• Contact

    Xchanges: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Technical Communication, Rhetoric, and Writing Across the Curriculum.
  • Home
  • Archives
  • About
  • Staff
  • Resources
  • Submissions
  • CFP
  • Contact

Empathy for the Instructor: A Reflection of Using Empathy-Based Pedagogy as a Graduate Teaching Assistant

by Kristen Venegas | Xchanges 19.2, Fall 2025


Download PDF Download PDF

Contents

Introduction

What Exactly is Empathy-Based Pedagogy?

How Did I Teach it?

Empathy-Based Pedagogy in the Writing Classroom: Reflection, and Responsive Instruction

Grand Takeaways

Works Cited

About the Author

Introduction

Reflecting on the swift transition between graduate student and instructor, my initial sense of self was primarily rooted in my role as a learner; however, my transition to a Graduate Student Assistant (GTA) brought a new set of challenges and expectations.

The seminar rooms were small and discussion-driven, but instead of intimacy and a rewarding dialogue, I often felt isolated. This isolation was disorienting. Still, I realized it was a necessary invitation to deepen my understanding of the importance of inclusivity and empathy in teaching. It became even more apparent that empathy extended past understanding students’ emotions; it’s about creating a space where all students, even those who may feel like outsiders, can be heard and acknowledged.

This was an emotionally complex role that often required me to navigate rugged emotional terrain. What had once been a concept I experienced as a student now became a tool I had to wield for both my students and myself. How much of myself could I give without compromising my academic identity? How could I offer empathy without blurring the line between teacher and peer?

These questions, both personal and pedagogical, eventually transformed into a formal inquiry of my own classroom practices. In Fall 2023, I conducted an IRB-approved study in my English 103 (called “Rhetoric of the Mind”) composition courses, each with 18 students. The study aimed to explore whether implementing an empathy-based pedagogy—one that explicitly asked students to draw from personal experience and identity—could increase engagement and foster deeper learning, regardless of whether students initially identified with the assigned texts. Through a discourse and thematic analysis of student-generated writing (including free-writes, reading responses, and reflective assignments), I also examined which pedagogical practices including cohort discussions or ungraded reflective writing were the most effective in creating meaningful academic engagement. While this study centered on student outcomes, it also clarified the emotional and professional challenges I faced as both instructor and instructor including balancing empathy with authority, maintaining professional boundaries, and managing the emotional labor of being a teacher while still navigating my academic and personal growth. Now, I’m turning the lens inward as I examine the other side of empathy-based pedagogy through the perspective of the instructor.

Pages: 1· 2· 3· 4· 5· 6· 7

Posted by nicole_oconnell on Dec 08, 2025 in Issue 19.2

Related posts

  • Academic Leadership by Day, Student by Night: Juggling Department Management, Teaching, and a PhD Program as a Minority Woman
  • Reclaiming Authority in the FYC Classroom as a Graduate Teaching Assistant: Using Feminist Pedagogies to Empower
  • Reflections on Collaborative Writing
  • Editor's Note
  • Editor's Note
  • Chat(GPT)-ing about the Affordances Generative AI Tools Offer for ADHD Writers
  • Experienced Teachers, Emergent Researchers: Graduate Students Developing Scholarly Identities
  • Local Assessment Design and Graduate Student Wellbeing
  • Precarity and Negotiations of Racialized Identities of Two POC Grad Instructors in a PWI
  • Redistributing Care Work: Toward Labor Justice for Graduate Student Instructors
  • Tactically Transgressive Teaching: Dis/Empowerment as Graduate Student-Instructors

© by Xchanges • ISSN: 1558-6456 • Powered by B2Evolution

Cookies are required to enable core site functionality.