The Writing Consultation:
Developing Sustainable
Writing BehaviourRowena MurrayUniversity of
Strathclyder.e.g.murray@stra
th.ac.uk
The problem
Academics must write for publication, but find it difficult to make time to do so.
Even when ‘permission’ is given for writing in the workplace, other tasks have priority.
Even when skills and behaviours are developed, they are difficult to sustain (Murray & Newton, 2008).
The Exercise Consultation
1-to-1 motivational interviewAims to change prioritiesAligns priorities with personal values
Widely used in health promotion
Uses goal setting, balancing advantages and disadvantages of different courses of action and social support to initiate behaviour change.
The Writing Consultation
1-to-1 interviews, pairs of academics
Focused on writing goalsReviewing barriers to achieving goals
Developing strategies for overcoming them
Mutual peer supportProved workable with academics in informal trials (e.g. at end of retreat)
Published journal article
Aims of the Nuffield study
To implement and evaluate the writing consultation
To answer 2 questions:1. Does taking part in a writing
consultation initiate change in writing behaviour leading to prioritisation of writing?
2. Does it increase motivation to write?
Methods
14 (>13) academics who attended either/both writer’s group & writer’s retreat.
Met every 2 weeks in pairs for period of 8 weeks (time commitment of 4 hours).
Used the Writing Consultation template. 30-minute interviews by external researcher.
Ethical approval from the University. Interviews transcribed verbatim and checked.
Analysis for core constructs: stages of change, decisional balance, goal setting, social support.
Findings: stages of change & decisional balance• Both seen as useful at 1st meeting, but repetitive at subsequent meetings, as position of writing was unlikely to change in such a short period.
• Decisional balance useful for discussing pros and cons of writing and not writing: ‘a good outlet for discussion on the position of writing’; ‘helpful to strengthen my values and beliefs about writing’.
Findings:goal setting & social support
Setting and monitoring goals with others generated sense of achievement: ‘being able to meet these goals put [me] in a better place, and that has a knock-on effect’; ‘lost that constant feeling of low grade failure’.
Useful to discuss barriers to achieving goals and ways of overcoming them.
Main reported benefit was social support: ‘you know that the fears you have … you are not alone’.
Conclusions: behaviour change
Behaviour change leads to prioritising writing.
Writing consultation raises awareness of importance of goal setting for writing in the time that we have.
Study revealed limited awareness that unrealistic goals lead to failure.
Setting goals and achieving them feels good and is highly motivating.
Writing goals are more likely to be achieved out of offices.
Issues
Those in a structured supervision process reported less behaviour change.
A small minority saw the approach as managerialist.
The concept of behaviour change initially seemed alien, as did stages of change model.
Some confused ‘goals’ and ‘actions’. This confusion and perception of repetition suggest concepts are not yet fully adopted.
References
Bandura, A (1997) Self-efficacy: The Exercise of Control. New York: Freeman.
Loughlan, C & Mutrie, N (1995) Conducting an exercise consultation: guidelines for health professionals, Journal of the Institute of Health Education, 33: 78-82.
Miller, WR & Rollnick, S (2002) Motivational interviewing: Preparing People for Change, 2nd edn. London: Guildford Press
References
Murray, R & Moore, S (2006) The Handbook of Academic Writing: A Fresh Approach. Maidenhead: Open University Press-McGraw-Hill.
Murray, R & Newton, M (2008) Facilitating writing for publication, Physiotherapy, 94: 29-34.
Murray, R, Thow, M, Moore, S & Murphy, M (2008) The writing consultation: Developing academic writing practices, Journal of Further and Higher Education, 32(2): 119-128.
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