Engaging Academic Staff through an Institutional CPD Framework

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Transcript Engaging Academic Staff through an Institutional CPD Framework

Gaining Fellowship of the HEA: The
value of an e-portfolio as a thinking
space
Aspire Symposium
September 2013
Aim of the session
• Describe the YSJ professional recognition
process and in particular share how eportfolios are used as a thinking space for
participants to collect and collate their
evidence.
• Share evaluation findings
• Provide opportunity for discussion about the
pros and cons of using e portfolios in this way
Recognising Academic Practice
York St John University Continuing Professional Development Framework
Associate of the HEA
Support staff who are not engaged
in assessment of students but who
have a substantive element of their
role in teaching and learning
• Supporting learning in Higher
Education (30 M level credits)
Fellow of the HEA
All academic staff who teach and
support student learning
• Post Graduate Certificate in
Academic Practice (PCAP*)
• Post Graduate Diploma
• MA
Senior Fellow of the HEA
Experienced staff who lead
and mentor others in the
enhancement of teaching
and learning
Professional Dialogic/Paper Routes
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New academic staff induction and survival kit
Peer Observation of Teaching and Learning
Writing retreats
Learning, Teaching and Assessment development workshops e.g. master classes and Technology Enhanced
Learning workshops
Pedagogic research activities
Research Informed Teaching activities
Pedagogic conferences internal and external
Scholarly activities e.g. breakfast café, bespoke activities such as dialogue days and curriculum redesign events
SEDA Supporting Learning Technology and SEDA Embedding Learning Technology Awards
Principal Fellow of the HEA
Staff with sustained and
effective record of impact and
influence on teaching and
learning at
strategic level
Recognising Academic Practice
YSJ CPD Framework
• Professional dialogue routes to D2 and D3
accredited by HEA January 2012
• Pilot cohort (n=15) April to July 2012 (D2 only)
• CPD Framework accredited by HEA September
2012
– Professional dialogue and paper routes D1-D4
• Cohorts Sept 2012 (D2 plus pilot D3 process), Jan
2013, April 2013 (D2, 3 and pilot D4), June 2013
• University targets 100% by end of 2014/15
Professional dialogue route
• Professional dialogue route is underpinned by the values of staff
collaboration and collegiality, development and reflection.
• Professional dialogue is to facilitate reflection by being:
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an intentional process,
where social context and experience are acknowledged,
in which learners are active individuals,
wholly present,
engaging with others,
open to challenge, and
the outcome involves transformation as well as improvement for both
individuals and their organisation’
(Brockbank, A Beech, N & McGill, I (eds) (2002) Reflective Learning
in Practice Aldershot UK : Gower
The role of the portfolio
• A thinking space
– to reflect on professional practice
– to bring together appropriate evidence that can
then be discussed in the dialogues
– A formative aspect of the process
– A celebration of expertise and showcase identity
as a professional teacher
– An opportunity to be creative
Some examples of portfolios
• Mandy
• Link to YSJ OER
• http://eportfolio.yorksj.ac.uk/view/view.php?t
=SWzjLICXemNnJ8GAbY3k
Discussion
• Using the dialogue sheets in small groups
consider the first pair of questions, make
notes on your sheets!
• Don’t forget to give your group a name!
Discussion
• Pass your sheet to the next group and
• Reflect on their notes for question 1
• Consider the second pair of questions
Evaluating the value of the e portfolio
• 23 staff completed an online survey
• The majority had worked in HE for more than 6
years with 7 working in HE for longer than 15
years
• Who were they
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The majority were senior lecturers
Two readers
One Dean
Two working in areas outside faculties
• Staff came from all 4 Faculties
What do the staff think?
• An evaluation into the use of the portfolio
revealed the following:
• Increased confidence in using e portfolios
• Valuable as a reflective space to think about
evidence
• A few disliked it and wanted to be able to use
an alternative platform
What did they say
• It's been good for me to use the e-Portfolio in a
real-world scenario, rather than simply exploring
and testing its features for the benefit of teaching
others.
• I found it quite unintuitive at first and continued
to be frustrated by some of its less flexible
aspects, but soon got used to its overall use
• I couldn't get on with it at all to begin with but
Phil helped me a lot and I ended up really
enjoying it
Does it have value as thinking space
• Mahara allowed for the "documentation" of and "drawing
together" of evidence, to support the dialogic process. It
gave me an opportunity to look back and reflect upon my
achievement and plot my progression over time
• It did precisely that - I found that thinking what to include
in the e-portfolio made me reflect on what I had been
doing and why
• It took so long to get the stuff on in the right order [had to
take everything off and number it]. The thinking had to be
done before anything could go on Mahara as a finished
product. No value for me in the thinking / developmental
process which was all done outside the presentation of the
portfolio
• Still in process, certainly the selection of content
has been very useful as it challenges reflective
process, raises many questions ( linking theory to
practice), and makes you realise what the
students have achieved very well, challenges
teaching role ..... corroborates literature in this
area.
• it was a good platform for that, as it allowed
small areas of text plus downloads of larger files
plus photos to break it up and stimulate
discussion
Likelihood of continuing portfolio
• 20 said yes!
• Although!
– In a folder within Microsoft
– Using Word in My Documents
– In other electronic ways
Final comments
• I think the e-Portfolio is a good tool at this stage, but I
am looking forward to the next version which will
include a much more user friendly interface and closer
links with Moodle. Using it for SFHEA application
provided me with an opportunity to use the tool in
earnest, which I really enjoyed
• The employment of Mahara to record personal
achievement & development is both convenient &
highly effective
• If a constantly updated CPD is needed then time will
need to be found to keep it up to date, this may be
tricky in some areas
• Working with the students, graduates and
external business partner in world of digital
platform has been really important for me. Also
made me realise what we need to do to support
students to gather quality material for content implications for digital archiving etc perhaps we
can take this further in discussion across
colleagues in IT, Marketing, Careers,
Employability and also though the
subject/departments as my experience of
working with Mahara touches all these areas ...
just a thought?
The challenges
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Mahara as a platform
Formative/summative
Technical challenges
What’s enough?
What’s not enough?
If portfolio summative how do we ensure its
not a burden for the assessor?
Discussion
• Move your sheet to the next group.
• Consider the third pair of questions.
Discussion
• Return the dialogue sheet to its original group.
Consider future actions you might take back to
your institution.