (2021). Exploring the therapeutic relationship in nursing. Mental Health Practice. 24(5): 34-41. Available from: Exploring the therapeutic relationship in nursing theory and practice (rcni.com) [Accessed 13th February 2024].