Empty citations?
This article was originally posted at the beginning of 2012, but its content remains relevant. This is perhaps a good time to run the article again given that many university staff are now busy marking exactly the sort of assessment this post discusses. By Sam Graham Last week, I had lots of students coming in […]
Want to remember? Don’t skim 100 times
The LSU blog turns 1 year old this month. So far we’ve posted over 90 articles, reached over 18,000 viewers and have built our followers to over 300 in 93 countries. Thanks for reading! In honor of this, we are going back to one of our first articles published on this blog – one from […]
Carrying Your Weight: Academic Style
By Sam Graham, LSU
In the LSU, we often help students with their essays, which is much the same as coaching weightlifting.
We refine students’ writing techniques so they can express their ideas in the clearest, most convincing way possible. We don’t write the essays for them, though.
Weightlifting coaches refine lifters’ lifting techniques so they can lift the most weight possible. They don’t lift the weights for them, though.
Reading A Theoretical Approach to the Coach’s Cue, I see that we face a lot of the same challenges as weightlifting coaches.

Weightlifting at the Maccabiah Village, from the Government Press Office (Israel), under Creative Commons license
Lost in translation
In the weight room
What a lifter hears might be quite different from what their coach says because they have different ideas, or models, of an ideal lift. The coach provides cues based on their model, formed by their education and experience as a lifter. The lifter has their own model, and cues are interpreted under this model. Where the models differ, a cue might mean something quite different. Sometimes, past training of the lifter can make their model quite different from the coach’s, and this can interfere with the coach’s cues.
In the LSU
Similarly, what a student hears might be quite different from what their advisor says because they have different models of an ideal essay. Also similar, past education can interfere with the advisor’s cues. With a less-than-ideal background in academic English or with academic experience only in a different tradition – common in Vietnam – other conceptions of academic writing can interfere with their understanding of our advice. On the other hand, If they’ve had good English teachers, this makes our job easy because we can provide short cues and they know what we’re suggesting (“Where’s the topic sentence?”).
Know your student/lifter
In the weight room
As a weightlifting coach and a lifter build a relationship, the coach develops an understanding of what the lifter understands. Meanwhile, the lifter’s lifting model aligns with the coach’s model, allowing them to more quickly and even reflexively understand each other.
In the LSU
I still see students I taught in the English programmes, where I worked before moving to the LSU. Knowing their background means I know the wider context of their writing issues. They also know what to look for in their writing if I say simply “Explanation?” and don’t need a full explanation of the importance of explicitly explaining the connection between evidence and a contention.
Speak softly and carry a big stick. Or don’t. It depends.
In the weight room
Some lifters like a calm space, others macho chest bumping. Some like loud, sharp pointers, while others prefer quiet, technical pointers.
In the LSU
The ‘treatment’ for the same issue, and how I deliver it, is rarely the same for students I know.
Everything we see is a perspective, not the truth.
In the weight room
The coach and the lifter’s perspective is quite different. The coach watches while the lifter feels the weight. A good coach will use their own experience as a lifter to make cues that make sense from the perspective of being under a weight. Telling the lifter what the outcome should look like won’t always work since the feeling of the weight is far more immediate. Getting them to make small changes can help ‘trick’ the lifter into making far bigger ones.
In the LSU
It’s also easy to forget that our view as an advisor is quite different from the student’s. Without a cloud of facts from the research, it is easy to see how arguments might be rearranged or tightened. For the student, there are far more moving parts – both in the essay and in their notes – to consider.
We can also help our students write far better essays with small tricks. For example, I’ve had success getting students to link their supporting arguments to their thesis – a quite difficult concept – by telling them to simply make sure that the keywords from their thesis statements are in each paragraph. It’s easy to do this, but difficult for them to do it without linking the ideas.
…
The principles here are, I think, universal. I can’t think of teaching contexts where the following won’t make for better teaching and learning:
- Know how your students see themselves
- Know how your students see their work
- Know how your students see you
- Perspective matters
- Small changes lead to big changes
- Prioritise what needs to be changed
- Speak their language
- It isn’t just what you say, it’s how you say it.
In Praise of Crazy Teachers
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By Sam Graham, LSU Two assumptions guide how I see others: we’re all fundamentally good and a wee bit crazy. Two assumptions guide how I see teaching: we should all be good and a wee bit crazy. It’s easy to see how being good – ethical – helps your teaching. Of course we should […]
Seven things I wish I knew at uni
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By Sam Graham, LSU Regrets, I’ve had a few. But then again, too few to mention. Actually, not too few. Seven, to be precise. Seven things that I wish I could go back in time and tell my 18 year old self about how to do better at uni. Study stuff 1. Start with Wikipedia […]
Slow Thinking in a Fast World
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By Sam Graham, LSU Waiting for a friend? Get out your phone, check Facebook. Cooking dinner? Turn on the TV. Heading to the gym? Download a podcast. Settling down to work? Good luck, here’s another email. We’re surrounded by stimulation and always have something to do. With a smart phone in our pocket, we have […]
It is OK to be confused
By Sam Graham, LSU This is Sam’s article that appeared in Thanh Nien News and Vietweek News on 7/12/2012. University can be a scary place. There are constant deadlines and never any time to rest and apply what you have already learned. Each class brings new subject material or a new assignment, always pushing the boundaries of knowledge. New ideas […]
An alternative education
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By Sam Graham, LSU My most profound learning was experience was not in a university classroom. Instead, I was sitting eyes closed, with little sense of the passing time, in pain. There were no concrete outcomes from the course and nothing keeping me there. The teacher’s eyes were closed too. This was a Vipassana meditation […]
What is the point of an education?
This is Sam’s article that appeared in Thanh Nien News and Vietweek on 1/6/2012. By Sam Graham, LSU I have a job offer for you. It is a really good one with some nice perks. You get to read all sorts of books and spend hours each week debating with your co-workers. Productivity is optional, so long as […]
Want to remember? Don’t skim 100 times
By Sam Graham
I recently came across this nice blog post on how trying to memorize something really doesn’t improve your ability to actually remember it.
The key factor is thinking about it deeply.
A 1973 study (referenced on the blog) looked at two factors: shallow and deep processing, and intention and no intention to remember.
Half of the study’s participants were asked to simply check which words and an ‘e’ or ‘g’ in them (shallow processing), and the other half were told to rate how pleasant the word was to them (deep processing). Half of each group were told that they would be quizzed later on what the words were, the other half weren’t.
Those who rated how pleasant the words were remembered far more than those who identified the ‘e’s or ‘g’s. Those who knew there was a test coming remembered on a few more than those who didn’t.
The key implication for us in the LSU and RMIT is this:
If you are a student the implication of this study and those like it is clear : don’t stress yourself with revision where you read and re-read textbooks and course notes. You’ll remember better (and understand much better) if you try and re-organise the material you’ve been given in your own way.
The blog also touches on implications for how information is presented to students (not too organised or they won’t thinking deeply!) and whether it’s reasonable for students to remember information from lectures.






