RAPPORT ISSUE 5 | Page 75

RAPPORT Issue 5 (August 2020) their Diploma, such students receive credit for the first year at an Australian university and continue their undergraduate degree from the second year. I chose Diploma students to be my participants as, according to Marshall (1996), in purposive sampling, "the researcher actively selects the most productive sample to answer the research question" (p. 523). Diploma students would be educationally mature enough to understand the importance of action planning, self-directed learning, and reflective practice. In terms of numbers, they represented a substantial proportion of the fifteen studying at this level, thereby providing grounds for suggesting some generalizability in terms of results. The two teachers, who volunteered from a pool of thirty, had direct knowledge of the Individual Learning Plan. Both were willing to take part in this study by following the suggested intervention and being interviewed twice. They were interviewed before the first tutorial meeting in week 1 to capture their previous experience with completing ILP, and again in week 16 to capture their feedback on the implementation of the tutorial meetings and the use of ILP during these meetings to record students' progress. In Week 1, students were requested by a tutorial teacher to meet at an allocated time to discuss and complete their Individual Learning Plan. The average time spent with each student individually during the tutorial session was between fifteen and twenty minutes for T1 and ten to fifteen minutes for T2. After the first meeting, I sent the students a link to an anonymous online survey that captured their thoughts about the initial tutorial meeting, where they completed the Individual Learning Plan with the teacher and discussed any early signs of concerns. Students were interviewed in week 16 of an 18-week semester. I asked questions related to the individual tutorial meetings they had across the semester. All 13 students completed the survey and attended the interview. Findings related to the value of the tutorial meetings Before the first tutorial meeting, the teachers were asked for their thoughts on the likely value of such meetings: I think we need to talk to students on one to one basis to see how they are coping so far in order to make sure they aren't behind in any way. By doing so, we can identify issues that might affect their study and help them with strategies to stay on track. This will also allow the students to see any obstacles in their way that interrupt their study. [T1] …a chance to look at the individual student and ask them how you learn. That way, we get the information from them; they then reflect on how they learn themselves. Then we can develop a learning habit with them, which helps them through their life. [T2] In the second interview after the tutorial meetings, both teachers indicated the importance of having individual sessions based on the feedback they received from students: Students found it good that we initiated the meetings, and they were happy to have more sessions. [T1] Students mentioned that they would prefer more follow-ups/meetings to discuss their progress and ensure 74