RAPPORT ISSUE 5 | Page 25

RAPPORT Issue 5 (August 2020) actually had the goal to be the best supporters they can be.’ Nadler & Simerly (2006) suggest that more attention is needed in training personal tutors to know how to listen better if the benefits are to be truly reaped. Listening within the personal tutor relationship, it is argued here, can lead to both individual and institutional improvements and is therefore something that needs to be encouraged. Listening, in the context of personal tutoring, needs to ensure that personal tutors themselves are heard by their institution. Being a personal tutor can be difficult, challenging and exhausting. The institutional benefits of satisfied and 'connected' students is well documented in league tables yet the hard graft that goes into such relationship building with students is perhaps not as fully recognised. Institutions need to take responsibility for the supporting and training of personal tutors. References Bodie, G.D., Vickery, A.J, Cannava, K. & Jones, S.M. (2015) The role of 'active listening' in informal helping conversations: impact on perceptions of listener helpfulness, sensitivity, and supportiveness and discloser emotional improvement. Western Journal of Communication, 79(2): 151-173 Burnside-Lawry, J. (2011) The dark side of stakeholder communication. Stakeholder perceptions of ineffective organisational listening. Australian Journal of Communication, 38(1): 147- 173 Davis, J.S. & Cooper, D.L (2001) Assessing advising style: student perceptions of academic advisors. College Student Affairs Journal, 20(2): 53-63 Drake, J.K. (2011) The role of academic advising in student retention and persistence. About Campus, 16(3): 8- 12 Grey, D. & Osbourne, C. (2018) Perceptions and principles of personal tutoring. Journal of Further and Higher Education Griffiths, S. (2009) Teaching and learning in small groups. In Fry, H. Ketteridge, S. & Marshall, S. (eds.) A Handbook for Teaching & Learning in Higher Education: Enhancing academic practice (3 rd Ed.). Abingdon: Routledge Hester, E.J. (2008) Student evaluation of advising: moving beyond the mean. College Teaching, 56(1): 35-38 Hixenbaugh, P., Pearson, C. & Williams, D. (2006) ‘Student Perspectives in Personal Tutoring: What do students want?’ in Thomas, L. & Hixenbaugh, P. (eds.) Personal Tutoring in Higher Education. London: Institute of Education Press Itzchakov, G. & Kluger, A.N. (2017) The Listening Circle: a simple tool to enhance listening and reduce extremism among employees. Organizational Dynamics, 46: 220-226 Jones, S.M (2011) Supportive Listening. The International Journal of Listening, 25: 85-103 24