Guidance aims to enhance the student’s agency: motivation and ownership in relation to studies, self-reflection in relation to personal knowledge, skills and resources. It is not the supervisor’s duty to do things for the student; instead, their duty is to instruct the student on how to steer their actions. Enhancing agency is closely tied to the student’s objectives, their processes of becoming an expert (and, in a broader sense, the development of their identity) and, through them, the student’s well-being and motivation to study.
The student’s agency, motivation to study and their well-being, as well as their becoming an expert, requires the student to be able to understand the connection between their studies and the rest of their life career: what interests them in their studies, what they strive for through their studies, what significance they studies have in the context of their life. Here, the supervisor can be of help by allowing the world outside academia to become part of the guidance encounter.
Studying also includes many kinds of thoughts and emotions. For instance, learning new things often leads students to feeling uncertain whether they are adequately capable or learning well enough. The uncertainty can be stressful and can create additional challenges for the students. Students are prone to comparing themselves to an ideal version of a student, and they read success stories on social media. The comparison can make the student feel like a failure or somehow abnormal even when the challenges related to the student’s studies are ordinary and expected. This is why guidance should normalise the challenges related to studying.
The supervisor must be ready to listen and to receive whatever the student wants to tell them about their situation, but they must not become burdened by the student’s stories.
Tools for guidance
It is important that the supervisor is aware that there is no right way to study and that everyone has different ability to study. Study ability is a combination of several interconnected factors. Exploring the study ability model with the student can help to clarify this. The student can be encouraged to consider what areas they are doing well and where they need support:
- In terms of study skills and personal resources, the student can reflect with the supervisor on where they can get help and how they themselves can contribute to their situation.
- When discussing the learning environment or teaching and guidance, it is important that the supervisor listens to the student's feedback and considers what needs to be done to ensure that the study progress is not hindered.
The Guidance Compass offers information about the other operators providing students with guidance at the University and in which cases a student can be referred to them.
The instruction page concerning challenging guidance situations offers support for how to examine your own limits, and practical instructions for challenging guidance situations.
Professional benevolence as a tool and objective of guidance
One of the most important characteristics of a supervisor is their so-called professional benevolence – their strive for respectful, empathetic and ethical interaction in which the parties feel accepted, respected and safe as they are. Seeing other people, listening to them, and conversing with them are important and valuable elements of guidance.
Professional benevolence does not mean that the supervisor should resolve the student’s issues for them. The supervisor should not try to act as a therapist, psychologist, career counsellor, priest, labour services expert, immigration officer or anything else not included in the job description of a supervisor.
The key elements in guidance based on professional benevolence are
- creating a safe environment and giving the student time to examine the things occupying their mind
- allowing the world and life outside of studies to become a natural part of the conversation
- striving to help the student progress in their contemplations by, for example, listening to them, asking them questions, and examining the matter with them.