Transcript Slide 1

A Balancing of
Responsibilities
Tom Evershed
Higher Education Manager, Warwickshire College
Warwickshire College
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Mature and confident provider of HE
Six centres, all with higher education
Over 1000 HE students
A wide range of subjects and awards
Six awarding bodies (five HEIs)
Currently applying for Foundation DegreeAwarding Powers
Six Different Relationships
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Coventry University
The University of Worcester
The University of Gloucestershire
Birmingham City University
The University of Warwick
Edexcel
Chapter B10 – Managing Higher
Education Provision With Others
• Expectation: Degree-awarding bodies take
ultimate responsibility for academic standards
and the quality of learning opportunities,
irrespective of where these are delivered or who
provides them. Arrangements for delivering
learning opportunities with organisations other
than the degree-awarding body are implemented
securely and managed effectively.
Chapter B10 – Managing Higher
Education Provision With Others
• Indicator 2: Governance arrangements at
appropriate levels are in place for all learning
opportunities which are not directly provided by
the degree-awarding body. Arrangements for
learning to be delivered, or support to be
provided, are developed, agreed and managed
in accordance with the formally stated policies
and procedures of the degree-awarding body.
Chapter B10 – Managing Higher
Education Provision With Others
• Indicator 5: The risks of each arrangement to
deliver learning opportunities with others are
assessed at the outset and reviewed
subsequently on a periodic basis. Appropriate
and proportionate safeguards to manage the
risks of the various arrangements are
determined and put in place.
Chapter B10 – Managing Higher
Education Provision With Others
• Indicator 11: Degree-awarding bodies are responsible for
the academic standards of all credit and qualifications
granted in their name. This responsibility is never
delegated. Therefore, degree-awarding bodies ensure
that the standards of any of their awards involving
learning opportunities delivered by others are equivalent
to the standards set for other awards that they
confer at the same level. They are also consistent with
UK national requirements.
Six Different Approaches
to Chapter B10
• Six relationships potentially means six
different ways to meet Chapters B3 & B5
• How much responsibility do colleges want
to take for each different Indicator?
• How much should they want to take?
• And how much should they be delegated?
Chapter B3 – Learning & Teaching
• Indicator 1: Higher education providers articulate and
implement a strategic approach to learning and
teaching and promote a shared understanding of this
approach among their staff, students and other
stakeholders.
• Indicator 2: Learning and teaching activities and
associated resources provide every student with an
equal and effective opportunity to achieve the
intended learning outcomes.
Chapter B3 – Learning & Teaching
• Indicator 3: Learning and teaching practices are
informed by reflection, evaluation of professional
practice, and subject-specific and educational
scholarship.
• Indicator 4: Higher education providers assure
themselves that everyone involved in teaching or
supporting student learning is appropriately qualified,
supported and developed.
Chapter B5 – Student Engagement
• Indicator 1: Higher education providers, in partnership
with their student body, define and promote the range of
opportunities for any student to engage in
educational enhancement and quality assurance.
• Indicator 3: Arrangements exist for the effective
representation of the collective student voice at all
organisational levels, and these arrangements provide
opportunities for all students to be heard.
Chapter B5 – Student Engagement
• Indicator 4: Higher education providers ensure that
student representatives and staff have access to
training and ongoing support to equip them to fulfil
their roles in educational enhancement and quality
assurance effectively.
What Kind Of Relationships
Do We Want?
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Can we be trusted?
The fight for respect
Culture change
What are the implications for the
relationships between HEIs and colleges
with HE?
The Way We Do Things Around Here
• Wherever we use our own procedures we
focus on enhancement; this cannot
happen in the same way where we use
others’ procedures
Questions
• To what degree do students belong to their awarding
body institution? To what extent should they belong?
• It is easier to manage one system than six – for HEIs
and for us – but is equality of opportunity confused by six
different cultures?
• Can cultures of HE-ness and enhancement be fostered
without ownership of the culture?
• Should HEIs work harder to build HE-related learning
and teaching skills at FECs? If so, how?
• “We are made wise not by the recollection
of our past but by the responsibility for our
future.”
George Bernard Shaw
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