Encouraging Student Engagement and Attainment: About Reflections

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 24

DECEMBER 2007

About Reflections

Our cover article is on the very current topic of


Encouraging Student Engagement and Attainment by
Professor Lorraine Stefani, who is Director of the Centre
for Academic Development at the University of Auckland,
New Zealand and a former Queens member of staff in
the School of Biological Sciences. Professor Stefani was
a recent keynote speaker at the CED conference on this
topic held in September. This issue of Reflections also
includes an article on the conference, which featured three
internationally known keynote speakers and a number of
workshops presented by local speakers.
We also feature a report on Queens National Teaching
Fellowship 2007 winner, David Gibson from the School of
Management and Queens own internal teaching award
winners. In addition we have thoughts on the usefulness
of field trips as a way of engaging students with the
science curriculum and articles on recent initiatives to
provide students with opportunities to enhance their skills
development.
Contributing to the next Reflections
We are delighted that we have a record number of articles
sent in by Queens staff in this issue. We would very much
welcome contributions for our next issue of Reflections
to be published in Spring 2008. Contributions can take
several forms:
Articles on an aspect of teaching and learning or
student support (generally 500 - 750 words);
Shorter newsflash items, e.g. reporting on
a recent event or advertising a new venture
or up-coming event (100 -200 words);
Brief synopses of recent interesting articles on
teaching and learning from the educational
literature (100 200 words);
Letters or responses to previous articles or to recent
developments in H.E.
Contributions can be submitted
via e-mail to Linda Carey,
([email protected]) or Susan Shields
([email protected]) Centre for
Educational Development.

Linda Carey
Editor of Reflections

Encouraging
Student
Engagement
and Attainment
Lorraine Stefani
Professor and Director of Academic
Development University of Auckland

Student engagement is currently a hot topic in higher education. While the


overall mission of universities should surely be to engage students in learning
through providing the conditions and the environment in which learning will
flourish, the current (re) emphasis on engagement is due to many factors
including: increasing diversity of the student population; globalization and the
new marketing of higher education; increased competition between universities
and internationalization of the curriculum; changing expectations of the student
population partly but not exclusively due to the power and the capabilities of
the new technologies.
The current emphasis on engagement brings, or should bring students and the
student experience to the forefront of our thinking with respect to our academic
practice. The increasing diversity of the student population should not be simply
a mantra that rolls off the tongue to emphasize the complexities of teaching and
learning. Rather it is a phrase that requires some un-packaging to interpret the notion
of diversity. What does diversity mean for us in the classroom, the lecture theatre, the
laboratory indeed what does it mean for us at institutional level?
At its simplest engagement in an educational context refers to the time, energy
and resources students devote to activities designed to enhance their learning at
University. Krause (2006) expands on this definition and posits that:
The well-adjusted and engaged student is one who assesses and re-assesses their
thinking as transitions and opportunities to engage in different ways continue
through and beyond the first year of university.
This definition offered by Krause (2006), while eloquent and succinct, may embody
some implicit assumptions. Given the heterogeneity of any student body, it is quite
likely that engagement will mean different things to different students. It has to be
unlikely that within an increasingly heterogeneous student population, there is one
measure or one definition of engagement that encapsulates the level of motivation
or the learning goals of each individual student. We might consider that motivation
to learn is a factor associated with ones willingness and ability to engage in the way
that academics or funding bodies interpret the concept of engagement, and to be
fully engaged in the learning process according to an ill-defined term of reference.

Designed by Media Services

Welcome to the fifth issue of Reflections, the newsletter


which focuses on teaching, learning and assessment
in Queens and more generally in higher education.
Reflections is published once a semester by the Centre
for Educational Development and provides a forum for
discussing learning and teaching initiatives in Queens.
We aim to balance articles from the various support units
within Queens with contributions from academic staff and
guest writers.

Haggis (2006) in her research on pedagogies for diversity, takes


issue with the assumptions we make in higher education that all
students know that higher education study is about questioning,
challenging, debating and creating knowledge as well as being
about exploring and coming to know what is already known!

The topic of student engagement is likely to be high on the


education agenda for some time. Taking the issue seriously and
promoting a culture of engagement that impacts positively on
both students and staff is undoubtedly the way to go even if it is
difficult and challenging.

Barnett and Coate (2005) argue that a curriculum for engagement


calls for a teaching that is likely to engage, to lift, to enthuse,
even to inspire. In other words, curricula for engagement call for
pedagogies for engagement.

The strategic response is a holistic response and universities


need to adopt integrated, institutional approaches that promote
student engagement and involvement from an early stage. From
a range of conference presentations on student learning and
the plethora of published work on how universities operate, the
following points are suggestions as to how universities might
change in ways that could potentially create at institutional level,
a culture of engagement:

However, we must be careful within institutions about how we


promote engagement. It is not reasonable to put the total weight
of student engagement onto academic staff. Engagement is not
a simple concept. It requires a whole of institution commitment
to create the culture, ethos and environment that will contribute
towards enhancing levels of student engagement.
At the recent successful conference hosted by the Centre for
Educational Development at QUB, the levels of staff engagement
with the concept of student engagement were very high indeed.
However, as one delegate commented, it is always the already
converted who enthusiastically participate in such conferences.
Encouraging student engagement and attainment requires a
holistic strategic response. At the present time we lack a body
of institutional research on what constitutes engagement and
crucially, how students describe and define engagement at
different levels of study or how strategic students are in
being engaged. At the present time we lack a body of research
pertaining to student engagement in an increasingly complex
educational context. Some potential areas for research include:

If we are to actively promote student engagement there is a


greater need to emphasize, and create conditions for, faculty wide
commitment to the mission of their institution.







The validity and reliability of institutional assumptions about
levels of preparedness for university level study and access to the

culture of the disciplines.
Identifying the characteristics of significant learning experiences

in a mass higher education context.

How we might transform the current academic culture to

develop disciplinary-based professional educators without

disrupting disciplinary-based research.

While there may be a lack of appropriate research available to us,


there is no lack of initiatives to promote and enhance a culture
of engagement. In Australasian universities there are a number of
interesting developments occurring with, of course, the ultimate
goals of enhancing student attainment, retention and success.
Some of these developments and initiatives are listed below:
Provide clear statements regarding the Universitys expectations
of student responsibilities in all publicity materials intended for
potential and actual students.
Create a University web-site specifically for first-year students.
Create a Student Engagement Research and Development Unit.
Celebrate teaching through recognition, support and awards.

Universities are hierarchical in nature, whereas the global


environment in which we operate is becoming much more fluid.
The development of leadership capacity may be more important
than hierarchy.

The current emphasis in universities is on delivering products


whereas more emphasis could be put on coaching for
change processes.

Enhancing our understanding of the relationship between levels


of student engagement and student outcomes e.g. with
respect to learning, academic progress, personal growth.


Institutions could shift incrementally from being fixated


on structure to promoting a culture and ethos which is more
meaningful to our students. In other words, create communities
of practice where teachers recognize they are also learners
learning from their students.

The hierarchical nature of universities can and does create


empires and silos whereas what is required in a 21st century
university is the development of a shared vision on curriculum
standards, pedagogy and the skills necessary for change.
This requires commitment from all staff, better integration of
institutional processes and better means of communication
within universities.
There is a pressing need for academic initiatives designed to
integrate technologies into our teaching and learning strategies
with the aim of providing new learning experiences for
our students.
Students do not only study, they have very full lives, and we
could endeavour to create conditions whereby they can make
better use of their time in and out of the classroom through
improved communication and enhanced interaction with course
materials using technologies as a tool.

There is no blueprint for effecting such change within universities


but the above suggestions all require institutional commitment
because such transformations cannot be left to a few committed
individuals. Hopefully, this short paper will encourage dialogue
and debate on how universities can transform themselves to be
responsive and adaptable to the changing needs, expectations and
aspirations of our students which is, after all, a primary purpose of
higher education.

Research and document teaching and learning practice from a


first-year perspective.

Barnett, R. and Coate, K. (2005) Engaging the Curriculum in Higher Education. SRHE/Open
University Press, Maidenhead, U.K.

Review the academic agenda and support and promote


academic development.

Haggis, T. (2006) Pedagogies for diversity: retaining critical challenge amidst fears of climbing
down. Studies in Higher Education 31 (5) pp 521-535.

Krause, K. L. (2006) New Perspectives on Engaging First Year Students in Learning. http://www.
enhancementthemes.ac.uk/documents/events/20070308/FYE_Engagement_Krause.pdf
(accessed 20 August 2007).

New Flexible Teaching Space


Gill Kelly, CED

In 2006, the JISC e-Learning and Innovation


Team published the report Designing Spaces
for Effective Learning: A guide to 21st century
learning space design. Giving examples of
new style physical learning environments
developed by HE institutions across the UK,
it put forward a vision for flexible teaching
spaces to accommodate current and evolving
pedagogies.
Over the last academic year Queens had its own project group
(drawn from Schools, Estates, Information Services and Academic
and Student Affairs) designing and developing a Flexible
Teaching Space situated on the top floor (room 307) of the Peter
Froggatt Centre. A large open space to support different modes
of teaching and learning, the room can be configured in many
different ways. Although it is possible to set up the room with
the focus on one teacher at the front, the room is primarily
designed to support a range of learner centred activities which
can be supported by provision of the following movable
facilities:

modular folding tables


folding chairs
stools
whiteboards
and the following technologies:
20 charged, wireless tablet PCs
7 plasma screens
40 Personal Response System handsets
(voting technology)
DVD/VCR
Solid state digital video cameras
USB flat bed scanner
Colour laser jet printer
Flexible lighting.
All of the above can be easily and quickly set up during a session
to allow large (up to 60 students) or small group work. Initial
reaction from staff making pilot use of the room is very positive
with regard to the range of ways it can be utilised to support
effective student learning.

If you would like to see the


Flexible Teaching Space
(Room 307 Peter Froggatt Centre),
it will be open for viewing
2.30pm - 4.30pm on
Thursday 24 January 2008
3

Queens Teaching Awards


2007
Experienced Teaching Staff

Dr Philip Hanna
School of Electronics, Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science

Dr Tracey Wilkinson
Anatomy, Division of Basic Medical Sciences,
School of Medicine and Dentistry

Ms Shelley Tracey
School of Education

This award is made to a highly-committed


teacher whose enthusiasm for his subject
has influenced his approach to learning
and teaching. This has enabled his
students to engage actively and deeply
with the difficult topic of computer
programming early in their degree
subject. By doing so, their enjoyment
of the subject is enhanced and they are
motivated to spend time, outside of
formal teaching time, on their projects.
This is backed up by sound educational
practice linked to pedagogical literature.

This award is made to a highly-effective


teacher whose commitment to her students
and teaching practice is very evident and
who has developed a variety of teaching
methods to facilitate her students diverse
range of learning styles. She has effectively
reorganised the teaching in her modules
in order to provide a more stimulating
experience for her students and introduced
a range of appropriate assessment practices
in line with those changes.

This award is made to a highly-reflective


practitioner whose own professional
development is key to her teaching. Her
innovative teaching methods inspire and
stimulate student learning effectively and
she makes creative use of resources and
assessment methods.

Dr Fiona Magowan
History and Anthropology

Dr David Marshall
School of Nursing and Midwifery

This award is made to a highly-effective


teacher committed to research-led teaching
and the use of innovative and varied
assessment techniques. She is providing
her students with skills which will have
value beyond their degree, such as selfawareness, the ability to be reflective and
effective communication skills. Her teaching
methods enable her students to become
active agents in their own learning.

This award is made to an enthusiastic and


dedicated nurse lecturer who is effectively
bringing his professional experience to
the teaching of nurses training to work
with people with learning difficulties. He
provides a stimulating and supportive
learning environment for his students
and has sensitively and appropriately
included two people with learning
disabilities in the delivery of various
aspects of the curriculum in order to bring
the lived experience to his students.

Eight Queens Teaching Awards were awarded in 2007. The Award recipients are a mix of teams and
individuals, new and experienced staff using innovative and traditional methods. Five awards were
presented in the category of experienced teaching staff, two awards presented to staff teaching for
less than five years and one award in the final category of learning support staff.
The Teaching Awards panel was chaired by Professor Ken Brown. Professor Phil Race from the
University of Leeds was the external assessor and a number of academic and academic-related staff
from across the University completed the panel.
Staff Teaching for less than five years

Learning Support Staff

Dr Claire Mitchell
School of Sociology, Social Policy and
Social Work

This award is made to an enthusiastic


teacher who, in the short time she has
been working in higher education,
has made a dramatic impact on the
engagement of her students with their
subject. Her innovative teaching methods
have inspired her students to become
active participants in their own learning
and have enabled her students to discuss
openly and reflect on difficult topics
related to Northern Ireland issues.

Dr Melissa McCullough
Medical Education, School of Medicine
and Dentistry

This award is made for a team teaching


approach to introducing medical students
to ethical law. The team has used their
enthusiasm for the subject to stimulate
students interest and has developed
innovative and varied teaching methods to
engage students in active learning, including
a moot to stimulate debate and introduce
a number of topics within the module. The
panel particularly noted the transferability of
many of the methods to other subjects.

Team of
Dan Holden (Senior Subject Librarian)
Janet Drake (Subject Librarian) and
Carol Dunlop (Subject Librarian)
from Library Services and Research Support
This award goes to a learning support team
in the Universitys Library Services and
Research Support for their effective and
well-considered delivery of the RefWorks
package. The team has recognised the
different learning styles of their learners and
developed a training course appropriately.
Their success is evidenced by learner
feedback. The team continuously reviews
and evaluates the training to maintain its
currency and relevance for learners, drawing
on appropriate educational theory.

The 2008 round of the QUB Teaching


Awards will open in January 2008 and
will be advertised widely at that time.

Enhancing
the Classroom
Experience
David Marshall

As an educator, I have a passion to impart


knowledge to student nurses related to best
evidence-based practice which will meet
the health care needs of people who have a
learning disability and their carers. In my 26-year
professional career, I have never lost the vision
to be in a place where I can play a significant and
influential role in maximizing the opportunities for
this client group. I see my current role as educator
allowing these aspirations to come to fruition
through the use of innovative teaching methods
that maximise the student learning experience.
It appeared to me as lecturer in Learning Disability Nursing, in the
School of Nursing and Midwifery, that bringing people for whom
we care into the classroom to talk about their lived experience as
recipients of care would be an innovative idea. In order to put this
idea into action, I approached two people who have a learning
disability and their carers. Both Paddy Harland, who is employed
as a gardener at QUB, and Peter Thompson, who has Downs
Syndrome and lives in accommodation provided by the Triangle
Housing Association, enthusiastically agreed to speak to students.
Hearing Paddy and Peter speak at lectures, which included question
and answering sessions, fostered the idea of creating DVDs for
teaching purposes.
Paddys DVD A Gardeners Tale includes his employer - Paul
Wallace - Estates Dept Manager, QUB, and Paddys dad (main carer).
The DVD gives students an insight into the life of a person with
a learning disability and his employment at QUB. The teaching
skills highlighted in the DVD are transferable and could be used
for teaching purposes in other disciplines e.g. social work and
psychology.
Peters DVD Peters Moving Story includes his carers at Triangle
Housing Association and traces Peters past, highlighting different
types of housing in which he has lived.

Mr Peter Thompson and Dr David Marshall


Students from the Learning Disability Branch Programme have
been fully involved in producing the DVDs which has included
acting as interviewers. Evaluation by students has been excellent
with one student stating that it is a unique experience to see and
hear Paddy and Peter share what it is like being employed and
having a learning disability and to hear how specialised housing
schemes work in reality. you just wouldnt get that out of a
textbook.
Working in conjunction with Paul Morris (Audio Visual Technician,
School of Nursing & Midwifery), the Estates Department, carers and
nursing students has been challenging. Both Paddy and Peter have
triumphed in the face of adversity and hearing and seeing it in
a real-life situation in the classroom has proven to be a highly
effective pedagogy.

My life as a National Teaching Fellow


David Gibson

In July 2007 I was fortunate enough to win a


National Teaching Fellowship awarded by the
Higher Education Academy. It was the culmination
of four years work in embedding enterprise into
the curriculum in forty-six disciplines throughout
Queens.
As someone primarily focused in learning and teaching activities
in a research university, I found it was very motivational to
receive a National Award vindicating the quality standards of our
entrepreneurial teaching strategy.
As the first person in the UK to win a National Fellowship for
enterprise education, I received a lot of publicity nationally and
locally. I was interviewed by Frank Mitchell on UTV radio and
have had extensive coverage in the local papers. Fame at last!
Most pleasing of all were the sincere congratulations from many
colleagues at Queens.
The National Teaching Fellowship award ceremony was in
September. What was exciting was not only meeting the fellow
award winners who came from various disciplines, but also the
availability of mentoring to develop as a National Teaching Fellow.
We were linked with people with similar areas of educational
interest and a system put in place to help with personal
development. The prize of 10,000 available for professional and
personal development was also useful. There is also an opportunity
to participate in group projects with other National Teaching
Fellows from mainland UK.

Although it was a little awe inspiring to see some of the excellent


practice throughout all academic disciplines, HEA and the
Association of National Teaching Fellows have a collaborative spirit
and a willingness to help new Fellows to develop.
There have also been more tangible results from winning a National
Teaching Fellowship. I was offered external examinerships in
entrepreneurship with the Universities of Huddersfield and Glasgow
Caledonian. I was also asked to join the Editorial Board of a new
HEA online journal for Sociology and Politics. Professor David Kirby,
a leading enterprise education academic, has offered me a Visiting
Professorship at the new British university in Egypt.
Perhaps the most valuable part of the process has been
reflecting on my teaching practice in preparing my submission
for nomination. After winning the internal teaching awards at
Queens, it was a considerable step up to win a National Award and
I was greatly encouraged by the help provided by the Centre of
Educational Development at Queens.
The award has given me encouragement not only in that my
work has some credibility but has made me reflect and provided a
process for me to become a more reflective practitioner, learning
from best practice internally and externally. I now hope to play
my small part in helping Queens become a world class centre for
enterprise education in line with its excellent research base.

There is now an ongoing dialogue online with the Association


of National Teaching Fellows and a great opportunity to access
learning and teaching expertise in a variety of subject areas. This
is vital as the Queens enterprise education system is based on
embedding within existing subject areas with the challenge to
embed within the Humanities Faculty over the next two years.

David Gibson

This short article is based on a presentation made at a CED conference


(Enhancing the education environment at Queens) in September 2006
during which I reflected on benefits staff and students gain from field
courses in marine biology in the context of the biosciences CEAIL.

Dai Roberts
Director of Education,
School of Biological Sciences &
Queens Biosciences CEAIL

Field courses have a long tradition of using active


and interactive learning and team work to develop
field and laboratory skills, key objectives of the
biosciences CEAIL.

Why
bother
with
field
courses?

Field courses are frequently


perceived by laboratory-based
scientists as jollies (Moore,
2001); they are expensive, time
consuming, logistically challenging
and raise health and safety (liability)
issues. However, they offer science
students in disciplines such as
Geography, Geology and Biology
opportunities to observe and
make sense objectively of the real
world in all its messy complexity.
There is also huge demand from
students who want to gain field
experience (particularly overseas)
as part of their personal and career
development. Academics involved
in environmental research and
education are committed to retaining
field courses in the curriculum. This
is because they see field experiences,
which have stimulated major
scientific discoveries (Darwin 1845;
Herdman, 1923), as fundamental to
their disciplines.

Between 1998 and 2004, I coordinated a module in


Practical Marine Ecology which provided a broadbased introduction to the diversity of current
approaches used to study coastal communities.
The module involved directed sampling in the
field, laboratory work and data analysis. This was
followed by a team project which employed
learnt field skills to investigate an area of the shore
selected by the students. The project involved
defining, planning and executing an agreed task
(active, problem-based learning) and was assessed
through individual oral and written presentations
and a poster produced by the team; one groups
poster was published (Brady et al., 2002).
During the project the students enhance their
skills in negotiation, communication and time
management, including working under pressure
and gain increased confidence through ownership
of the work and getting to know staff. At the
same time, academic staff have opportunities to
get to know students and improve interactive
approaches to learning and teaching; some staff
also collect preliminary and long-term field data
for research (research-informed teaching).
In the 1970s, undergraduates in Botany and
Zoology spent up to four weeks on residential field
courses during three-year degree programmes.
Today, students in Biological Sciences have similar
opportunities; the School runs three residential
and one non-residential field courses annually,
and is encouraged to retain them by external
examiners. These modules retain their popularity
as evidenced by student evaluation [scores >4/5]
and comments field course was excellent brings
lecture material to life. [Level 2 Marine Ecology
May 2007]; I definitely think each module should
have a choice of either field trips or lab work/
practical classes because field trips are
much better!!
[Level 2 Applied Ecology September 2006].

Field courses offer opportunities to develop


a wide range of generic skills within cognate
disciplines. We need to encourage staff and
students to reflect more on why we bother
with field courses in order to capitalise on the
educational opportunities they offer and how
these relate to the real world, a vision shared with
the CDIO initiative in engineering education.
Nowadays, virtual field-trip software means
students can experience fieldwork, such as
investigating processes in rock pools, without
getting wet; although simulations can offer
opportunities to those who would otherwise
not be able to undertake fieldwork, they are no
substitutes for the real thing
(Spicer & Stratford, 2001).
Perhaps the last word should be given to John
Steinbeck (1945) who recognised that an
appreciation of the natural world is primarily
gained by observing it:
Doc was collecting marine animals in the
Great Tide Pool on the tip of the Peninsula. It is
a fabulous place; when the tide is in, a wavechurned basin, creamy with foam, whipped by
the combers that roll in from the whistling buoy
on the reef. But when the tide goes out the little
water world becomes quiet and lovely. The sea is
very clear and the bottom becomes fantastic with
hurrying, fighting, feeding, breeding animals.

References
Brady, K.M. et al (2002) Biotope mapping at Ballyhenry Island, Strangford
Lough, Northern Ireland. Extended Abstract In: Nunn, J.D. (ed.) Marine
biodiversity in Ireland and adjacent waters. Conference Proceedings,
MAGNI Publication No. 008. Belfast. Pp. 158-159.

Spicer, J.I. & J. Stratford (2001) The virtual field trip good, but no
substitute. In: Moore, P.G. (ed.) Developing and sharing best practice in
marine-related fieldwork. University Marine Biological Station, Millport.
Occasional Publication No. 8. 8-14.

Darwin, C. (1845) Journal of research into the natural history and


geology of the countries visited during the voyage round the world of
H.M.S. Beagle under the command of Captain Fitz Roy, R.N., John
Murray, London.

Steinbeck, J. (1945) Cannery Row Dedicated to Ed (Doc) Ricketts. New


York: The Viking press.

Herdman, W.A. (1923) Founders of oceanography and their work: an


introduction to the science of the sea, Edward Arnold & Co., London.

Dai Roberts has participated in field courses for over 30 years in Queens
and throughout Europe as part of a European ERASMUS network in
Environmental Science and Education.

Biopic:

Moore, P.G. (2001) A cost-benefit analysis of marine fieldwork. In: Moore,


P.G. (ed.) Developing and sharing best practice in marine-related
fieldwork. University Marine Biological Station, Millport. Occasional
Publication No. 8. 2-8.

ADVENTURES IN INTERDISCIPLINARITY :
A BRAND NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY ARTS MA EXPERIENCE
Anna Newell, Artistic Director, Creative and Performing Arts

The Centre for Excellence in the


Creative and Performing Arts (NI)
one of Queens three Centres for
Excellence in Teaching and Learning
has just launched a brand new
interdisciplinary arts MA experience.
Students from across the creative and performing arts disciplines
come together for intensive task-focused practice-based
weekend workshops and one-off business skills workshops
as part of the innovative new Adventures in Interdisciplinarity
module that is at the heart of this new set of MA pathways.
What this model for the MA is about is creating an adventure
playground where learning can happen in a broad range of ways

10

some of them not necessarily predictable. Its much more than


the simple transferral of knowledge. Its a journey with several
maps, some of them which will be drawn and redrawn during the
journey: its a voyage where the direction of the ship is determined
as much by the crew as by the ships captain; its a hothouse full
of fertile earth; its a conversation with many disparate voices.
In preparaton for this new way of working, the Centre trialled
a version of this module last academic year, attracting a
volunteer group of 18 students, ex-students and young and
emerging arts practitioners who went on a novel journey
together between November 2006 and March 2007.
The brand new interdisciplinary arts MA experience is now up
and running and has attracted seven full-time and two part-time
students as well as five students who are taking the Adventures as
a non-credit-bearing addition to their own MA programme.
This group is from a wide range of arts backgrounds including
theatre, design, choreography, social anthropology, psychology,
music and creative writing and are aged between 21 and 51.

I wasnt sure what to expect but I went


home buzzing

it was brilliant. Ive never really been


involved in any project like this before.

absolutely amazing - the level of


exper tise condensed and impar ted in less
than 48 hours was inspirational

it was an adventure in the truest sense


of the wordexploring the unknown..
Leading Adventures this semester are Eric Lyon from the Sonic Arts
Research Centre at Queens, Forced Entertainment - one of Britains
most exciting experimental theatre companies - and poet Sinead
Morrissey and photographer Sylvia Borda.

The Centre for Excellence in the Creative and Performing Arts (NI)
one of Queens three Centres for Excellence in Teaching and
Learning - is creating a unique opportunity for students to play, to
explore, to go on a creative adventure with their peers from all over
the University.

areyoucomingouttoplay?

For each of the Adventures the student group meet with the visiting
artist(s) on a Friday lunchtime and by the end of Saturday they
will have created a performance or an installation or a
This is a six-week course that will run from 2-4pm for six Wednesdays
presentational pitch.
starting Wednesday 6th February and finishing Wednesday 12th March. It
will be run by the Centres Artistic Director, Anna Newell, an experienced
These informal performances are open to all interested parties, will
theatre director and interdisciplinary artist and will be highly practical,
last no more than an hour and are free of charge.
task-focused and, above all, fun. Each session will explore practical
creative collaboration using a variety of games, exercises and tasks.
For further information please contact Anna Newell
[email protected]
Through these sessions, students will gain confidence and skills in
To book at place at the performance contact Juliana Licinic
creativity, innovation, team-work, presentation, working to a deadline,
[email protected]
negotiating a group dynamic, problem-solving and self-presentation etc.

Coming next semester


FURTHER ADVENTURES IN INTERDISCIPLINARITY!

Places are limited to 25 participants altogether with an initial limit of 3


participants from each subject and will be allocated on a first-come
first-served basis.

Public performances arising from the second semester module


FURTHER ADVENTURES IN INTERDISCIPLINARITY will take place
at 7pm on the evenings of 2 Feb, 23 Feb and 15th March - these
Adventures will include collaborations with conceptual artists,
a film-maker and with an artist from Scotland whose area of
speciality will only be revealed to the students halfway through the
Adventure.

This course is open to all students from dentistry to drama, from


medicine to maths, from physics to film: no prior experience of
the arts is needed, just a willingness to collaborate creatively and take
a journey into the unknown!

In addition the FURTHER ADVENTURES module includes workshops


on multi-platform documentation, starting your own business and
a Dragons Den pitching challenge.

To find out more about


areyoucomingouttoplay?
please contact:
Anna Newell
[email protected]
028 9097 5112

photographs by Neill Harrison, Xiaomin Wu and Drew Mikhael

11

CED Annual
Conference Encouraging student
engagement and
attainment
Alison Skillen and Susan Shields, CED

On 17th and 18th September 2007, Queens hosted


a 2-day conference on the theme of Encouraging
Student Engagement and Attainment. The
conference, organised by the Centre for
Educational Development, featured three
national/international speakers and nine parallel
workshops covering subjects such as curriculum
design, blogging as a tool, threshold concepts and
experiences of implementing PDP within Schools.
In addition to the three keynote speakers, the
conference also featured colleagues from within
Queens, St Marys University College and the
University of Ulster, Jordanstown.
The conference proved popular and attracted over
60 delegates ranging from Queens, Stranmillis
University College, the University of Ulster,
Waterford Institute of Technology and Dundalk
Institute of Technology, some of whom are
members of the All-Ireland Society for Higher
Education (AISHE).
Professor Ken Brown, Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Education and
Planning), welcomed the delegates to the conference and referred
to the achievement of David Gibson, Senior Teaching Fellow in
Entrepreneurship, School of Management, who has become the
first recipient of a National Teaching Fellowship for Enterprise
in Education in the UK.
Lorraine Stefani, Professor and Director of Academic Development
from University of Auckland, New Zealand, opened the conference
with an address on A southern hemisphere perspective on student
engagement. What does Student engagement mean? The well
adjusted and engaged student is one who assesses and re-assesses
their thinking as transitions and opportunities to engage in different
ways continue through and beyond the first year of university
(Krause, 2006). Key points included Why is the concept of student

12

engagement a hot topic? (changing demographics, government


imperatives on retention and attainment) and measuring student
engagement (how can we realistically measure engagement/do
surveys provide meaningful data?). She referred to the complexity
of student engagement, touching on issues such as the importance
of student induction/orientation along with keeping abreast of
technology in teaching.

Following the keynote, three parallel workshops were offered:

Professor Lorraine Stefani


Curriculum design to enhance student engagement
Mr Jonathan Worley (CETL(NI), St Marys University College)
Encouraging student attainment through peer tutoring in
academic writing
Ms Karen Fraser (University of Ulster)
Blogging as a tool to encourage and monitor student
motivation and engagement

Ray Land, Professor of Higher Education and Director of the


Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement at
the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, delivered the second
keynote address entitled Threshold concepts and troublesome
knowledge: a transformational approach to student learning. This
presentation highlighted a new conceptual framework to inform
programme design and assessment. The approach builds on the
notion of threshold concepts (Meyer and Land 2006) which can
be considered as akin to a portal, opening up a new and previously
inaccessible way of thinking about something. Professor Land
suggested that it represents a transformed way of understanding
without which the learner cannot progress. Conceptual boundaries
and different aspects of troublesome knowledge (difficult, alien
and tacit) were discussed: such troublesomeness and disquietude
is purposeful, as it is the provoker of change that cannot be
assimilated, and hence is the instigator of new learning and new
ontological possibility. To conclude, Professor Land put forward ten
considerations for course design.

After the keynote address, three further parallel workshops


were held:

Professor Ray Land


Using threshold concepts to inform course design
Mr Clive Cochrane (QUB)
Developing students information literacy
Ms Shelley Tracey (QUB)
Enhancing student engagement through creative reflection

Day two was opened by Professor Sally Brown, Pro-Vice-Chancellor


(Assessment, Learning and Teaching) and Professor of Higher
Education Diversity in Teaching and Learning at Leeds Metropolitan
University. Her presentation on Using formative assessment to
foster student engagement and achievement explored how staff
can maximise the scale and scope of the formative assessment
they give students without overloading themselves in the process.
Feedback from assessment was discussed from the students
perspective - when and how feedback was best received so that
it can be constructive and allow students to build and work on
improvement. Whilst accepting that detailed and timely feedback
is hugely demanding of staff, Professor Brown highlighted that
assessment and feedback are at the heart of retention.

The final plenary and closing remarks were delivered by Professor


Sally Brown. She emphasised the importance of promoting
student engagement as a means of improving student retention
and the whole student experience. She also urged staff not to be
complacent and to look forward and engage with new technology
with which so many of our students nowadays are familiar.
Feedback from participants about the event has been extremely
positive. Delegates comments include inspiring, stimulating,
challenging, educational, enjoyable, entertaining, insightful,
thought-provoking, well-organised.
The PowerPoint presentations from the keynote addresses from
this years conference can be downloaded from the CED website at
www.qub.ac.uk/ced.

To give feedback more effectively and efficiently, Professor


Brown suggested:

Using model answers;


Using assignment return sheets;
Writing an assignment report;
Giving feedback to groups of students;
Using statement banks;
Using computer-assisted assessment;
Involving students in their own assessment.
Professor Ken Brown, Professor Lorraine Stephani, Professor Ray Land and
Ms Linda Carey
In conclusion, Professor Brown advised that concentrating on
giving students detailed and developmental formative feedback is
the single most useful thing we can do for our students, particularly
those who have had a struggle to achieve entry to higher
education. To do so may require considerable re-engineering not
just of our assessment processes but also of curriculum design
as a whole.

Delegates then divided into three further parallel workshops:

Professor Sally Brown


Combating and deterring plagiarism
Dr Alan Masson and Mrs Aine MacNeill (University of Ulster)
Teaching and learning practice the view from both sides
of the fence
Professor Sally Brown, Professor Lorraine Stephani and Ms Linda Carey
Ms M Boohan, Dr J Vyle, Mr D Foster and Mrs E Gallagher (QUB)
Experiences of implementing Personal Development
Planning within Schools at Queens

Next conference to be held May 2009 see CED for details closer to the date
13

The First Year


Experience
Survey

Student attainment and


retention is an important
focus for the University and
a good first year experience
is fundamental to ultimate
success. In order to illuminate our

understanding about what makes for a good


(or bad) first year experience, the University
took the decision last autumn to abandon
its Survey of Current Students which had
become redundant by the introduction of
the National Student Survey in 2005 and
replace it with a new First Year Experience
(FYE) Survey. The FYE offers enormous
Susan Harte and Sarah Hannaford, CED
potential, particularly because it will be
repeated every year. Not least the longitudinal
data will help us assess whether or not any
Work/Life Personal Learning Teaching
new initiatives that we introduce into the first
year have an impact.
Balance
Resources
The questionnaire used in the survey was
based on current research into the first year
experience taking place nationally; this
includes research on the inter-related issues
of retention and progression, and dropout and withdrawal. Academic staff and
colleagues in academic support were also
consulted in order to maximise the value of
the survey.
The eventual questionnaire was divided
into six sections: Teaching, Assessment and
Feedback, University Services, Advice and
Information, Work/Life Balance, Learning
Resources, Personal Development. Students
were also asked to comment on the best
aspect and worst aspect of their experience
so far at Queens. The survey was distributed
online to first year students on programmes
leading to either a Bachelors degree or an
undergraduate Masters using a new tool
called Questback. Students in the University
Colleges, the Theological colleges and on
University programmes in further education
colleges were not included.

14

3.1

3.4

4.0

3.6

Assessment University
and
Services
Feedback

3.6

3.6

The survey was a complete success achieving a good response rate (29.5%).
The results of the FYE survey are detailed above.
The results of the survey also complement other work that
CED is currently undertaking on the characteristics of students
who complete their degrees successfully and those who
withdraw. A detailed summary of the results can be found on
the CED website at www.qub.ac.uk/ced. The new software,
Questback, enabled easy production, distribution and
management of the survey and the survey process. Questback
is very user friendly and has several capacities for analysis from
very general to very statistical. Currently, we are reviewing
the questionnaire for the 2008 survey with the majority of
it staying the same to allow for year on year comparisons. If
anyone has any suggestions for questions or would like any
additional information regarding the FYE survey or Questback
please let us know (at [email protected]).

83%

International
students are
satisfied with the
Queens learning
experience
of international students at Queens are satisfied
with their learning experience, according to
the findings of the International Student
Barometer

The barometer, which is carried out by the International Graduate


Insight Group, gathers feedback and opinions from the current
student population. The latest research was carried out at the end
of academic year and 55 universities participated, including
14 Russell Group universities.
The study shows that international students at Queens place most
value on library facilities, fair and transparent assessment of their
work; technology; and support from academic staff when they
need it. Queens achieved satisfaction levels of over 80% in all of
these areas and is ranked in second place in the Russell Group Index
(RGi) and 11th place against the overall International
Student Barometer (ISB).
Students are also satisfied that they are being taught by lecturers
who are expert in their field (93% satisfaction); and the fact that
they have the flexibility to decide how they want to study (89%
satisfaction). Students are also satisfied with the level of research
activity ongoing (88% satisfaction).
The International Student Barometer also investigates student
opinions on the support services provided by the University and
their day-to-day living experience at Queens. If you would like more
information on the results of the survey, please contact
Julie Thompson, Marketing and Recruitment
(Extension 1150; [email protected])

Julie Thompson
Marketing And Recruitment

15

Pre-final Year Students


actively experience London
Law Firms
Roisin Copeland
Careers, Employability and Skills
Gaining experience, as a student, in a professional work
environment is a desirable goal for developing employability
but placement and internship opportunities are highly
competitive, especially in London City Law firms.
Over a five day visit at Easter 2007, twelve pre-final year students
from the School of Law participated in a programme of
workshops with eight City of London Law firms who regularly
attend the Queens November Law Fair to recruit students.
The trip, organised by the Careers, Employability and Skills
unit, has taken place for the past eight years. Over this time
the quality of the experience has continued to be developed
through increased investment of time and resources by the
firms. Students are no longer passively absorbing information
through presentations about the firms but are actively engaged
in skills and problem solving related to modern legal practice.
This year the workshops ranged from Alternative Dispute
Resolution and Solicitor Advocacy to Negotiation and
Commercial Awareness skills. Each firm offered a distinctly
different activity that provided an insight into the nature of work
carried out by a leading corporate and commercial law firm.
A significant factor underlying the quality of the experience is
the range and depth of collaboration. The main parties involved
in the organisation of the trip include the Law Firms Human
Resource staff, the School of Law and Queens Careers. However the
workshops are often delivered and facilitated by Law firm partners
and Law trainees who in many cases are alumni of Queens.
The workshop activities include case studies and exercises
that provide simulations of legal practice work which are used
in the selection process for the recruitment of graduates.
This year the amount of firms visited was doubled on the previous
year to allow for canvassing of support for the second edition of
the Queens Careers publication Moving into Law guide. Without
the financial funding and contribution of graduate profiles from the
London Law firms, this resource for students would not be feasible.
The students visited two firms per day except on the arrival
and departure days where only one firm was visited. This
was both challenging and tiring but the students remained
dedicated to their ambassador roles and the opportunity
to make a positive impression on a potential employer.
The students who participate in the trip are required to
contribute to the dissemination of the experience to the
wider School of Law students. The students work individually

16

or in pairs to review the experience of a chosen firm and


capture their impressions on a PowerPoint presentation.
The following personal insights and quotes are taken
from the student PowerPoint presentations:
Oh mythe reception area is bigger than the
average Belfast law firms entire building.
We were greeted with Danish pastries and coffee before moving
into a large boardroom for informal introductions from the head
of recruitment and two of the firms lawyers. All three were from
Northern Ireland so there was a lot of good humour flowing!
Amenities: swimming pool, gym, doctor, dentist, games
room, hairdressers, restaurants and bars, show how the
firm cares for the welfare and morale of their staff, but also
create the impression that you never need to leave!
Very impressed with the firm the size, international
nature, ethos and work environment.
Great diversity of people and cultures with
everyone very friendly and approachable.
In addition to the resource provided by the PowerPoint
presentations, the students from the trip also agree to promote
the experience through participating in on-campus workshops
organised by Careers, Employability and Skills. So far this semester
four of the students were involved in facilitating first year groups
of students as part of a two-hour careers induction. Also planned
is a workshop on the day of the Law Fair (21st November) to
launch the City Law trip 2008 to pre-final year students.
Although only a small number of students directly benefit
from the week with the London firms, the impact can
be far reaching. There is a significant word of mouth
marketing of the experience that has generated greater
interest and aspiration to aim higher and further afield.
The firms too have been impressed, not only with the calibre
of student, but also the fact that Queens is the only University
to bring its students to the City marketplace. As with all
collaborations the return on investment is evaluated and a
measure of success is significant for each of the partners to
continue. This years feedback augurs well for City Law trip 2008!

The

Virtual

Lecture

Amanda Sefton, Media Services

Multimedia resources on Queens Online are


fast becoming an integral part of the student
learning experience at Queens University.
The Virtual World is now the norm for the
average student; however it may be a new
and undiscovered area for the lecturer. A good
starting point is the Virtual Lecture. It is an easy
product to create and has proven very popular
with both students and staff.
Media Services can assist in all aspects of the production of the
Virtual Lecture and online learning and teaching materials.
Typically a Virtual Lecture includes PowerPoint slides and video. The
video plays at the top left corner of the screen and is accompanied
by a synchronised PowerPoint presentation. Slides are indexed so
that students can move instantly to different parts of a lecture or
review parts of the lecture they may not have fully understood.
Web links embedded in PowerPoint also remain active so that
students can browse additional materials before returning to the
presentation. Staff have used the Virtual Lecture as a revision tool
for students, as a means of providing lectures in their absence
and as a means of freeing up lecturing time for more small group
contact with the students.
The Virtual Lecture is a first step but some Schools, such as
Medicine, have developed sophisticated websites which
incorporate lectures, video demonstrations, downloadable audio
for MP3 players, online study materials, tests and recommended
reading. Feedback from students has been very positive.
Ive been revising away! I have found the recorded lectures to be
most useful. They were well put together by the computer experts.
Just thought I would email you this because it is genuine positive
feedback. They really detract from the boredom of continual
reading. They should suit ALL auditory learners.

So how can staff create a Virtual Lecture?


Media Services provide advice on how to structure PowerPoint
presentations for this type of delivery. The lecture is then filmed
in their studio. This is a simple head and shoulders shot of the
lecturer and the video is compressed into a streaming format that
can be played on a wide range of computers and mobile devices.
The Virtual Lecture is created using a programme called Microsoft
Producer, a user friendly editing programme which synchronises
PowerPoint slides with the video. Lecturers edit this themselves
at Media Services with as much assistance as they require. The
completed Virtual Lecture is then added as a resource into
Queens Online.
To view an example of a Virtual Lecture go to
http://www.mediator.qub.ac.uk/ms/producer/MitralStenosis.htm
Media Services run training courses on all aspects of creating
Virtual Lectures. For further information contact Amanda Sefton,
Educational Media Producer, at [email protected] or ext. 5625.

17

Topical Issues in Biomedical Education:


a report of a recent conference
Etain Tansey and Aisling Keane,
Division of Basic Medical Sciences

Aisling
The Basic Medical Sciences (Physiology and Anatomy) are
fundamental to the teaching of not only Medicine but also
Nursing, Dentistry and Physiotherapy, amongst other clinicallyrelated disciplines. In recent times the provision of biomedical
education has been evolving to meet the changing demands
of new curricula. With this in mind, teaching fellows from
the Division of Basic Medical Sciences at Queens University
Belfast held an education conference entitled Topical Issues
in Biomedical Education on September 13th and 14th. The
five main subject areas chosen for this conference were
Problem Based Learning (PBL), Student Selected Components
(SSCs), Intercalated Degrees, Ethics in Biomedical Science and
Standardised Assessment. The aim of the conference was to
discuss these relevant and topical issues through keynote
lectures and workshops. There was also an opportunity for
interested academics to present some of their own research.
The conference was advertised widely and resulted in
keen interest.

One of the major strengths of this conference was the standard


of the guest speakers. All were experts in their respective fields
and included distinguished professors, as well as recipients of
National Teaching Awards. Professor Maurice Savage (Director of
Medical Education, Queens) opened the meeting, emphasising
the importance of teaching and learning at Queens. The first
speaker, Professor Jim McKillop (Deputy Executive Dean of
Medicine and Muirhead Professor of Medicine, University of
Glasgow), spoke of the impact of PBL on the University of Glasgows
medical teaching over the past ten years. Professor Deborah
MurdochEaton (Head of Medical Education, University of Leeds)
then discussed SSCs, highlighting the General Medical Councils
stipulation that 25-33% of the five year curriculum be devoted
to SSCs and underlining their importance and benefits in the
medical curriculum. SSCs are now acknowledged as fundamental
to developing lifelong learning skills required by physicians. The
motives of and benefits to medical students carrying out an
intercalated degree were explored by Professor Anthony Payne
(Professor of Anatomy, University of Glasgow). Later in this session,
he was joined by two former Queens intercalated students
(Dr Patrick Campbell and Mr Gerrard Sloan) who spoke of their
experiences on the Queens intercalated degree programme.
On the following day, the first speaker was Dr David Lewis (Senior
Lecturer, University of Leeds). He explained why ethics should be
integrated into undergraduate and graduate curricula within the
biological sciences. His presentation was followed by a workshop
where delegates were divided into groups and asked to discuss
the ethical considerations in various cases. The final presentation,
given by Professor Trudie Roberts (Head of the School of Medicine

18

Etain

and Director of the Medical Education Unit, University of Leeds)


and Dr Kathy Boursicot (Head of Assessment, Barts and the London,
Queen Marys School of Medicine and Dentistry), was extremely
informative and entertaining. The two speakers are well known
experts in standardised assessment, running workshops on the
topic for the Higher Education Academy. Their lecture gave a
broad overview of the different methods that can be used to set
examination standards (including the Angoff, Ebel and Borderline
Group methods). The delegates then had an opportunity to use
standard setting techniques to set a pass mark for a mini-exam
designed for second year medical students. The concluding
remarks were made by Dr Etain Tansey (Teaching Fellow and Chair
of the Conference Organising Committee) who thanked all of the
speakers and delegates that had travelled from all over the UK
and Ireland to attend and contribute to the inaugural meeting.
Feedback from the conference was extremely positive. Some
examples of comments made include: The themes were very
relevant and the speakers were excellent; Standard setting very
good format. The two speakers worked very well together. I enjoyed
the visit; This was an excellent conference which I look forward
to attending each year. Queens and the University of Manchester
are already discussing ideas for future conferences, planning to
hold the conference at each institution on an alternating two year
cycle. A proposed date for the next conference is September 2009.
The organising committee gratefully acknowledges the funding
awards received from the Learning and Teaching Conference
Fund provided by the Centre for Education Development, the
Physiological Society and the Anatomical Society of Great Britain
and Ireland. We would like to thank all of our sponsors for
their support.

Dr Alasdair Thin, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh presents his research


concerning text-to-speech software

The Undergraduate
Ambassadors
Scheme (UAS)
Linda Ryles, CED

Launched in 2002 by the


science writer and broadcaster,
Simon Singh, UAS enables
undergraduates to explore the
teaching profession, with a
particular (but not exclusive)
focus on science, technology,
engineering and maths (STEM)
disciplines and at the same
time, to gain modular credit and
develop their transferable skills.

The Level 3 Project Module provided an


academic home for the scheme, with the UAS
component counting for 25% of the module
marks. Semester one was used as a planning
and lead-in phase to set up appropriate
procedures for the scheme, such as Child
Protection Training for students and staff.

The UAS website (www.uas.ac.uk) provides a


comprehensive range of guidance materials
for academic staff, supervising teachers and
students, all of which may be customised
to suit the discipline and module. Students
are expected to spend the equivalent of at
least ten half days during a semester in a
The scheme offers significant benefit to
school, although they may also spend some
all stakeholders:
time researching or preparing materials in
the University or elsewhere. In schools, they
It is a tried and tested model of curriculum
work in partnership with a teacher providing
development for academic staff who are
valuable help and subject expertise in the
seeking a framework for embedding
classroom or laboratory and carry out a
and accrediting student skills, a development
special project which is agreed in advance
in the curriculum, fully in keeping with the
between student, University tutor and school.
Universitys Education Strategy and the new
Student Employability and Skills Policy;
Rachel McLaughlin signed up for the pilot,
spending time in Methodist College, where
It provides school teachers with practical and
she worked in classes with a range of age
enthusiastic help in the classroom;
groups and abilities. Rachels experience was
very positive:
Pupils become more fully engaged with
STEM subjects and are encouraged to aspire
to higher education;
Students are able to explore the reality of a
teaching career and contextualise their own
learning, whilst enhancing their skills profile
and gaining academic credit.
The Universitys first UAS pilot ran last
academic year in the School of Chemistry
and Chemical Engineering, co-ordinated by
Dr Paul Stevenson, Director of Education, and
supported by Linda Ryles, Senior Educational
Developer in the Centre for Educational
Development.
A number of students completing second
year (many aspiring to a teaching career) had
expressed tentative interest in the scheme
during pre-enrolment in June 2006, so contact
was made with local schools in the greater
Belfast area to gauge their potential uptake.

Rachel Mclaughlin
A scheme like this is a great idea. The main
reason for taking part in this Undergraduate
Ambassador Scheme was to achieve a sense
of what teaching actually entailed. I wanted
to experience working with pupils to help
my communication skills and also working
alongside a group of teachers to aid my team
working skills. I have gained confidence in
approaching people in a hectic environment
as well as being able to work in an already
well-established team.

I had a reality check, so to speak, in that the


idea of teaching is a whole lot different to
the reality of teaching. I now feel I am more
prepared for a teaching career, I have been
shown the ups and downs of this profession.
I am grateful for the opportunity I was given.
I would recommend this scheme to anyone
who wishes to have a career in teaching or
other child-related professions.
Rachel is now a PGCE student in the
Universitys School of Education.
Dr Michael Dorrity, Head of Chemistry in
Methodist College, commented that the
scheme was an excellent idea which gave
undergraduates an insight into what life
was like in a busy school, whilst at the
same time providing additional support for
teaching staff.
Dr Paul Stevenson is offering the scheme to
students again this year and is confident that
interest will be high: Teaching chemistry is an
aspiration for many chemistry undergraduate
students and UAS gives them some proper
work experience before they make their
application to teacher training college.
Lessons learned from the pilot:
Marketing the scheme to local schools
is best done face-to-face, rather than by
mail-shot - 6th Form visits to University
departments can provide an opportunity to
share information with teachers;
The requirements of the scheme must be
balanced with student effort demanded
by other parts of the degree programme,
particularly in final year when the stakes
are high;
Time for pre-placement student and staff
training should be built into the lead in phase;
Customisation of materials should be
repeated at each iteration to ensure
currency of information relating to the
Northern Ireland school curriculum etc.;
Feedback from staff, students and teachers
should be used to fine-tune the scheme to
achieve optimum benefit to all stakeholders.
If you are interested in exploring how
UAS might add value for your students,
please contact Linda Ryles in the Centre for
Educational Development ([email protected]
or telephone 028 9097 6605).

19

The Learning Development Service

Paula Moran and Tim Crawford,


Learning Development Service

The Learning Development Service (LDS) is a new service located within the Student Guidance Centre which
is open to all students to help with the development of generic skills needed to succeed at University.
Students need to be able to organise their time, communicate their needs, problem solve and learn effectively to achieve their potential
at Queens. Many students develop these skills naturally and respond effectively to the challenges presented but if they do not, sometimes
it can lead to non-attendance and withdrawal. You may recognise that students are struggling but it is not always possible to allocate the
time needed to work with students on these areas. The LDS has been established to help you provide this support to students. We work with
students in a friendly and informal manner to help them identify what problems are affecting their work and the skills they need to develop
to solve these problems.
What is happening this Semester?
WORKSHOPS
The LDS provides workshops on

Time management

Essay writing

Your Personality

Your Learning Style

Communicating effectively

Your motivation

Assertiveness

Problem Solving

Exam techniques

Preparing for Exams

Exam nerves

The schedule of workshops for this


Semester is on our website and hard
copies are also in the Student Guidance
Centre. Copies of the schedule can
be sent to your School or department
on request. Workshops are normally
organised over lunchtime and last
approximately 50 minutes. Groups
are usually small to facilitate student
interaction. Students can book a place
for workshops through the website or
by emailing the LDS on [email protected] or
by calling into the student information
area in the Student Guidance Centre.
If you would like a workshop delivered
to a group of your students we would
be happy to discuss this. If there are
other topics you think should be
delivered please let us know.
One to one
At any time during the year if you think
a student would benefit from getting
support, please pass on our details. We
have bookmarks which you can give your
students with details on how to contact us.

20

We will arrange to meet with your student


to discuss and agree a plan of action.
Meetings are held in rooms in the Student
Guidance Centre. A student may attend
a number of sessions depending on
the action agreed. Students can book a
one-to-one session by contacting the
Student Guidance Centre. Appointment
times will normally be between 9.30-4.30
and will last between 30 - 50 minutes.
Outside office hours can also be
arranged when necessary.
Website
A range of topics are covered on the
website which give practical tips on
academic-related subjects e.g. note taking,
tutorials and time management. If you find
students are requesting help in areas that
are not covered on our website please email
this information to [email protected] as we
will be continually developing new courses
and materials depending on student needs
identified. We would also be delighted to
get your views on what you think could
be improved on the website or to include
resources you have found beneficial in
supporting students.
Peer Support
Students often have difficulties settling
into University and we have found that
students will listen and talk more openly
to other students than to staff. During
Welcome and Orientation this year the
student guides offered support to students
with settling in e.g. finding Tescos, getting
a mobile phone and finding their way
around Belfast. International students and
other students from outside Northern
Ireland found this help particularly useful.
We are keen to develop this aspect of
student life and know that a number
of Schools have peer support projects.
We would like to hear about your

experience and we will use this


information to inform our practice.
The LDS would like to hear from
students who are interested in helping
other students so please encourage
your students to contact the LDS if
they are looking for opportunities
to develop their key skills.
Training will be given by the Learning
Development Service to enable
students to carry out this role.
Other resources
There are a number of useful study skills
texts that can be used by students in
the Student Information area of the
Student Guidance Centre. A list of these
books are on our website along with a
number of links to other web resources.
http://www.qub.ac.uk/sgc
There are also a number of self-help guides
(stress management, time management) to
help students study more effectively which
can be downloaded from our website.
Finally
If you have suggestions for how the
Learning Development Service can
help students succeed academically at
Queens University Belfast please let us
know or if you want to find out more
about what we do just contact us (details
below). We would be delighted to show
you around the new Student Guidance
Centre and talk about how we can provide
practical support to your students.
Paula Moran, Learning Development Officer
Ext. 2873 email: [email protected]
Tim Crawford, Learning Development Tutor
Ext. 2874 email: [email protected]
Learning Development Service
Ext. 2727 email: [email protected]

The Lets Work Project


for students with
disabilities
Paul McLennan, Lets Work Project

Background and Purpose


The Lets Work project was set up for Queens students with
disabilities to enable them to access work experience and graduate
employment. The principle behind this project is to give students
with disability an equal opportunity in the job market. Graduate
Employers want all students to have employability skills as well as
a good degree. Experience at Queens University and elsewhere
has shown that some students with disabilities will not have the
same access to part-time job opportunities and work experience
that others have had. The Lets Work projects main purpose is to
change that and enable students with disabilities to be proactive
in developing employability skills and therefore be in a better place
to compete in the fiercely competitive graduate job market. The
project also wants to change the negative perception that some
students with disabilities and others have of their own potential to
compete successfully in the graduate job market.

Preparing for Employment


Some students with disabilities, like the non-disabled peers, have
stated that they have enough to deal with in regards to coping
with their life at University and that they find it very difficult to have
any time and motivation for anything else. The Lets Work project
has therefore been very proactive in encouraging these students
to become more focused by offering Careers Guidance through an
intensive 1:1 approach, which could involve several meetings over
a long period. The project has also been involved in helping these
students set up placements in a very gradual way if necessary, such
as making the initial contacts with employers or other organisations
on the students behalf. The project has helped students consider
how to disclose their disability to an employer in a positive manner
and develop their employability skills through a series of workshops
and individual meetings.
The project has so far organised a number of events throughout
the last academic year aimed at motivating and developing the
students confidence to do a work placement and make the most
of the employability programmes delivered by the Careers Service.
Such events include The Blind in Business event in Edinburgh
University where two Queens students who are Blind/Visual
impaired had the opportunity to meet ten Graduate employers for
ten minutes each to get interviewing practice and have valuable
networking experience. There was also the Lets Work event held
in the Great Hall in March, where 33 students with disabilities
along with graduates, employers and voluntary organisations met
together to address ways to prepare for employment.

The benefit of this event is reflected in this comment from one of


the students, Made contact with representatives from Northbrook.
Great motivation and met a few people with disabilities, so I feel
less isolated.

Here are three examples of how the Project has


helped students with disabilities:
A second year student with disabilities has been supported
by the project through individual meetings, workshops
and events to develop her employability skills and find a
placement with the Equality Commission in Belfast in June.
She has become more aware of what employers are looking for
and is starting to prepare for employment.
A recent graduate left Queens last summer with no recent
work experience and was unemployed. The project has
supported him through individual meetings, a graduate
workshop and the Lets Work event to gain a voluntary
placement with the RNIB in Belfast. This has also helped him to
become less socially isolated and become more confident.
A first year student with caring responsibilities felt he would
not have enough time to do a work placement. The project
through individual support and the Lets Work event has
helped him to gain a place on The Developing Employability
Skills for Non-Vocational Disciplines project and find a summer
placement with a local theatre.

Further Information
If you are aware of students with disability who could similarly
benefit from the Project, then direct them to Paul McLennan,
Careers Adviser (Disability) Lets Work Project on 9097 2862 or email:
[email protected]

21

Work placement an assessment solution?


The words Work placement can result in academic staff running
to lock their office doors.
How do we ensure all students get the same
placement experience?
How do we assess them?
We have no experience in assessing this type of work!
These are some of the issues which those involved in work
placement have been wrestling with for some time.
We know work placement is of value to students, but we do not
seem to be able to identify why. What is it that students gain whilst
on placement which makes it beneficial to them in terms of their
personal and academic development?
If we cannot identify what the students are gaining, how can we
assess it?
In the Institute of Agri-Food and Land Use at Queens, all the
undergraduate degree programmes have compulsory work
placement. For those on a 3 year programme, 16 weeks of
placement is required, whilst for those on the 4 year programme 46
weeks is the minimum. In the former the placement is assessed as a
module in Stage 2, whilst for the latter it is a module at Stage 3.
During the last academic year, the first cohort of students
completed the 16 week placement and this article describes the
assessment of those students.
Assessment and Learning outcomes
In determining the assessment for the module, the learning
outcomes were the key. i.e. what did we want the students to gain
from their placement?
The development of learning outcomes was approached in
the same way as for all other modules, except that in order to
accommodate a range of suitable placements, they needed to be
at a higher level than would be usual for a taught module. This is
similar to the approach taken for project or dissertation modules
where the learning outcomes are not project specific as each
student has a different project.

22

The learning outcomes agreed for the placement module were:


At the end of the module the student will:
i. be able to relate academic learning to the work place,
ii. have developed identified work related skills,
iii. be able to critically evaluate their learning from
the placement and
iv. have enhanced their career knowledge.
The level of the learning outcomes ensures that their achievement
by the student is independent of the type of placement attained.
The nature of the learning outcomes also means that in terms
of assessment, it is based on what the student has learnt whilst
applying for and during the placement and not the activities
they carried out whilst on placement. What the student does on
placement provides evidence to support their achievement of the
learning outcomes.
Assessment
The assessment is based on enabling the students to demonstrate
they have achieved the learning outcomes.
The assessment of the placement includes:
i. a pre-placement portfolio (20%) consisting of a summary
of applications and outcomes, CVs and covering letters,
eflection on each application and a forward assessment
of skills to be gained on placement ( in line with those
identified in the programme specification). Assessment
of the preplacement portfolio has a heavy weighting
on the learning elements. i.e. the reflection on each
application (completed through a proforma) and
the forward assessment of skills ( completed through
a proforma).
ii. a placement folio (60%) consisting of a log book, two
work based learning elements, a new CV including skills
etc. gained from placement, a covering letter applying
for a graduate job with their placement organisation and
a reflective essay in which the student has to demonstrate
achievement of each of the learning outcomes through
evidence from their placement.
An assessment of the student by the placement host, based
on their job performance and a range of 14 employability
skills accounts for 10% of the folio mark. Each work based
learning element involves the student writing a 500 word
report on an overarching aspect of their placement organisation
such as the Marketing Strategy, Health and Safety Policy, the
Customer base or the Management structure. These require
the student to do research outside their job area increasing their

Dr Karen King
Director of Education, Institute of Agri-Food and Land Use
understanding of how their placement organisation functions.
Assessment of the placement folio has a heavy weighting on the
reflective essay, where the student demonstrates their
achievement of the learning outcomes. The evidence
to support this reflection should be referenced to the
application reflection, the forward skills assessment,
the log book and the work based learning elements.
iii. a presentation (15 mins) (20%) in which students outline the
activities they carried out whilst on placement and how they
achieved each of the learning outcomes. The assessment of
the presentation has equal weighting on
content and presentational skills.
The assessment has been structured such that certain
elements of the placement folio and the presentation also
meet the assessment criteria for the Queens Work Experience
Award offered through Careers, Employability and Skills.
The Queens Work Experience Award is a new and innovative
programme which was designed to enable students to gain an
accredited award which recognises skills developed through
work experience. The programme, delivered by Careers, enables
participants to gain a theoretical and practical understanding of the
skills they are developing. It also involves training on how to reflect
on the experience and make the link between work experience,
work based competencies and graduate employment.
In assessing achievement of each of the learning outcomes, the
students have to demonstrate the following:
i. ability to relate academic learning to the work place.
Specific identification of elements/subjects within their
modules. The quality of their ability rather than quantity
is assessed.
ii. have developed identified work related skills.
Clear evidence of development of transferable, subject
specific and/or cognitive skills.
iii. be able to critically evaluate their learning from
the placement.
Indication of where, how and when the learning
from i and ii will be of benefit to them.
iv. have enhanced their career knowledge.
This aspect includes not only specific jobs and types of
work, but also the type of work environment the
student feels most suited to. i.e. group or individual
working, office based or more varied.

Placement preparation
Key to the ability of the students to achieve the learning outcomes
is their preparation. Compulsory elements of the Queens Work
Experience Award, included 2x3 hour workshops, facilitated by
Deirdre Deery from Careers to students prior to their placement. As
a result of these workshops, students were very clear on the reasons
for undertaking their placement and what they could gain from
it. They were also made aware of aspects such as networking and
professional attitude.
It is essential to ensure the placement can provide opportunities
to enable the student to achieve the learning outcomes. Each
placement has to be approved and a placement agreement is
established which includes the job description, the academic
requirements in terms of assessment and a statement that all
parties agree to support the student in achieving the learning
outcomes which are stated. The student, placement host and
module co-ordinator all sign the agreement and each receives
a copy.
Success
All the students taking the module during the last year excelled
as evidenced by both their academic and placement host
assessments. All the placement hosts were highly complimentary
about the students and wish to take students next year. A number
of students also secured job offers on graduation.
The placement hosts were very supportive and encouraging
to the students in enabling them to complete their academic
requirements.
The reflective essays have clearly shown the increased personal
development, confidence and honest self-analysis gained by the
students through developing reflective skills.
Whilst review is needed to enhance the assessment in particular by
reducing the number of assessed elements, the module has clearly
demonstrated that placement can be assessed like other modules,
based on learning outcomes.
Future developments
The placement model will be rolled out into the rest of the School
of Biological Sciences through the CETL in Active and Interactive
Learning, which aims to enhance employability skills through active
and interactive learning, including work placement.
Future developments include linking the placement module to
PDP, specifically through the construction of student CVs and
the placement process and an assessment of some higher level
employability skills ( which many students have demonstrated
this year) by the placement hosts. With respect to this latter
development we have involved external stakeholders through our
curriculum boards and specifically the relevant Sector Skills Council
representatives.
Anyone who would like to discuss the issues raised in this article can
contact me at [email protected] or Deirdre at [email protected]

23

Centre for Educational Development

Reflections

Queens University Belfast


6 Malone Road
Belfast BT7 1NN
Tel: 028 9097 6570
Email: [email protected]

Guest Speaker Series 2007


Event:
Presenter:
Date and time:

Reap (Re-engineering Assessment Practices)


Dr David Nicol, Strathclyde University
15 February 2008, 10.00am 1.00pm. OSCR

Event:
Presenter:
Date and time:

Enquiry-Based Learning, Manchester CETL


Karen ORourke and Bill Hutchings
18 April 2008, 10.00 am - 1.00 pm, Council Chamber/Canada Room

Event:
Presenter:
Date and time:

In at the Deep End


Professor Phil Race, Leeds Metropolitan University
13 May 2008, 9.30 am - 12.00 pm, OSCR

Event:
Presenter:
Date and time:

Encouraging Motivation and Active Learning in Lectures (and beyond)


Dr Kate Exley, University of Leeds
16 May 2008, 10.00 am - 1.00 pm, Council Chamber/Canada Room

For details of these events, please visit the CED website at http://www.qub.ac.uk/ced

Summary of Workshops January March 2008


JANUARY
10
Jan
2008
Linking Student Employability to Graduate Recruitment
16
Jan
2008
An Introduction to Disability Awareness
16
Jan
2008
Detecting and Preventing Plagiarism
23
Jan
2008
Small Group Teaching for Arts & Humanities
23
Jan
2008
An Introduction to the Features of QOL for Learning and Teaching (IT)
24
Jan
2008
The Dyslexic Student at University
24
Jan
2008
Laboratory Demonstrating
26
Jan
2008
Integrating Career Management and Employability Skills into the Curriculum
30
Jan
2008
Small Group Teaching for Science, Engineering & Medicine
30
Jan
2008
Using the Turnitin UK Plagiarism Detection Software (IT)

FEBRUARY

4
Feb
2008
Teaching and Learning for Research Staff Part 1
6
Feb
2008
Preparing and Giving Lectures Part 1 Tips & Theory
6
Feb
2008
PowerPoint for Lectures and Presentations: First Steps (IT)
7
Feb
2008
Supporting Students in Distress or Difficulty
7
Feb
2008
Teaching and Learning for Research Staff Part 2
13
Feb
2008
Interactive PowerPoint Presentations (IT)
13
Feb
2008
Preparing and Giving Lectures Part 2 Practical session in small groups

13
Feb
2008
Higher Education Lunchtime Forum Dr Geraint Ellis
14
Feb
2008
Preparing and Giving Lectures Part 2
20
Feb
2008
Teaching Larger Classes
27
Feb
2008
Using Computer Assisted Assessment within QOL for Learning and Teaching (IT)
27
Feb
2008
Small Group Teaching for Science, Engineering & Medicine
29
Feb
2008
Small Group Teaching for Arts & Humanities

MARCH
5
Mar
2008
Writing Learning Outcomes and Module Design
5
Mar
2008
Creating Audio and Video enhanced presentations for QOL (IT)
8
Mar
2008
Disability Disclosure, Confidentiality and Evidence in a Higher Education Context
12
Mar
2008
Assessment in Higher Education
12
Mar
2008
SENDO Understanding the Legislation and Responsibilities of Staff
28
Mar
2008
Students and their Careers: A graduate recruitment perspective
Please visit the CED website for further information on the courses and registration details

2.00 4.30
9.30 1.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 4.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 4.00
2.00 5.00
10.00 1.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 5.00
9.30 4.30
2.00 5.00
2.00 - 5.00
2.00 5.00
9.30 1.00
2.00 - 5.00
9.30-12.30 or
2.00 5.00
12.30 - 2.00
2.00 - 5.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 4.00
2.00 5.00
9.30 4.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 5.00
2.00 5.00

You might also like