Emotional labour within the personal tutor role - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Emotional labour within the personal tutor role

Description:

... feelings relating to study (anger, disappointment, grief, frustration, elation) ... such as care, concern, protection, responsibility, empathy and frustration ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:211
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: iw62
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Emotional labour within the personal tutor role


1
Emotional labour within the personal tutor role
  • Angela Williams
  • Lecturer
  • Department of Nursing
  • School of Health Science

2
AIM
  • To identify and discuss emotional labour within
    the personal tutor role

3
Structure
  • Introduction Background
  • Organisational structure and process
  • Emotional labour within the Personal Tutor role
  • Implications

4
Introduction background
  • Implications of widening access to higher
    education
  • Nature of students (diversity in age, gender,
    culture, qualifications, experience,
    expectations, commitments)
  • Increased numbers of students
  • Challenge is to address the needs of large
    numbers of students with varying needs in a
    personalised way

5
Organisational structure and process
  • Significant emphasis and value is placed on the
    personal tutor role within Swansea University and
    within the School of Health Science

6
Organisational structure and process
  • Consistent, branch specific personal tutoring
    throughout the programme
  • Personal tutor time is mandatory, structured and
    supportive in purpose
  • Personal tutor role incorporates group reflection
    with personal tutor students following each
    clinical placement

7
Emotional Labour (Hochschild 1983)
  • Based on flight attendants, emotional labour
    described as,
  • the induction or suppression of feeling in order
    to sustain an outward appearance that produces in
    others a sense of being cared for in a convivial
    safe place (p7)

8
Work requiring emotional labour (Hochschild 1983)
  • Face or voice contact with the public
  • Requires the worker to produce an emotional
    response in another e.g. gratitude
  • Enables the employer through training to exercise
    a degree of control of employees emotional
    activities

9
  • James (1989) emotional labour
  • labour involved in dealing with other peoples
    feelings, a core component of which is the
    regulation of emotions (p15)

10
Key features of emotional labour (James 1992)
  • Hard work
  • Regulation and management of feeling
  • Action and reaction
  • Doing and being
  • Demanding, skilled work
  • Personal exchange
  • Can be used for commercial purposes
  • A pretence
  • Response to common situations
  • Subject to gender discussions

11
James (1989)
  • Emotional labour is hard work and can be
    sorrowful and difficult. It demands that the
    labourer gives personal attention which means
    they must give something of themselves, not just
    a formulaic response (p18)

12
Emotional labour within the personal tutor role
  • Working with our emotions in dealing with
    students emotions
  • Dealing with students feelings relating to study
    (anger, disappointment, grief, frustration,
    elation)
  • Dealing with students problems (mental/physical
    illness, isolation, abuse, bereavement, divorce,
    relationship problems)

13
Emotional labour within personal tutor role
  • Working with our emotions
  • Students who are difficult to manage
    (demanding, lack commitment, reluctant to take
    responsibility - may be unpopular)
  • Relationship has potential for attachment and
    emotional involvement (Menzies 1960)
  • Personal tutors can experience a range of
    feelings such as care, concern, protection,
    responsibility, empathy and frustration
  • These feelings have to be managed

14
Implications of emotional labour
  • Smith (1992) highlighted the importance of
  • supportive environment
  • effective leadership
  • role modelling and
  • valuing of emotion work
  • as crucial for student nurses to care for
    patients.

15
Support for personal tutors
  • Needs to be recognised and supported through
    formal and informal organisational mechanisms
    (e.g. clinical supervision, mentorship)

16
Research
  • Research is crucial to illuminate the facets of
    emotional labour specifically within the personal
    tutor role

17
References
  • Hoschild A.R (1983) The managed heart
    commercialisation of human feeling, Berkeley,
    University of California Press
  • James N. (1992) Care organisation physical
    labour emotional labour, Sociology of health
    and illness, 14 (4) 489-509
  • James N. (1989) Emotional labour skill and work
    in the social regulation of feelings,
    Sociological Review, 37, 15-42
  • Smith P. (1992) The Emotional Labour of Nursing,
    London, Macmillan

18
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com