Transcript Slide 1

The Burgess recommendations:
background and progress with
implementation
Rob Ward
The Centre for Recording Achievement
[email protected]
Steering Group Report (2007)
Honours Degree Classification No Longer Fit for
Purpose
Case for Change (Why Develop a HEAR?)
• Summative System at Odds with Lifelong
Learning.
• Wider Recognition of Achievement.
• Recognising Achievement at all Levels.
• Employability Skills.
• Employers have clearly defined qualities they are
looking for in graduates.
• Greater financial investment than ever before.
 Students require more than just a certificate.
 All stakeholders should have detailed information on
what is behind a particular class of degree.
The wider context…
• ‘a need to do justice to the full range of
student experience by allowing a wider
recognition of achievement.’
• ‘the present system cannot capture
achievement in some key areas of interest
to students and employers.’
The HEAR Proposals…
• By …2010/11… a Higher Education Achievement
Report (HEAR) will be the central vehicle for
recording all university-level undergraduate higher
education student achievement in all UK higher
education institutions.
• The HEAR will be a single document, based on, and
developed from, the current academic transcript,
and incorporating the European Diploma
Supplement (so first and foremost an academic
record...)
• The HEAR will contain information which the
institution is prepared to verify. Further work should
be done on how to measure and record skills and
achievements gained through non-formal learning…
The story so far…
• A varied range of initial trial institutions,
purposefully chosen to reflect diversity…
• An unfinished account, practice still
evolving but much clarified…
• Second wave of institutions about to
become involved…
What is the HEAR?
• Core template framework reflecting a more
detailed and rounded view of a student’s
experience and achievements.
• Key building blocks (sections):
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Information identifying the holder of the qualification
Information identifying the qualification
Information on the level of qualification
Information on the contents and results gained
Information on the function of the qualification
Additional information
Certification
Information on the national HE System
HEAR Components =
• Academic Transcript (module marks and grades).
• Diploma Supplement.
• Additional information esp. section 6.1 - a ‘richer picture’
of student achievement, verified additional achievements
recorded under one of three headings:
– University, Professional and Departmental Prizes;
– measured or assessed performance in non-academic
contexts accredited by, or with external accreditation
recognised by the University, e.g. awards concerned
with employability;
– Additional recognised activities undertaken by students
which demonstrate achievement but for which no
recognition is provided in terms of academic credit, e.g.
Course Representatives or Students’ Union Officers.
‘Going with the grain’…
• Transcripts… 64% (45 out of 70 institutions)
were achieving the objective of providing a
transcript meeting the minimum data set
requirements for undergraduate students.
(Brennan and Shah, CHERI, 2003).
• Diploma Supplement…60% of respondents
reported issuing the Diploma Supplement - over
twice as many HEIs as in 2005 when only 28%
of respondents issued the Diploma Supplement
(60% response rate, UUK Europe Unit survey,
2007/8).
Wider learning: survey evidence
from the sector…
62 responses (from 44 institutions). Key
points:
– 22 responses related to nationally recognised
schemes; 40 to Institutional provision;
– 29 formally Assessed;
– 24 Credit Bearing;
– 21 included within the current Transcript.
The direction of travel…
• A shift from ‘why should we’ to ‘how can
we’…
• Broad agreement on the framework and
Guidelines for implementation approach…
• Significant visibility for the initiative within
trial institutions…
• Emphasis on value in supporting learning
and employability…
More than a record…
Evolving HEAR’s provide
• A basis for discussion with student bodies about
wider achievements and how these might be
recognised
• a context for recognising learning and informing
choices…
– ‘As part of the HEAR pilot The University of
Manchester is exploring formative HEARs to be
produced annually for students in order to inform their
academic and extra-curricular choices. The ‘HEARing
voices’ project will focus on the formative,
development aspects of the HEAR initiative and will
run alongside the development of graduate HEARs.’
• a (re)source for students to draw upon in
articulating and evidencing their achievements
to employers and postgraduate tutors.
Work in progress…
Technical challenges for some… ‘the next useful stage is a
technical stage, to develop a viable and sustainable system
to capture and store the information.’
Alongside…
•‘We have now produced a trial HEAR. The exercise
proved less painful than we expected. We expect to be
able to allow students to see on the intranet how their
HEAR is developing during the course of their
studies.’ (Feb 2009)
• ‘By the end of July 2010 we are intending to attempt to
produce a HEAR for all our completing graduates. This
should have section 6.1 material in it. We have not
decided whether this will ‘go live’ but probably will
provided we can do this effectively.’ (December 2009)
More than half the institutions in the ‘first wave’ report
they could provide a ‘near HEAR’ document for all this
academic year.
Key Issues Emerging
Sections of the HEAR that have involved the
greatest discussion and testing have been:
section 4.3: the amount of information available about
programme structures (modules) and assessment;
section 6.1: information about other activities and skills
that can be verified by institutions.
Further work necessary in terms of costing.
General wish of triallists to retain an institutional
perspective and flavour in both respects, not too
prescriptive from the centre.
Wider achievements and the HEAR
(6.1)…
• Within a clear guidance framework…‘authorised
statements of student achievement not included
elsewhere, whether:
– assessed and/or accredited by the University;
– verified by appropriate and authorised University
personnel;
– approved by the University for inclusion on the basis
of criteria confirmed under the relevant quality
assurance procedures of the institution.’
• Emphasis upon approaches which seek to
maximise student inclusion…
Context for employer stakeholders
The Graduate Market:
Graduate numbers:
335,000 students graduated in 2008
260,000 graduated in 1999
175,000 in 1994
Graduate vacancies (top 100 graduate employers)
19,900 vacancies in 2008
14,300 in 2009
Why we might think HEARs are important to employers:
We know the current system is flawed
Greater transparency = fairer recruitment
The HEAR could give:
Enhanced diversity of information
Risk reduction / Efficiency gains
Key employer messages so far:
• Simplicity of format and concise content, though not at
the extent of removing the individual and personal focus.
• Primary value in enabling students to be ‘more
choiceful’; highlighting the importance of thinking and
acting to develop a range of experiences and
achievements beyond academic programmes, and in
providing a richer record they could use to articulate and
evidence achievements.
• Substantial preference for an electronic HEAR, and for
this to be available for scrutiny in respect of applications
for internships or - in the final year of undergraduate
study - for employment opportunities.
• Institutional verification of wider achievements seen as a
new and welcome development .
And not just large employers…
‘We have found that the CVs of applicants who
have applied for jobs we have advertised are very
formulaic and standardised and contain little actual
information about the people themselves.
The expanded sections in 4.3 and 6.1 would be
most helpful as this personalised “soft facts”
content gives the prospective employer a much
more rounded picture of a potential employees
abilities.’
Some key issues
• ‘Institutional vision/fit’
• Institutional readiness.
• Institutional support.
HEAR and the Student Experience
The Student
Experience
Student as an
Active Learner
Student as an
Active Partner
Student as an
Active Citizen
Graduate as
manifesting
graduate
attributes
Institutional readiness: stakeholder
views…
• Senior staff
• Registries
• Faculties
• Student unions
• Students
Generally positive, importance of
‘mission fit’ (fear being left behind?)
professionally engaged - but see
challenges (additional data, processes,
procedures)
Sceptical, yet see opportunities. Need
to ensure programme information is
up-to-date and appropriately archived.
enthusiastic welcome, new
responsibilities for conceptualising and
recording.
enthusiastic welcome, a new view on
“their” record.
Institutional Support…
• Technical discussion Forum
– [email protected] by visiting
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgibin/webadmin?A0=HEAR-TECHNICAL
• Technical architecture considerations for
implementing the HEAR
– http://wiki.cetis.ac.uk/Technical_architecture_consider
ations_for_implementing_the_HEAR
• HEAR Technical Specification
– Nov 09 (final version March 10)
• ‘HEAR Readiness Self-assessment framework.’
Timetable for implementation…
• The Implementation Steering Group has
agreed that the default position is that
there should be sector-wide rollout with
incoming students at the beginning of the
academic year 2011-2012.
• Voluntary take up could occur from 201011 if all continues to go well with the
current trial.