Lessening sensitivity: student experiences of teaching and learning sensitive issues

Despite growing interest in learning and teaching as emotional activities, there is still very little research on experiences of sensitive issues. Using qualitative data from students from a range of social science disciplines, this study investigates student's experiences. The paper highlights how, although they found it difficult and distressing at times, the students all valued being able to explore sensitive issues during their studies. The paper argues that it is though repeated exposure to sensitive issues within the classroom that the students became more comfortable with the issues. This process of lessening sensitivity is an important part of the emotional journey through higher education. It will argue that good student experiences need not always be positive emotions and that sensitive issues should be seen as an important part of transformational education.

[1]  D. O’Byrne The Places and Spaces of Human Rights Education , 2014 .

[2]  J. Hobson,et al.  Reframing teaching relationships: from student-centred to subject-centred learning , 2013 .

[3]  Gurnam Singh,et al.  Sat-Nav Education: A Means to an End or an End to Meaning? , 2013 .

[4]  Julie Cotter,et al.  Beyond the first‐year experience: the impact on attrition of student experiences throughout undergraduate degree studies in six diverse universities , 2011 .

[5]  Sarah S. Amsler,et al.  From ‘therapeutic’ to political education: the centrality of affective sensibility in critical pedagogy , 2011 .

[6]  P. Lowe,et al.  Teaching and Learning Sensitive Topics , 2010 .

[7]  Shirin Housee ‘To veil or not to veil’: students speak out against Islam(ophobia) in class , 2010 .

[8]  Jennifer Nixon,et al.  Teaching race in social work education , 2010 .

[9]  B. Lichtenstein Sensitive issues in the classroom: teaching about HIV in the American Deep South , 2010 .

[10]  Tara N. Richards,et al.  ‘But I’m not a counsellor’: The nature of role strain experienced by female professors when a student discloses sexual assault and intimate partner violence , 2010 .

[11]  S. Gill,et al.  ’How did it go?’ Negotiating race, racialisation and identity when teaching issues of race and equality in HE , 2010 .

[12]  V. Hey,et al.  Gender/ed discourses and emotional sub-texts: theorising emotion in UK higher education , 2009 .

[13]  H. Christie Emotional journeys: young people and transitions to university , 2009 .

[14]  V. Braun,et al.  Editors' Introduction: Is the Personal Pedagogical? Sexualities and Genders in the Higher Education Classroom , 2009 .

[15]  Shirin Housee Should ethnicity matter when teaching about ‘race’ and racism in the classroom? , 2008 .

[16]  V. McCune,et al.  ‘A real rollercoaster of confidence and emotions’: learning to be a university student , 2008 .

[17]  V. Braun,et al.  Using thematic analysis in psychology , 2006 .

[18]  Tamsin Haggis,et al.  Meaning, identity and ‘motivation’: expanding what matters in understanding learning in higher education? , 2004 .

[19]  Sue Clegg,et al.  Independent inquiry and the undergraduate dissertation: perceptions and experiences of final‐year social science students , 2004 .

[20]  B. Hooks Teaching Community: A Pedagogy of Hope , 2003 .

[21]  Kristi Johansen,et al.  Teaching to Transgress , 1997 .

[22]  On the Spirit of Patriotism : Challenges of a “ Pedagogy of Discomfort , 2022 .