Student Engagement: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

Student Engagement:

Description:

Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: Ellie Russell Last modified by: NUS ORG Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) Company: Design Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:190
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: EllieR7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Student Engagement:


1
Student Engagement defining, opining,
refining Kate Little Student Engagement and
Partnership Consultant Proud Manchester Law grad
09 _at_katelittle
2
In this session
  • What is Student Engagement and why are we talking
    about it?
  • Moving from consultation to partnership, and
    rejecting alternative narratives
  • What does engaging teaching look like to
    students?

3
Student engagement in the UK
  • Lots of work on student engagement in learning,
    but also a focus on student voice embedded in
    processes and structures and the idea of students
    as partners.
  • Student engagement practices are not new but
    student engagement as a policy priority is
    relatively recent.
  • Moving beyond systems and instead describing
    concepts e.g. potential of individuals to
    influence their environment.

4
So what is Student Engagement?
  • Many articles, conference papers and chapters on
    student engagement do not contain an explicit
    definition of engagement, making the (erroneous)
    assumption that their understanding is a shared,
    universal one.
  • (Trowler, 2010, 17)

5
Student engagement literature
  • Three types of engagement
  • In students own learning
  • Rooted in identity
  • In structures and processes

Trowler, V. (2010) Student Engagement Literature
Review. York The Higher Education Academy
6
Student engagement in learning
  • Engagement in this sense has been proven to
    improve outcomes
  • Performance
  • Persistence
  • Satisfaction
  • Much work in this area has led to improvements in
    teaching and learning practices.

7
Seven effective practices
  • student-staff contact
  • active learning
  • prompt feedback
  • time on task
  • high expectations
  • respect for diverse learning styles
  • co-operation among students
  • Chickering and Gamson (1987)
  • No surprises there! But having the evidence base
    behind them has really given colleges in America
    an incentive to drive forward changes in this
    area.

8
How does the QAA Code define it?
  • The term covers two domains relating to
  • Improving the motivation of students to engage in
    learning and to learn independently
  • (Learning and Teaching Chapter)
  • The participation of students in quality
    enhancement and quality assurance processes,
    resulting in the improvement of their educational
    experience.
  • (Student Engagement Chapter)

9
The UK Quality Code
  • Higher education providers take deliberate steps
    to engage all students, individually and
    collectively, as partners in the assurance and
    enhancement of their educational experience.

10
How else is student engagement defined?
  • Individual
  • Collective
  • Governance and decision making

11
From student engagement to partnership
  • The 2010 NUS/HEA Student Engagement Toolkit
    framed partnership as the goal of student
    engagement.
  • Need to build up to partnership
  • Consultation
  • Involvement
  • Participation
  • Partnership

12
Why partnership?Rejecting alternative narratives
13
Rejecting consumerism
  • Student engagement is not happening inside a
    policy vacuum.
  • A narrative of competition and choice offers
    students an inflated perception of their power,
    when it is in fact limited to commenting only on
    what has been sold to them.
  • Customer is always right devalues the role and
    expertise of educators.

14
Rejecting consumerism
  • Regardless of whether students agree with the
    values and characteristics of the funding model
    in which they sit, they may adopt behaviours we
    associate with consumerism unless we offer a new
    and compelling way of thinking about learning

15
Re-thinking apprenticeship
  • Idea that a student attends university in order
    to gain mastery in a particular subject and
    spends time with experts in order to do this.
  • Advocates might be wary of too much student
    engagement on the basis that students cannot be
    expected to know what they want to learn in
    advance of learning it.

16
Re-thinking apprenticeship
  • We dont necessarily need to wholly reject this
    approach, but we do need to reimagine it.
  • Students are apprentices in the business of
    student engagement.
  • Support could come from sources other than
    academic staff, particularly the students union.

17
Re-thinking apprenticeship
  • Students can never be equal partners because
    they do not have the necessary expertise to
    engage with academic staff on an equal basis
  • is what some people say.
  • Equality is as much about respecting each
    others views as it is about having similar
    levels of knowledge.

18
What is partnership?
  • Can we agree that partnership is about students
    and staff working together to improve education?
  • For NUS this is about students having a role in
    the academic community with all the rights and
    responsibilities that this status affords.
  • And about recognising that students will need to
    be inducted into their community of practice,
    not just expecting them automatically to adopt
    engaged behaviors.
  • The goal is preparing students for active,
    engaged citizenship not a life of passive
    consumerism.

19
Students unions
  • Individual students may engage in various forms
    in their learning, but a whole system of
    partnership must flow through the students union
    for it to be a true partnership.
  • Mass surveys of students can never replace
    genuine student representation, because we all
    value
  • Genuine dialogue with students
  • Representative democracy
  • Students shaping the agenda, not reacting to it
  • Students unions are key partners in the
    assurance of quality, and the support for course
    representatives

20
Things SUs do to engage students in shaping their
education
  • Represent students on decision-making bodies
  • Recruit, train and support course reps
  • Research students experience and interpret
    student feedback data
  • Organise students to campaign for education
    change
  • Work with their institutions on student
    experience and engagement projects
  • Support academic societies

21
Politics of student engagement
  • Student engagement is political- contested space,
    no right answer, different levels of power,
    people exerting their influence.

What benefits are on offer? What penalties for
non-participation? Who has access? Who is
excluded?
Who describes the boundaries of the terrain?
What motivates activity? Who sets the agenda?
Who does the engaging and who is engaged?
22
What do students think?
  • Partnership is all about responding to the local
    context, so its important to talk to your own
    students about what it means to them.
  • We do have some national data which shows that
    students wish to be more involved in shaping
    their course than they currently are.

23
What do students think?
24
What do students think?
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
CHERI
28
Passive vs Active Engagement
  • Surveys
  • Student representation
  • Student led change

29
What is engaging teaching?
30
From the mouths of students
31
Engaging students with learning
  • Interesting and engaging teaching style
  • Encouraging students
  • Passion for subject area
  • Challenges students to succeed
  • Enthusiastic, about teaching and showing interest
    in students opinions
  • Up to date in research
  • Motivational
  • Reliable, consistent and trustworthy
  • Entertaining
  • Bradley, S., Kirby, E. Madriaga, M. (2014) What
    students value as inspirational and
    transformative teaching. Innovations in Education
    and Teaching International (published online 31
    Jan 14)

32
  • It is evident from the analysis of student
    comments that students want to be taught by staff
    who are enthusiastic about their subject,
    empathetic and hold a desire for students to
    develop their full potential.
  • Students valued being challenged to achieve
    their full potential, recognising that this was
    done through hard work as demonstrated by their
    academic role models.

33
Reimagining an authentic curriculum
  • Literature on excellent teaching is talking more
    and more about inclusive, authentic pedagogies
  • NUS HE work over the next year is focused on
    teaching and learning, and authenticity will play
    a big part in this
  • Authenticity goes hand in hand with the drive for
    student engagement and partnership

34
Four aspects of authenticity
  • Problems rooted in the real world
  • Learning through inquiry and thinking skills
    metacognition (thinking about your thinking)
  • Discourse among a community of learners,
    cooperative and peer learning
  • Empowered through authentic learning personal
    connection, student centred learning
  • Rule, A.C. (2006). Editorial The Components of
    Authentic Learning. Journal of Authentic
    Learning, 31, 1-10

35
Why authenticity?
  • The higher the level of authentic learning that
    focuses on higher levels of thinking, disciplined
    in-depth inquiry, substantive discourse, and
    connections to the real world, the higher the
    level of all students performance regardless of
    achievement level or demographic characteristics
  • Avery, 1999 and Newman Associates, 1996, quoted
    in Rule, A.C. (2006). Editorial The Components
    of Authentic Learning. Journal of Authentic
    Learning, 31, 1-10

36
To sum up
  • Student engagement is not an activity. It is a
    way of doing things.
  • Engaging students in their learning through
    active and authentic learning has been proven to
    have positive outcomes.
  • Students want to be more involved than they are
    currently in shaping their course indeed, their
    institution.
  • Students value being challenged, supported and
    inspired by their teachers.
  • Partnerships between staff and students at all
    levels are vital to building a learning
    community.

37
Key Resources
  • NUS Manifesto for Partnership
  • http//www.nusconnect.org.uk/campaigns/highereduca
    tion/partnership/a-manifesto-for-partnerships/
  • What works? Retention research
  • http//www.heacademy.ac.uk/what-works-retention
  • HEA framework for partnership
  • http//www.heacademy.ac.uk/assets/documents/studen
    ts_as_partners/Framework-for-student-and-staff-par
    tnerships.pdf
  • The Student Engagement Partnership
  • www.tsep.org.uk
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com