RAPPORT ISSUE 5 | Page 60

RAPPORT Issue 5 (August 2020) may be conflated (see for example Andrews & Wallis 1999); • the limited opportunities for training and development in coaching and mentoring approaches for staff; • the provision of central support services in areas such as academic writing/academic skills development as a discrete provider of coaching (solutions)-related services centred upon the improvement of academic performance in particular; and: • given the emphasis upon learning - to the perceived relevance of specific coaching relationships in contexts where specific professional routeways and ‘fitness to practice’ requirements are not involved or – for mentoring - as an element in contexts where ‘workplace mentors’ already exist (in teacher or nurse education, for example). 16 It is therefore not surprising that the evidence in our overall Portfolio sample group centred more upon engagement with students via single interventions, crisis situations and elements of student referral to professional support services. As testimony from one Portfolio emphasises, their University: … offers 3 different models which allows for diversity across faculties and even within departments …. identifies three major strands of pastoral support, academic advice and careers/placement and allows for a reactive approach to problems and issues, via sign posting when the students need professional services. This unfortunately doesn’t allow for a nurturing or coaching role, therefore impacting on the ability to develop collaborative and proactive relationship with the students. (Portfolio 23) One final point remains, which the limited sample on which this paper is based cannot answer but which remains of central importance; issues of ‘power’ and ‘control’ in such coaching and mentoring relationships (see e.g. Garvey et al, op. cit., chapter 7). From one perspective, the practices of coaching (and mentoring) may consciously and explicitly disrupt or shift the dynamic away from the tutor as ‘problem solver’ toward an emphasis on the student as the active agent in the process, providing support and scaffolding which enable tutees to develop different ways of seeing the situation and/or new ways of addressing issues and decision taking. From another, notwithstanding the focus upon dialogue and learner ownership, the tutor remains in control of the process (see e.g. Clutterbuck 1998: 8) and the hierarchical power difference between tutor and tutee is reinforced. Indeed, one may speculate that – in contexts where tutorial time is limited – an emphasis upon a solutions-focused approach may threaten to drive out the relationship building elements, as the quotation immediately above suggests. But the wider applicability of that view, alongside the recognition of the strengths and limitations of coaching and mentoring approaches in UK HE settings are themselves questions for further exploration. 16 This is clearly different from the discussion here about coaching and mentoring within the context of personal tutoring and student support and guidance. 59