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SOLSTICE Conference 2015
4th & 5th June 2015
Transforming lives, inspiring changeProfessor Alejandro ArmelliniUniversity of Northampton@alejandroa
PLAN
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1. Principles
2. Transforming lives, inspiring change
3. A strategic approach to QE in L&T
4. Making the VLE work for us
5. Alignment with the UKPSF
6. Innovation – really?
7. Viable futures for learning
PRINCIPLES
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• Quality of teaching central to the quality of the student experience
• Transformational learning experiences through inspirational teaching
• Knowledge and learning and open, mobile, connected and scalable
Responsive-reactive
Radical-innovative
Developmental-incremental
Good practice based on identified needs & evidence
Innovative ideas backed
up by evidence of
needFrom niche to mainstream
enhancement
Innovative approaches aligned with
organisational culture and
needs
Quality enhancement
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Pre-session cognitive exposure –
multimedia resources
F2F session: analysis, discussion,
reflection & goal setting
Post-session online work: consolidation &
evaluation
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Pre-session cognitive
exposure – multimedia resources
?F2F session:
analysis, discussion,
reflection & goal setting
Post-session online work:
consolidation & evaluation
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Pre-session cognitive
exposure – multimedia resources
Pre-session activation of schemata –
asynchronous online tasks
F2F session: analysis,
discussion, reflection & goal
setting
Post-session online work:
consolidation & evaluation
Digital resources
Tasks for sense-making
Analysis, discussion, reflection & goal setting
Consolidation & action planning
ONLINE & F2F ONLINE & F2F
FACE TO FACE, SMALL GROUPS
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VLE DESIGN BENCHMARKS
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Level Focus Key features
Foundation Delivery Absolute minimum expected Course information, handbook and guides Learning materials
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VLE DESIGN BENCHMARKS
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Level Focus Key features
Foundation Delivery Absolute minimum expected Course information, handbook and guides Learning materials
Intermediate
Essential in all ‘blended’ courses
Participation In addition to ‘Delivery’: Online participation designed into the course. Tasks provide meaningful formative scaffold. Online participation encouraged and moderated, but not
assessed.
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VLE DESIGN BENCHMARKS
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Level Focus Key features
Foundation Delivery Absolute minimum expected Course information, handbook and guides Learning materials
Intermediate
Essential in all ‘blended’ courses
Participation In addition to ‘Delivery’: Online participation designed into the course. Tasks provide meaningful formative scaffold. Online participation encouraged and moderated, but not
assessed.
Advanced
Essential in all fully online courses
Collaboration In addition to ‘Delivery’: Regular learner input designed into course & essential throughout. Online tasks provide meaningful scaffold to formative and
summative assessment. Collaborative knowledge construction central to a productive
learning environment & part of assessment.
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VLE DESIGN BENCHMARKS
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Level Focus Objective
Foundation DeliveryCOMPLIANCE (or REPOSITORY!)
Intermediate
Essential in all ‘blended’ courses
Participation ENGAGEMENT
Advanced
Essential in all fully online courses
Collaboration ACTIVE LEARNING
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Content dump vs learning pathway
Trawl through stuff vs use a scaffold
Hidden learning outcomes vs explicit alignment
Chaos vs structure
Push content vs engage
Upload vs design
Resource vs course
Deliver vs teach
UKPSF DESCRIPTORS – CATEGORIES OF FELLOWSHIP
Associate Fellow of the Academy
Graduate Teaching Assistants or Associate Lecturers with
limited teaching role
Learning support, demonstrators or technicians
with some teaching responsibilities.
Career researchers or staff experienced in professional areas with some teaching
responsibilities.
Fellow of the Academy
Staff for whom teaching or learning support is a significant
element of their role
Academic or Support staff holding substantive teaching &
learning responsibilities
Experienced professionals with substantive teaching & learning
responsibilities e.g. within workplace settings
Senior Fellow of the Academy
Staff with considerable expertise in supporting high quality student learning in all dimensions of the framework
Experienced staff demonstrating sustained
impact & influence on the L&T practice of others over a
number of years
Significant experience leading, managing, programmes, mentoring, departmental, school or university L&T
responsibilities
Principal Fellow of the Academy
Highly experienced, sustained and effective impact in relation
to institutional, national or international L&T strategy
Wide-ranging strategic leadership and policymaking responsibilities in connection
with key aspects of L&T
Strategic impact and influence in relation to L&T that extends beyond their own institution.
Practical Courses
(‘New Teacher’)
< Level 7
EdD modules
Level 8
Associate Fellow
Senior Fellow
EdD
Peer ReviewMentoring
Scholarship
Level 8
Practical courses: (new and existing
staff), aligned with UKPSF
< Level 7
Fellow
PGCAP60 credits
Level 7
HEA recognition
Qualifications
Development in:Mentoring, Leadership,
Policy, Research Supervision, etc
(new and existing staff), aligned with UKPSF
Level 7
Intro
duct
ion
to C
@N-
DO &
the
UKPS
F –
two-
hour
wor
ksho
p
Minimum 12 months
Assessment for Associate
Fellowship D1
Minimum 2 years
Assessment for
Fellowship D2
FULL CAIeRO
Collaborative Learning Experiences Online
Assessment - a tool for Learning
Supporting Student Achievement
Peer Observation for Development
Reading Circles exploring L&T Literature
HE Survival+
Peer Observation for Development
+ 1 from belowAp
plica
tion
& Ex
tens
ion
with
in
Prac
tice
Appl
icatio
n &
Exte
nsio
n wi
thin
Pra
ctice
Assessment for PGCAP
Minimum 1 year post-fellowship
C@N-DO submission for D2 + 1000 words at L7
L&T Development Project
Minimum 3 years Impact & Influence
Assessment for Senior Fellowship
D3
+ selection from below based on needs
Becoming a C@N-DO mentor
Becoming a C@N-DO assessor
Becoming a C@N-DO facilitator
Appl
icatio
n &
Exte
nsio
n wi
thin
Pr
actic
e
Changemaking @ Northampton – Development OpportunitiesC@N-DO: a framework for enabling positive change
Interview: Needs analysis for CPD planning
Further recognition route
Qualification route
Becoming a subject or programme leader
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PEDAGOGIC INNOVATION
“Adapting to characteristics of students and responding to their development is an inherent aspect of pedagogy. […] These adaptations can be considered innovations if are based [sic] on a new idea and when they have the potential to improve student learning, or when they are linked with other outcomes […]”
(Vieluf, Kaplan, Klieeme & Bayer, 2012)
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PEDAGOGIC INNOVATION
“What is an innovation in one education system may be well-established practice in another; what is appreciated as an improvement may be rejected elsewhere.”
(Vieluf et al., 2012)
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OLD WINE IN NEW BOTTLES?
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Old wine
Learners generate content as homework, which is used creatively in the following seminarCourse in a (digital) box
Talk to your classmates
New bottles
Flipped classroom
xMOOC
Social learning
Learners bring their books and pencil cases (among many other technologies)Loops of personalised assessment for learning & feedbackStudy on the bus or train, on campus or at homeTeaching methods
Bring your own device (BYOD)
Dynamic assessment
Mobile learning
Pedagogies
SUMMARY: SHAPING THE FUTURES WE WANT
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• Adapting to the challenging climate not good enough: take action, take risks, evaluate, refine
• Pilot small but also pilot big
• Build capacity, model, review, scale up
• Think assessment for innovation
• Engage others in the change, share ownership
• Disseminate, encourage feedback
• Remember: students want ‘contact time’
AN OPPORTUNITY FOR ENHANCEMENT
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Requirements from professional and accreditation bodies can be accommodated, and normally improved, within a blended, learner-centred mode of study
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VIABLE AND PREFERRED FUTURES FOR LEARNING
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An opinion
• We can imagine, but not forecast future scenarios for learning
A hunch
• There is far less pedagogic innovation than meets the eye
A wish
• Teaching, in any mode of study, will be conducted with expertise, commitment and passion, and with a focus on benefiting our students and their communities
READING
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• Gilly Salmon’s blog: http://www.gillysalmon.com/blog.html
• Armellini, A. & Nie, M. (2013). Open educational practices for curriculum enhancement. Open Learning 28(1) 7-20.
• Rogerson-Revell, P., Nie, M. & Armellini, A. (2012) An evaluation of the use of voice boards, e-book readers and virtual worlds in a postgraduate distance learning Applied Linguistics and TESOL programme. Open Learning, 27(2), 103-119.
• Nie, M., Armellini, A., Witthaus, G. & Barklamb, K. (2011). How do e-book readers enhance learning opportunities for distance work-based learners? ALT-J, Research in Learning Technology, 19(1), 19-38.
• Nie, M., Armellini, A., Randall, R., Harrington, S. & Barklamb, K. (2010). The role of podcasting in effective curriculum renewal. ALT-J, Research in Learning Technology 18(2), 105-118.
• Armellini, A., & Aiyegbayo, O. (2010). Learning design and assessment with e-tivities. British Journal of Educational Technology 41(6), 922-935.
• Armellini, A., & Jones, S. (2008). Carpe Diem: Seizing each day to foster change in e-learning design. Reflecting Education, 4(1), 17-29. Available from http://tinyurl.com/58q2lj
• Salmon, G., Jones, S., & Armellini, A. (2008). Building institutional capability in e-learning design. ALT-J, Research in Learning Technology, 16(2), 95-109.
• Salmon, G. (2013). E-tivities: The key to active online learning (2nd ed.). London and New York: Routledge.
• Salmon, G. (2011). E-moderating: The key to teaching and learning online (3rd ed.). New York: Routledge.
• Vieluf, S., Kaplan, D., Klieeme, E. & Bayer, S. (2012). Teaching Practices and Pedagogical Innovation: Evidence from TALIS. OECD Publishing. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264123540-en
To access: search ARMELLINI on Slideshare.net
Professor Alejandro Armellini5 June 2015
[email protected] | @alejandroa
THANK YOU