Transcript Slide 1

NTU First Year Tutorial Initiative
Student Writing In Transition Symposium 2011
13 September 2011
Helen Puntha, Centre for Academic Development and Quality
Theoretical Underpinnings
Transition
Engagement
•1st year students require
time and support to succeed
in new learning environment
and begin acculturation into
discipline/profession
•Engagement is the next most
important factor for predicting
student progression and
achievement after prior
qualifications
•Social transition is as
important as academic
transition
•For students with lower entry
qualifications the effect is
increased (Kuh 2008)
Learning as Participation
•‘Communities of
practice’(Lave and Wenger
1991)
•Active participation in
‘educationally purposeful
activity’ (Hu and Ku 2001)
Principles
Cohesion
Relationships between students and student-tutor
relationships
Identity
Disciplinary / professional identity
Purposeful
activity
Educational tasks with ongoing feedback built-in
feedback
Focus on
process
Supporting students with learning processes, not
content
Programmed
and
distinctive
Distinctive system with a programme of activities to
encourage effectiveness
System Requirements
Full tutorial system will be implemented in 2012-13.
Interim position for 2011-12 is as follows:
• All first year undergraduates to receive, in
Welcome Week, the names of a
personal/academic tutor and the members of their
tutorial group.
• Each tutorial group (of 8-12 students) to meet
twice in the first term and three more times,
across terms 2 and 3.
Guidance on Tutorial Session Content
Timing
Tasks which encompass the following
–
Induction week
Students are provided with the names of their tutor and of other
members of their tutor group
1
Term 1 (early)




2
Term 1 (mid-term, before
major assessment
deadlines)
 Understanding the curriculum – a sense of connectedness
 Assessment and feedback in HE, including expectations for the
programme, foregrounding of development across years
 Progress so far
3
Term 2 (early)
 Learning from and working with feedback: engaging with the
feedback that students will have encountered to this point
4
Term 2
 A short task based around what it means to be a member of the
disciplinary/professional community, eg profiling an expert
practitioner
5
Term 3

o
o

Getting to know peers and tutor
Expectations about learning at university; future goals
Reassurance about fitting in and being in the right place
How learning at NTU will be different/similar to previous learning
context (school/FE college), the importance of dialogue for effective
learning
Review of the year, including:
Identifying/revisiting future goals
strategies of an effective learner (lessons learnt)
Looking forward to Level 2
References
Hu, S. and Kuh, G.D. Being (dis)engaged in educationally purposeful
activities: the influences of student and institutional characteristics.
Research in Higher Education 43(5) pp. 555-575. 2001.
Kuh, G.D. et al. Unmasking the effects of student engagement on
first-year college grades and persistence. Journal of Higher
Education. 79(5) pp. 540-563. 2008.
Lave, J. and Wenger, E. Situated learning: legitimate peripheral
participation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1991.