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Death of office hours ‘damaging student-tutor relationships’

Amid declining attendances, some scholars see merit in making one-to-one feedback sessions mandatory while others say it is time to ditch historical anomaly

Published on
September 10, 2025
Last updated
September 10, 2025
Dolly Parton acts in a scene from the movie "9 to 5" which was released on 19 December, 1980. To illustrate that the death of office hours could be ‘damaging student-tutor relationships’
Source: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Academics say their office hours?increasingly have no attendees amid growing class sizes, the rise of student part-time work and?widespread use of AI, with their relationships with students being damaged as a result.

While it has long been known that?lecture hall attendance has dwindled?after the pandemic, this trend has bled into other areas of academic life, with students increasingly shunning in-person interactions with staff in favour of late-night emails and?even ChatGPT and AI personal tutors.

David Hitchcock, reader in arts, humanities, media, and creative digital at Canterbury Christ Church University, said that students are attending office hours “far less than even five or six years ago”.

While he believes this is partly a product of the pandemic, he said the trend extends beyond this, adding that today’s students are more likely to email about things previous cohorts would have discussed at office hours.

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He “couldn’t remember” the last time a student independently sought him out?during?office hours to get tutorial support or feedback on work, and “even prompted versions of tutorial feedback see far fewer takers now than they used to”.

Hitchcock said that the decline of the office hour “contributes, to some extent, to the changing, or perhaps the weakening, of the academic-student pedagogical relationship”, and said that “academics are one knowledge ‘authority figure’ among several options now”.

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It was also a loss for student learning and engagement, said Hitchcock, and “sometimes I worry students don’t know what they’re missing, and that we would be better off putting that sort of interaction directly into their timetables and expecting them all to go”.

Evelyn Svingen, assistant professor in criminology at the University of Birmingham, agreed that the trend was a sign of the “fall of interpersonal relationships” between staff and students, which she linked to?growing class sizes amid the financial crisis.

“The more the classrooms grow, the less I feel that students are likely to come, just because it’s becoming less personal,” she said, adding that “it’s a bit sad when you are sat in your office for one and a half hours for no one to come”.

Svingen added that once students do attend their first office hour, they are more likely to come again, but said: “Getting students to come to the first one is quite difficult, and they tend to only come to people that they know personally. It’s quite hard when you’re teaching a big classroom, and obviously it’s really difficult to have this conversation with a student and get to know them.”

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Students are increasingly “apologising” for “taking up my time”, she explained, adding that “students somehow just feel like they’re a burden and they’re not entitled to this time”.?

The lack of office hour attendance is creating issues when it comes to referencing, Svingen?continued, adding: “It’s quite difficult to write a recommendation letter for somebody who you’ve never met.”

Rob Briner, professor of organisational psychology at Queen Mary University of London, said he believes students “don’t see the value” in office hours, and are “voting with their feet”.

“I think a lot of these structures were set up for a different historical period when university wasn’t a kind of mass education. Now it is, some of those things maybe still work a bit, but some of them don’t particularly work well. They’re like vestiges of an older system,” he said.

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The rise of student part-time work means that fixed office hours could be outdated in a system where students are more outcomes-driven and time-stretched.

Universities, instead, he said, need to question: “If only 10 per cent of people who sign up to something then show up, you could keep going with that, or you could stand back and say, ‘90 per cent of people who said that they wanted to do this aren’t turning up. Do we carry on doing this, or do we think about the way that we’re organising learning?’.”

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juliette.rowsell@timeshighereducation.com

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