developing and enhancing partnerships for learning

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Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning How can increased student engagement promote student success? Becka Colley Dean of Students National Teaching Fellow

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Page 1: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning How can increased student engagement promote student success?

Becka ColleyDean of Students

National Teaching Fellow

Page 2: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Overview

• What makes students stay/leave?

• How can collaborative and peer learning enhance the student experience?

• What effect does peer interaction have on the student experience?

Page 3: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

• What do PARTNERSHIPS mean to you?

• Discuss with person next to you• 2 mins!

• Acrostic…

To get you thinking…

Page 4: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

• P• A• R• T• N• E• R

• S• H• I• P• S

Page 5: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Partnerships

• P eople• A ctivities• R eflection• T ransition• N urture• E nthusiasm• R espect

• S upport• H elp• I ndividuals• P eer• S taff

Page 6: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Students 2.0?

• Who/what are modern students? –A vision of students today (Wesch, 2007)

–Engaging Students at Bradford (Currant, 2009)

• What issues do they face? • What challenges does this pose for us?• How do we respond to differences from the

‘norm’?

Page 7: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Stating the Obvious But…

…Higher Education is changing:• “The university system is in need of ‘radical

change’ to provide a better deal for taxpayers and students” (Willetts, 10 June 2010)

• How is the sector going to respond?• What will we do differently?• Can partnerships support this process?

Page 8: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

• Over last 20 years Higher education has undergone radical and unprecedented change (Education Act, 1992; Dearing Report, 1997; Roberts Report, 2003; Leitch

Report, 2006; Browne, 2010; CSR, 2010)

• Learners are entering with different expectations and assumptions about their experiences

• The student body has become dramatically more heterogeneous and has fragmented in some cases

The Impact of ‘massification’

Page 9: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

What will happen to HE?

Page 10: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Go Back to Basics??

(no real change…)

Page 11: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Become Futuristic??

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Universities 2.0?

• Diversity of entry routes

• Issues of dealing with developing autonomy

• Earning whilst learning

• Disengaged learners seeking qualification

• Pressures on the system and individuals

• Changing processes within an inflexible

system

• Tradition and history

Page 13: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

“£9000 a year fees will be the

exception not the rule.”

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“Certain tutors appear arrogant and unwilling to listen to student's views. Tutors are often unable to make lectures interesting and/or

teach the subject matter in a way that clearly communicates the information and is stimulating. £3,000+ per year definitely

not worth it.” [quote from NSS]

In the context of…

Page 15: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

• How long to see the impact and effects?

• How long before even more change??

• What does this mean for student engagement?

Page 16: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Outcome = Mixed (imho…)

Those that can, will and those that can’t, will (struggle…)

What does this mean for• Staff• Students • Institutions• Society• You???

Page 17: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

How do students think they learn best?

“I prefer practical learning as I like to do things and get bored when just listening to someone talking. I do quite well when working in a group as well as it gives me more ideas and opinions”

“Through repetition. I like to study independently initially but then to consolidate the learning I like to discuss it and have feedback on it. I have a low attention span and so find a lot of reading and quiet time very hard work. I like to interact with people and so the discussion and debate of ideas appeals to me greatly”

“I learn best from doing things or thinking through a problem with other people or by writing something down, drawing it. I don't learn much by just reading something”

Page 18: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

The Traditional Curriculum…

University of X provides per module:• Lectures x 2 hours x 12• Seminars x 1 hour x 6• Group tutorials x 1 hour x 3

– Group work (with assessed presentation)• 100+ hours of independent study (aka the

library) per module• Assessed by coursework and 3 hour exam

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And if they’re really lucky they get…

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• “I do not get enough contact time. I am paying over £3000 a year and this semester I will have no lectures. This is not value for money!”

• “We are paying a lot of money to gain a degree only to be let down time and time again!”

• “More lecturers for the money I'm paying”• “Too much self-directed studies, not enough help from staff,

not sufficient lecture hours, too much money paid for not enough hours.”

• “The tuition fees are really expensive and they don't give us enough lecture time and I don't know what we are actually paying for.”

And the students say…

Page 22: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Why Do Students Leave University?

• Because they are not engaged

• Not engaged academically– “I am not clever enough”– “The course is not what I thought it would be”

• Not engaged socially– “I feel lonely”– “I am homesick”– “The other students are not friendly”

Page 23: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Why Come to University?

• Balance of power between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation

• Why have they decided to come to University at all?

• What do they expect… – of University itself?– to do once they leave?

Page 24: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Why Are You Here?

• Because “I have nothing else to do”• Because “my parents/siblings told me to

come”• Because “I don’t want to get a job”• Because “I want to study the subject”

• What impact will this have on engagement? How do we support a different learning experience?

Page 25: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Why Have I Stayed?

Page 26: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Issues of Belonging

Why do they leave?

• Lack of social life and community activity and involvement

• I have no social life here• Very limited activities to

simply relax and socialize.

(also financial, pressure of work, course related issues)

Why do they stay?

• My fellow students have helped me a lot. They have been very supportive and are always helpful.

• Support of class mates• The people on my course

and in my group have helped me throughout the course of the year

• The support of other students

Page 27: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

1. Make Research-Based Learning the Standard

2. Construct an Inquiry-Based Freshman Year

3. Build on the Freshman Foundation

4. Remove Barriers to Interdisciplinary Education

5. Link Communication Skills and Course Work

6. Use Information Technology Creatively

7. Culminate with a Capstone Experience

8. Educate Graduate Students as Apprentice Teachers

9. Change Faculty Reward Systems

10. Cultivate a Sense of Community

Ten Ways to Change Undergraduate Education

The Boyer Commission onEducating Undergraduatesin the Research University: REINVENTING UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATIONBoyer, 1999

Page 28: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

• What do PARTNERSHIPS mean to you?

• Who are these partnerships with?• Are the partnerships about

taking/relinquishing elements of control?• How do we ensure proactivity?

Personalisation? Engagement?

Going back to the beginning…

Page 29: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Expectation management is key• Support• Integration• Transition issues• Success• Awareness• Personalisation within a complicated and

fragmented system

It’s All About Expectations…

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• Universities need to become less fragmented but not turn into a unstimulating vanilla experience or a corporate collective…

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Partnerships for Success

• Knowing someone was there who understood all this really helped

• Supportive staff made me feel welcome

• It was good not to be alone

• Meeting other people and sharing ideas was excellent

Page 32: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Beyond HEIn HEPre-entry

Academic system

Social system

Organisational system

Professional services system

Student relations

Dispositions & capacities

Student engagement & belonging

HE system

May & Thomas, 2010

Page 33: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Intervention level: Core principles

Intervention level

Proactive Inclusive

Flexible

Transparent

Ongoing Timely

Integrated

Collaborative

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What Can We Do?

• Identify student expectations of University • Make explicit institutional requirements• Demystify the complex, codified structures• Provide holistic induction/transition experiences• Supportive assessment process

– Provide early formative assessment– Engage with curriculum to inspire learners

• Define curriculum engagement• Academic and Social integration

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• How do programmes become ‘grounded and nourished’?

• What does your institution do to welcome students & support with transition?

• How do you provide social interactions with teachers/staff and other students?

• How do you embed course advice and support services?

• Where does peer assisted learning feature in this?

Page 36: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

Any Questions?!

Page 37: Developing and Enhancing Partnerships for Learning

<Thank you!/>