Planning and Designing Technology-rich Learning Spaces University of Warwick - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 16
About This Presentation
Title:

Planning and Designing Technology-rich Learning Spaces University of Warwick

Description:

Planning and Designing Technology-rich Learning Spaces University of Warwick 17 July 2006 UK HE Space Management Project Impact on space of future changes in HE – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:143
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: drom
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Planning and Designing Technology-rich Learning Spaces University of Warwick


1
Planning and Designing Technology-rich Learning
SpacesUniversity of Warwick 17 July 2006
  • UK HE Space Management Project
  • Impact on space of future changes in HE
  • Bernard Dromgoole - Projects Adviser (HEFCE)
  • Project Manager to the SMG/SMP

2
UK HE Space Management Project
  • Current situation.
  • Estates and the HE sector
  • Increased costs of maintaining the estate
  • Space efficient and effective
  • Government policy
  • Changing academic needs
  • Students as customers

3
UK HE Space Management ProjectThe terrestrial
space mission..
  • Phase One
  • A. Model the affordable estate
  • B. Cost of space
  • C. Review of practice of space management
  • Phase Two
  • D. Assess other space management methods
  • Case studies
  • Promoting space efficiency in building design
  • Impact on space of future changes in HE
  • Good practice in space utilisation
  • Space norms

4
Impact on space of future changes in HE
  • Authors
  • Professor Ron Barnett and Dr. Paul Temple
  • (Institute of Education at
    University of London)
  • Remit
  • Assessment, including known trends in
  • Demand for courses
  • Methods of teaching and learning
  • Impact of widening participation
  • Possible changes in research activity
  • Distance/ self directed/ e_learning

5
The BIG challenge.
  • How much space will be needed in the future??
  • Student numbers and demands
  • Capital and revenue costs of space
  • Minimising waste whilst optimising effectiveness
  • Changing academic needs
  • Catering for new administrative needs

6
Methodology
  • How does this report address the issues?
  • Interviews with academic and admin staff at
    selected diverse institutions
  • Literature review
  • Assessment of potential drivers
  • - increase in distance learning
  • - staffstudent ratios
  • - changes in academic offering
  • - workplace based learning

7
Space and the universitys role
  • Previous 10 years vision
  • Increasingly virtual estate embedded in
    workplaces, shopping centres, cultural venues.
  • Next decade
  • More prominence as knowledge society
    develops.
  • Clustering around HEIs

8
Factors affecting space demand
  • Exogenous
  • - Government policies
  • - Student demand
  • Endogenous
  • - Academic change
  • - Pedagogic change
  • - Managerial change

9
Trends in space management
  • In the last 10 years m2 per FTE has dropped
  • Centralised timetabling more effective
  • Centralisation of space
  • Extending the teaching day and/or week
  • Extension of learning space
  • Academic offices
  • Administrative space
  • Significance of teaching space.

10
Research Disciplinary change
  • Generally intellectual content and
    technological change has led to little change in
    space need.
  • However
  • Equipment has diminished in size
  • Has become more wide ranging
  • More portable
  • Computers have replaced printing machines.
  • More experiments now IT based.

11
Student demand
  • .has had a small impact
  • Away from science, engineering and langs
  • Changing patterns of demand
  • E_learning
  • Work-place based learning
  • Student work/life balance

12
Future trends 1
  • Reduced space use
  • Extended teaching day/year
  • Larger student groups
  • Space remodelling
  • Improved space management
  • Workplace-based learning
  • Research equipment changes

13
Future trends 2
  • Increased space use
  • Increased post grad demands and numbers
  • More admin functions
  • Greater and higher facilities standards
  • New learning space demands
  • New research needs

14
Conclusions
  • Increasingly diverse. No one set of policy
    prescriptions will apply across the sector
  • Unlikely to see significant reductions in space
    need.
  • Space will need to be flexible and remodelled
    more often
  • Learning space will increase for student led
    and blended learning

15
Conclusions (cont)
  • Increase in space use to deal with new modes of
    knowledge production.
  • Quality of physical facilities becoming more
    important.
  • New central and increased administrative
    infrastructure
  • Workplace-based and itinerant learning will
    create some space reduction.

16
Impact on space of future changes in HE
  • N.B. The full report is available at
  • http//www.smg.ac.uk/resources.html
  • .Thanks for your attention!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com