RAPPORT ISSUE 5 | Page 63

RAPPORT Issue 5 (August 2020) The International Journal for Recording Achievement, Planning and Portfolios Organisation, leadership, support and development in personal tutoring: Abstract an attempt to address the challenges. Ricky Lowes Senior Personal Tutor Plymouth Business School, University of Plymouth This chapter explores the views, challenges and frustrations of those who are have a role in organising and leading personal tutoring at the local level. The role may be a set institutional role, such as senior tutor, or it may be a temporary project leadership role. Those in these roles attempt to support colleagues and guide the direction of personal tutoring developments, and as such are an important element in maintaining and developing personal tutoring systems in universities and colleges The leadership of personal tutoring is a generally neglected area in both policy and research, and the roles, whether permanent or transitory, lack recognition and reward. The chapter provides examples of different approaches and initiatives taken by those with a leading role in tutoring and reports the varying measures of success they encountered. Introduction and overview There is scant research enquiring into the leadership and management of personal tutoring systems, although Neville (2007) draws on a research study carried out at Worcester to set out institutional responsibilities with regard to personal tutoring. An effective personal tutoring system that provides all students with an optimal experience should be grounded in a clear vision of what that experience should be, along with effective deployment and management of people and resources. The aim must be to provide tutoring which is useful, equitable, and sustainable. There are a number of prerequisites needed for this to happen, and, at this point in the history of personal tutoring in the UK, not all institutions will have all of them in place. 62