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To wrap up the year, this editorial post celebrates the top ten viewed Teaching Matters blog posts in 2018. Interestingly, three of these posts were written in 2016, showing that the blog’s content is continually being accessed both nationally, and internationally. Their results were rather conclusive… 2.
In this article, Lila Pitcher, Student Intern with Information Services, talks about her experience of co-creating the Information Services Group (ISG) Intern Blog during the summer of 2018. So, here is my story of internships turned into blog posts, and friendship turned into teamwork. Alright, I exaggerate.
Vet students work with a model of a dog’s head [Paul Dodds]. It was fantastic that they were included in the event and celebrated just as much as staff who teach; this sort of thing I feel makes us feel more like partners in learning and teaching rather than separate entities of teachers and students. References 1. Stansbie, N.,
The University Chancellor, The HRH Princess Royal, talks to students at the workshop about blogging for Teaching Matters. This month, I am delighted to announce Teaching Matters’ focused intention to authentically engagestudents into conversations about learning and teaching across the University.
At this early stage, the student receives feedback from their SLICC staff tutor, who offers them guidance on how they may gain greater insight during the learning experience and maximise the available opportunities. The opportunities offered by SLICCs are only starting to be uncovered.
Students were also introduced to reflective learning models, as tools for their regular reflective blogs. These blogs form part of their assessed portfolio where they evidence what they have learned and demonstrate how they have met the self-designed learning outcomes for the course using the SLICC framework.
Every month Teaching Matters takes a theme and explores it through a number of blog contributions over the month. We also run an events listing page. The focus for March is Peer Learning. Remember, you can also submit details about your event and we can advertise it on Teaching Matters.
In this blog post, three SACHA alumni (Foster Osei, Mtevee Amugune, and Nisha Daniel), who participated in the SACHA programme as online distance learners, discuss the impact of experiential learning on the distance learner experience and share lessons that can be translated to other areas of the curriculum.
Guest blog post by Ray Angle, Assistant Vice President for Career & Professional Development at Gonzaga University and Matt Small, President and CEO of Symplicity.
In this post, Dr Kay Williams, Study Development Advisor at the Institute for Academic Development (IAD), explains the value of working with students as consultants to create the new Study Hub brand, and the Study Hub blog , which offer learning resources for students… How do you solve a problem with learning materials?
As universities are under an increasing level of regulation and accountability in relation to student success and retention, we see commitments towards partnership working as a form of best practice (see: Office for StudentsStudentEngagement Strategy ).
Students at SACHA Think Tank ideas launch. Photo credit: Daniel Hooper-Jones and Isaure Echivard, SACHA In this blog, SACHA staff members, Aidan Tracey and Emma Taylor discuss three common group dynamics and share key takeaways on effective teamwork. This post belongs to June-July Hot Topic series: Students as Change Agents (SACHA).
With this blog post we are delighted to announce the call for applications to participate in the curated week of the Festival, taking place from 19th – 23rd February 2018. For further inspiration, you can read about the events acknowledged at the Festival Awards in this earlier blog post.
It’s the four or five “in the middle” who either have not thought about it or have not considered it as an option who are the ones that we are interested in engaging with to help them explore their potential.
All this is set within the context of students exploring a topic or activity of their own choosing, interest and passion. Seconded to the Institute for Academic Development he is developing his interests in reflection, experiential learning, and student agency, to develop SLICCs institution-wide.
Students wrote blog posts summarising the papers for a wider audience, some of which were then published on the Just World Institute website (see here , here and here ). So, the course took something of the form of a research seminar, although as we note below, it was not exactly the same.
You can read previous blog posts about interning and Employ.ed on Campus Internship Jordana Black Jordana Black is a Mathematics Student at the University, entering the fourth and final year of her degree. It’s definitely been one of the most inter(n)esting summers of my life.
The Choice-Based Credit System (CBCS) is a progressive framework that empowers students to choose courses based on their interests, abilities, and career aspirations. Let’s learn how CBCS improves the quality of higher education in India in this blog post. What is a Choice-Based Credit System (CBCS)?
Students at SACHA Think Tank ideas launch. Photo credit: Daniel Hooper-Jones and Isaure Echivard, SACHA In this blog post, SACHA group coaches Lesley Kelly, Sophie Rippinger, Valerie McIntosh and Amer Khushman share top tips for group mentoring. This post belongs to June-July Hot Topic series: Students as Change Agents (SACHA).
I also now appreciate the importance of studentsengaging in thinking about their future careers as early as possible. It wasn’t that I was wrong in my approach before, but I didn’t really grasp that the twin concerns of academic performance and career aspiration could be interconnected.
Projects addressed topics such as annual giving, student retention, professional and continuing education, academic program planning, and more. The blog posts below are written by the participants to showcase their project and early outcomes. Scholastica Student Success Improving success for pre-health students Joe Fritsch, Ph.D.,
Drafts chapters of the RA, developed using information gathered from across the University and the Students’ Association, were made available to all staff and students in November and December 2019 with accompanying Teaching Matters blog posts. Comments received on the draft chapters were used to develop a first draft of the RA.
This has been very successful so far, with exciting and conceptually challenging material being brought into the course, and led to further collaborative work by the very same students in partnerships with external organisations both within as well as out with the course.
To find out more about course alumni check out the GeoScience Outreach website and read Isla Simmons’ Teaching Matters blog post: ‘ Teaching volcanoes: the Geoscience Outreach and Engagement course ’’. Joe has been working with Friend of the Meadows and Bruntsfield links and you can read more about his project on his blog.
In this mini-series blog post , staff from the Department of Social Responsibility and Sustainability outline the Living Lab approach to student learning and teaching, and discuss its benefits to students and academia… Living Lab projects are a key pedagogical tool that the University of Edinburgh use to increase understanding about real-world (..)
Image credit: Pixabay, CC0 In this blog post, three SACHA alumni (Foster Osei, Mtevee Amugune, and Nisha Daniel), who participated in the SACHA programme as online distance learners, discuss the impact of experiential learning on the distance learner experience and share lessons that can be translated to other areas of the curriculum.
Recognising this as a team of five postgraduate research students (PGR) representatives, we organised intellectually stimulating events focusing on the academic, social and wellbeing development of our diverse PGR learning community. Reps, and authors of this blog post: (L-R) Shaun Fisher, Somia Imran, Anny Chen and Iris Szu-Szu Ho.
Actionable Advice This blog post about the Geo-Science outreach programme gives useful advice on how to structure programmes before heading into the classroom. Explain your design in front of the whole class, describing what worked and didn’t work. Compete to be the winning design against the criteria set in the task description.
Previous challenge hosts share their own experiences of being involved in the programme and get some top tips for mentoring student groups from SACHA group coaches.
This specific course design approach, along with the tools we use for scaffolding, the mentoring and reflective practices, and the required institutional support, will be explored in more detail in a future Teaching Matters blog post.
Credit: Stephen Craven, CC0 The Department for Social Responsibility and Sustainability (SRS) is curating a mini-series of blog posts on learning, teaching and sustainability for Teaching Matters. Union Canal – Fountainbridge Moorings.
Come January 2019, we’ll be getting a similar group of heads around the table to scope out how we take this up a gear and continue to support our third and fourth year students as they progress through their programmes and towards graduation. Based on what we’ve built in collaboration with our students and staff so far, we’re feeling hopeful.
Reimagine the Student Experience Central to the transformation is a deep understanding of the new generation of learners — what they seek from their education and how they envision their university experience.
As each student progresses through the role of Design Agency intern, junior, senior, and director, their level of responsibility and workload increases. Each encounter of this spiral curriculum is assessed through reflective documentation often using diaries, blogs, films and pecha-kucha style presentations.
You can read about another University of Edinburgh student’s (Moriah McCauley) podcasting experience (also funded by the Student Partnership Agreement) on her ‘That Vet Life’ blog post. Elliott Gruzin Elliott Gruzin is a fourth year undergraduate philosophy and economics student.
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