RAPPORT ISSUE 5 | Page 47

RAPPORT Issue 5 (August 2020) It is also possible that the student wasn’t particularly motivated and/or may not have wanted to work on placement. (Portfolio 1, CS1) Further, being on placement may not be the experience students expect and support may be needed for this transition. Being able to provide developmental support on placement appears to be an important part of the AA role, and again this activity needs to be supported by the university: she was worried about the nature and scope of the work she was undertaking. (Portfolio 1, CS1) I also identify a lack of information about student profiles which would be useful. I asked student B what her grades were so far and rely on this as a base for my academic advice. (Portfolio 12, CS2) Disseminating best practice to develop AA support resources is an obvious ‘win’ for any university. For example, within the case studies drawn upon here, AAs describe using ‘actions plans’ to improve the support they offer to students. This structured approach facilitates student progress as the student can draw upon this support outside of formal contact with their AA: useful for us to devise an action plan outlining her learning needs and how she might achieve these…a plan of focused reading and some shadowing. (Portfolio 8, CS2) After our meeting, the student decided to continue with the semester at the host university and persist on achieving some goals we set in order to improve her situation. (Portfolio 15, CS3) In all the case studies being explored here an underlying theme is that each discussed how placement support took much time and effort to be able to deliver a continuing relationship and appropriate, timely support that has a positive impact upon student outcomes: We agreed to meet regularly over the summer until she found her placement. (Portfolio 12, CS 2) I now make a concerted attempt to keep these lines of communication open with regular emails and informal contact. (Portfolio 8, CS 3) We both agreed to keep in contact about her ongoing experience…She was very grateful for the intervention and ongoing support…That she didn’t leave and that she saw improvements …demonstrates that my input impacted positively on her. (Portfolio 1, CS1) With ever greater numbers of students on placement it is important to recognise and resource this maintain quality of provision: widening access combined with increasing demands on academics can influence the time and quality of academic tutoring. (Portfolio 8, CS3) Conclusion This brief exploration of AA case studies has outlined some of the variety and complexity of issues that students, supervisors, and AAs themselves are experiencing in the placement process. It is clear, that for AAs, in addition to the issues that students face on campus, being in the workplace brings extra concerns and extra workload. Given the uncertainty about the challenges awaiting the AA during visits, prior preparation is 46