- the Enhancement Themes website

Download Report

Transcript - the Enhancement Themes website

Co-creation of the curriculum
Dr Catherine Bovill, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Dr Niamh Moore-Cherry, University College Dublin, Ireland
Mr Luke Millard, Birmingham City University, UK
Dr Alison Cook-Sather, Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania, USA
Dr Peter Felten, Elon University, North Carolina, USA
International Enhancement Themes Conference 11-13 June 2013
Overview
1. Introduction
Dr Catherine Bovill, University of Glasgow
2. Co-creating curriculum in a mass education system:
challenges and insights
Dr Niamh Moore-Cherry, University College Dublin, Ireland
3. Broadening engagement: Can we engage all students, not
just the select few?
Mr Luke Millard, Birmingham City University, UK
4. How do we ensure we engage and take seriously diverse
students?
Dr Alison Cook-Sather, Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania, USA
5. How do we ensure we engage particular groups of students?
Dr Peter Felten, Elon University, North Carolina, USA
Shifting ideas about teaching
•
•
•
•
Student centred learning,
Student engagement,
Enquiry based learning,
Problem based learning etc.
But
“…participatory principles and practices may become
divested of their socially progressive potential by the
economic preoccupations of higher education reform.”
(Lambert, 2009:296)
The context is challenging
Current interest
Student representation (SPARQS 2011)
Students as researchers (Jenkins & Healey, 2009; Otis & Hammond 2010)
Students as change agents (Dunne & Zandstra, 2011)
Students as producers (McCulloch, 2009)
Student as producer (Neary, 2011)
Students as active participants (Bovill & Bulley, 2009)
Students as consultants (Cook-Sather, 2009)
Students as partners (Bovill et al, 2011, Little, 2011)
Students as co-creators (Bovill et al, 2011)
Co-creating what?
What is the curriculum?
Fraser & Bosanquet’s (2006) curriculum definitions
a) Structure and content of a unit
b) Structure and content of a programme of study
c) The students’ experience of learning
d) A dynamic and interactive process of teaching and
learning (p272)
Examples of co-creation
•
•
•
•
•
•
students asked to complete course feedback questionnaire
students choosing the topic for their research project
students co-designing marking criteria with staff
students designing (one of?) their own learning outcomes
students and staff collaborate to choose a course text book
students choosing which of two assessments they complete
for a course
• students becoming members of a curriculum design team
• students designing the content of the virtual learning
environment for a course or programme
Challenges we need to consider…
I teach first years and
Wethey
are don’t
all have 20
years
of and
experience
like
overstretched
this
IWe
only
have
teach
a these
me
tolike
know
what needs
more
professional
studentssounds
for
body
twothat
weeks
to
be
work…
constrains
and the course
what
we
is in
co-the content of
first year chemistry
ordinated
can do with
bythe
our
someone
curriculum…
else… curriculum…
References
Bovill, C. & Bulley, C.J. (2011) A model of active student participation in curriculum design: exploring
desirability and possibility. In Rust, C. Improving Student Learning (18) Global theories and local
practices: institutional, disciplinary and cultural variations. Oxford: OCSLD.
Bovill C., Cook-Sather, A. and Felten, P. (2011) Changing Participants in Pedagogical Planning: Students as
Co-Creators of Teaching approaches. Course Design and Curricula. International Journal for
Academic Development 16 (2) 197-209
Cook-Sather, A (2009) 'From traditional accountability to shared responsibility: the benefits and
challenges of student consultants gathering midcourse feedback in college classrooms',
Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 34: 2, 231-241.
Dunne, E. and Zandstra, R. (2011) Students as change agents. New ways of engaging with learning and
teaching in higher education. Bristol: ESCalate/University of Exeter.
Fraser, S. & Bosanquet A. (2006). The curriculum? That's just a unit outline, isn't it? Studies in Higher
Education, 31 (3) 269–284.
Jenkins, A. & Healey, M. (2009) Developing the student as a researcher through the curriculum. In Rust, C.
(Ed) Improving Student Learning: for the Twenty First Century learner. Oxford: OCSLD, Oxford.
Lambert, C. (2009) Pedagogies of participation in higher education: a case for research-based learning.
Pedagogy, culture and society 17 (3) 295-309.
Little, S (2011) (Ed) Staff-student partnerships in higher education. London: Continuum.
McCulloch, A. (2009) The student as co-producer: learning from public administration about the studentuniversity relationship. Studies in Higher Education 34 (2) 171-183
Neary, M (2010) Student as producer: a pedagogy for the avant-garde? Learning Exchange, 1 (1).
Otis, M.M. & Hammond, J.D. (2010) Participatory action research as a rationale for student voices in the
scholarship of teaching and learning. In Werder, C. and Otis, M. (Eds) Engaging student voices in
the study of teaching and learning. Sterling, Virginia: Stylus.
SPARQS (2011) Annual report. Avail: http://www.sparqs.ac.uk/upfiles/SPARQS%20REPORT%20PAGES.pdf
Main presentations
Questions for you
Speak to the people around you – in pairs and
threes share your answers to the following
questions:
1. What are your immediate reactions to the
presentations you have just heard?
2. What idea or example was the most powerful,
interesting, or useful for you?
3. What questions are you left with, which you
would like to pose to the panel?