posted on 2025-05-09, 00:36authored byCaroline Henderson-Brooks
Assessment feedback is increasingly a central part of pedagogy, with the academic benefits and affectual impact on students well described in scholarly literature. There is, however, little scholarly recognition of the affectual impact on markers; for this, one must turn to more general writing, for example, personal teacher blogs. To explore the issue from a scholarly perspective, this paper discusses the affective impact of marking on enabling educators; who are deeply committed to the personal journeys of their students and for whom marking often involves careful and extensive feedback on assignments intended to drive student learning and help them improve their academic skills in preparation for undergraduate studies. This paper introduces an autoethnographic reflection on the marking experiences of one enabling educator. This reflection is then mapped to categories of identified student emotions to provide an insight into the emotional labour of marking itself, separate to the general labour of teaching and supporting students in widening participation. It shows that marking is more than an academic task which has emotional impacts on students (both positive and negative), but a task that also emotionally impacts markers themselves. By making this emotional labour visible within a ‘pedagogy of care’, we can continue to identify ways to support enabling educators and address workload policy for this central dimension of academic work.
History
Journal title
Access: Critical explorations of equity in higher education
Volume
8
Issue
Access: Critical explorations of equity in higher education , 1
Pagination
110-121
Publisher
University of Newcastle
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
College of Human and Social Futures
School
Centre of Excellence for Equity in Higher Education (CEEHE)
Rights statement
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0