"omg same"

Frances M. Morris
{"title":"\"omg same\"","authors":"Frances M. Morris","doi":"10.31273/jppp.vol2.2022.1225","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Literature on education at all levels, from early-years to postgraduate, highlights the role of positive relationships in effective teaching. My experience of teaching undergraduates as a PGR has stressed this emphatically, especially since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The impacts of what many students know as “the Rona” are twofold: not only has undergraduate mental health suffered through the uncertainty and isolation of the recent years (e.g. Appleby et al., 2022; Catling et al., 2022), but the already-overwhelming workload of the academic staff primarily responsible for the education and welfare of students swelled during the transition to online teaching. Overcommitting staff even further results in reduced scope for relationship-building with students, in terms of both time availability and emotional capacity. PGR teachers, by comparison, have more flexibility and freedom to connect with undergraduates directly and in smaller groups, and the role of building relationships to support learning can fall to them.  \nIn this reflective account, I consider how my role as a tutor of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Maths (STEM) subjects for interdisciplinary undergraduate students allowed me to create an encouraging space for them to build relationships with me and each other. I found that near-peer teaching and the mutual trauma of studenthood in the pandemic created a strong connection where I was able to hear the students’ worries and concerns, not simply about the calculus I taught but regarding their entire course structure, systemic biases affecting their experience of their degrees, and the approach of the university as a whole. ","PeriodicalId":142586,"journal":{"name":"Journal of PGR Pedagogic Practice","volume":"35 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of PGR Pedagogic Practice","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.31273/jppp.vol2.2022.1225","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Literature on education at all levels, from early-years to postgraduate, highlights the role of positive relationships in effective teaching. My experience of teaching undergraduates as a PGR has stressed this emphatically, especially since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The impacts of what many students know as “the Rona” are twofold: not only has undergraduate mental health suffered through the uncertainty and isolation of the recent years (e.g. Appleby et al., 2022; Catling et al., 2022), but the already-overwhelming workload of the academic staff primarily responsible for the education and welfare of students swelled during the transition to online teaching. Overcommitting staff even further results in reduced scope for relationship-building with students, in terms of both time availability and emotional capacity. PGR teachers, by comparison, have more flexibility and freedom to connect with undergraduates directly and in smaller groups, and the role of building relationships to support learning can fall to them.  In this reflective account, I consider how my role as a tutor of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Maths (STEM) subjects for interdisciplinary undergraduate students allowed me to create an encouraging space for them to build relationships with me and each other. I found that near-peer teaching and the mutual trauma of studenthood in the pandemic created a strong connection where I was able to hear the students’ worries and concerns, not simply about the calculus I taught but regarding their entire course structure, systemic biases affecting their experience of their degrees, and the approach of the university as a whole. 
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“omg”
关于各级教育的文献,从早期教育到研究生教育,都强调了积极关系在有效教学中的作用。我作为PGR教授本科生的经历特别强调了这一点,特别是自COVID-19大流行开始以来。许多学生所知的“罗纳”的影响是双重的:不仅大学生的心理健康受到近年来不确定性和孤立的影响(例如Appleby等人,2022;Catling et al., 2022),但在向在线教学过渡期间,主要负责学生教育和福利的学术人员已经不堪重负的工作量进一步增加。过多的工作人员甚至会进一步减少与学生建立关系的范围,无论是在时间可用性还是情感能力方面。相比之下,PGR教师有更大的灵活性和自由,可以直接和更小的小组与本科生联系,建立关系以支持学习的角色可以落在他们身上。在这篇反思性的文章中,我思考了我作为跨学科本科生的科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)学科导师的角色如何让我为他们创造一个鼓舞人心的空间,让他们与我和彼此建立关系。我发现,同侪教学和学生在大流行期间的共同创伤创造了一种强烈的联系,在这种联系中,我能够听到学生们的担忧和担忧,不仅仅是关于我教的微积分,而是关于他们的整个课程结构,影响他们学位经历的系统性偏见,以及整个大学的方法。
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