Developing the Undergraduate Student as a Researcher through the Curriculum TASKS! Please pick up the session handout Sit in groups of 3-4 - perhaps with.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Learning Outcomes in quality enhancement
Advertisements

Exploring the links between research and teaching in Economics Dr Linda Juleff, Edinburgh Napier University Economics Network Project
QAA Research Teaching Linkages: Enhancing Graduate Attributes Theme Linda Juleff, QAA Steering Group Representative.
Supporting further and higher education Setting the scene Rhona Sharpe Learner Experience Support Project.
Developing institutional strategies to mainstream undergraduate research and inquiry for all students TASKS! Please pick up the session handout Sit in.
Moving Forward Together: Engaging Students through Research and Inquiry Mick Healey University of Gloucestershire, UK … universities should treat learning.
The Ethical Student: Enhancing the Teaching of Ethics in the Undergraduate Curriculum Funded by the Learning and Teaching Institute, University of Chester.
The University of Hull : From a research informed to a research active curriculum? Alan Jenkins,Professor Emeritus Oxford Brookes University : (UK) HE.
I3: Inquiry, Independence and Information MBA Suite Media City 19 th April 2012.
Linking discipline-based research and teaching to benefit student learning Mick Healey University of Gloucestershire, UK.
IT Portfolio Shell – Add a title, your name, date, links and examples
Assessing student learning from Public Engagement David Owen National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Engagement Funded by the UK Funding Councils, Research.
Linking discipline-based research and teaching to benefit student learning Mick Healey University of Gloucestershire, UK “… universities should treat learning.
Students as Producers: Engaging Students in Research and Inquiry
How graduate attributes could redefine how we teach and how students learn......(but haven’t) National Learning and Teaching Forum Melbourne, Australia.
Conceptualising undergraduate research and inquiry – some starting-points for discussion “Undergraduate research and inquiry: an investigation” University.
Designing an education for life after university: Why is it so difficult? CHEC, South Africa March 2011 A/PROF SIMON BARRIE, THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY.
Research Informed Teaching – a summary Dr Susan Hill and Assoc Prof Tony Fetherston.
Comparison of Teacher-Centered and Learner-Centered Paradigms From Figure 1-2 in Huba and Freed, Learner-Centered Assessment on College Campuses: Shifting.
Developing Strategies for Linking Teaching and Research: Institutional and department strategies to engage students in research and inquiry Alan Jenkins.
Workshop: Translating graduate attributes into classroom learning A/Prof Simon Barrie Institute for Teaching and Learning Hong Kong Institute of Education.
Scholarly activity, curriculum development and student involvement
Quality Enhancement and Communications The development and delivery of a research active curriculum will be promoted as a core and high quality activity.
SLAs – MAKING THE SHIFT. Session Goals Deepen understanding of Inspiring Education, Literacy and Numeracy Benchmarks (embedded in Curriculum Redesign)
Linking discipline-based research and teaching through mainstreaming undergraduate research and inquiry Mick Healey University of Gloucestershire, UK “…
References Healey, M. & Jenkins, A. (2009) Developing undergraduate research and inquiry. York: HE Academy
Linking discipline-based research and teaching to benefit student learning Mick Healey University of Gloucestershire, UK.
Engaging Students through Research and Inquiry Mick Healey University of Gloucestershire, UK “… universities should treat learning as not yet wholly solved.
Engaging Undergraduates in Research and Inquiry: From first year to final year Mick Healey “We need to encourage universities and.
Research Related Teaching
+ Assessments in Research Methods: A Literature Review (DRAFT) Dr Anesa Hosein and Dr Namrata Rao.
Strategies for developing an active research curriculum Mick Healey University of Gloucestershire, UK We need to encourage universities and colleges to.
Linking Teaching and Research through Engaging Students in Research and Inquiry: International Perspectives Mick Healey, Director Centre for Active Learning,
Realizing the Vision Humboldtian: Supporting Undergraduate Research for All Students in All Disciplines “… universities should treat learning as not yet.
Discipline based approaches and reflection Mick Healey and Martin Jenkins “… universities should treat learning as not yet wholly solved problems and hence.
"Bringing Discipline-Based Research into the Classroom" “… universities should treat learning as not yet wholly solved problems and hence always in research.
Designing inquiry learning into courses Mick Healey HE Consultant and Researcher, UK
The Wider Family Learning Nexus: “It’s still all to play for!” Presenters Dr Joan Goss (formerly O’Keefe) Justine Gallagher
Students as Partners in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education Mick Healey HE Consultant and Researcher
Undergraduate Research: International Perspectives on VN “… universities should treat learning as not yet wholly solved problems and hence always in research.
Thomas College Name Major Expected date of graduation address
Enhancing graduate attributes for competitive edge: the role of research teaching linkages Professor Andrea Nolan, Theme Chair.
Delivering Undergraduate Research for All Students; What Institutions and Educational Developers & Researchers … Can Deliver: Alan Jenkins Please ensure.
Engaging Students in Research and Inquiry Mick Healey and Martin Jenkins “We need to encourage universities and colleges to explore new models of curriculum.
Embedding Undergraduate Research and Inquiry in the Curriculum Mick Healey “We need to encourage universities and colleges to explore.
ationmenu/nets/forteachers/2008s tandards/nets_for_teachers_2008.h tm Click on the above circles to see each standard.
Research Teaching Linkages: enhancing graduate attributes Professor Andrea Nolan on behalf of Scottish Higher Education Enhancement Committee (SHEEC)
Planning and Integrating Curriculum: Unit 4, Key Topic 1http://facultyinitiative.wested.org/1.
Strategies for Developing a Research Active Curriculum Mick Healey “We need to encourage universities and colleges to explore new.
Linking research and teaching Associate Professor Angela Brew The University of Sydney.
How to Develop Inquiry Based Learning Activities Mick Healey HE Consultant and Researcher, UK
Christine Yang March 17, As a teacher it is critical for me to demonstrate mastery of technology teacher standards. ISTE-NETS Teacher Standards.
Session Objectives Analyze the key components and process of PBL Evaluate the potential benefits and limitations of using PBL Prepare a draft plan for.
Overview of the IWB Research. The IWB Research Literature: Is overwhelmingly positive about their potential. Primarily based on the views of teachers.
A Portfolio by: Mary S. Weinaug Enter.  As a teacher it is critical for me to demonstrate mastery of teacher standards  ISTE-NETS Teacher Standards.
Learning by doing: The reciprocal relationship of students as participators in research Sebastian Stevens, Anne Bentley, Julie Swain, David Sibley and.
International Baccalaureate Middle Years Programme IB MYP.
Middle Years Programme The unique benefits of the MYP.
Christchurch New Zealand October 2009 Integrating new technologies to empower learning and transform leadership.
Copyright © May 2014, Montessori Centre International.
International perspectives on integrating research and inquiry into the curriculum from the first year onwards Mick Healey “We need.
Using Research-Teaching Linkages to Enhance Graduate Attributes George Gordon, Cherie Woolmer University of Strathclyde 5 March 2009.
8/23/ th ACS National Meeting, Boston, MA POGIL as a model for general education in chemistry Scott E. Van Bramer Widener University.
Task! Introducing the session … Sit in groups of 2-3
Critical Information Literacy
Designing and Integrating Research and Inquiry Activities into the Curriculum Mick Healey HE Consultant and Researcher, UK
DPI 10 Teaching Standards
TECHNOLOGY STANDARDS FOR EDUCATORS BONNIE SMITH MAY 2, 2011
The Teaching-Research Nexus
Gina Wisker University of Brighton
Presentation transcript:

Developing the Undergraduate Student as a Researcher through the Curriculum TASKS! Please pick up the session handout Sit in groups of perhaps with people you dont know …. Appoint as CHAIR, person with most hair on their head; and as REPORTER person with brightest colour socks/stockings Discuss What experience, interests and questions do you bring to this session? For the moment these discussions are private!

Mick Healey Director of Centre for Active Learning and NTF Project on Leading, promoting and supporting undergraduate research in the new university sector, University of Gloucestershire & Alan Jenkins, Consultant HE Academy and QAA Scotland, Fellow Reinvention Centre for Undergraduate Research, Oxford Brookes and Warwick Universities … universities should treat learning as not yet wholly solved problems and hence always in research mode (Humboldt, 1810 translated 1970, quoted by Elton, 2005, 110) Developing the Undergraduate Student as a Researcher through the Curriculum

Session structure 1.Exploring your views 2.Why value undergraduate research and inquiry? 3.Linkages with ISL conferences 4.Some research evidence 5.Different ways of integrating teaching and research 6.Discipline and department based case studies of undergraduate research and inquiry 7.Case studies of mainstreaming undergraduate research and inquiry in institutions 8.Conclusion: your perspectives

Undergraduate research: Line-up In your groups we want you to use the following line up to discuss the views in your group on undergraduate research Chairs – Organise your groups Reporters – Be ready to state ONE conclusion / perspective that came out of our discussion of this line up was … Selected groups will be asked to report to the conference

Undergraduate research: Line-up One Undergraduate research is for ALL undergraduates in all HE institutions Strongly Strongly Agree Disagree ONE conclusion / perspective that came out of our discussion of this line up was …

Undergraduate research: Line-up Two I think it would be easy to mainstream undergraduate research for all students in my department / institution Strongly Strongly Agree Disagree ONE conclusion / perspective that came out of our discussion of this line up was …

Available from the HE Academy: /research/Institutional_strategies.pdf

Available from the HE Academy:

Why value undergraduate research in the mainstream undergraduate curriculum For the students who are the professionals of the future, developing the ability to investigate problems, make judgments on the basis of sound evidence, take decisions on a rational basis, and understand what they are doing and why is vital. Research and inquiry is not just for those who choose to pursue an academic career. It is central to professional life in the twenty-first century. Brew (2007, 7)

Why value undergraduate research in the mainstream undergraduate curriculum The lists that are produced to represent the graduate outcomes of HE must be scrutinised for attributes beyond mere skills. It is those items in such lists as ethical, cultural and social sensitivity, problem identification and formulation, recognition of the provisional nature of knowledge, and the propensity to keep critiquing, theorising and discovering knowledge i.e. to continue to learn through inquiry, that should be mentioned, indeed heralded as the unique outcomes of higher education. Smith (2008, 2)

Why value undergraduate research in the mainstream undergraduate curriculum A meaningful science education involves transforming the way in which students think by promoting a progression from novice to expert in both their attitudes and their approaches to the discipline and problem solving in that discipline. Todays educator should aim not simply to produce more scientists, but rather to get all students to learn to think about science like a scientist. Similarly, the goal of education in general is to get students to think like experts more broadly. (Wieman, 2004)

Why value undergraduate research in the mainstream undergraduate curriculum … research is a strong condition for teaching: being engaged in research of a frame-developing kind and projecting that research to wide publics is a strong - although not exactly necessary and certainly not sufficient - condition of teaching that is aimed at bringing about supercomplexity in the minds of students… Institutions, but also their students, have a right to expect that their lecturers are engaged in research … but the issue is whether lecturers adopt teaching approaches that are likely to foster student experiences that mirror the lecturers experiences as researchers. (emphasis added) (Barnett 2000, 163)

Why value undergraduate research in the mainstream undergraduate curriculum We believe an understanding of the research process – asking the right questions in the right way; conducting experiments; and collating and evaluating information – must be a key part of any undergraduate curriculum; whether or not those involved in delivering it are actively engaged in research activity themselves. (emphasis added) Bill Rammell, UK Higher Education Minister, 2006

Linking with previous ISL conferences 2007 Ron Barnett - Being a student in an age of uncertainty 2003 Angela Brew – Theory Research and Scholarship 2002 Marcia Baxter Magolda – Learners Narratives

Linking with this conference George Kuh: High impact activities Maggi Savin-Baden: Cutting down jungles and irrigating deserts Simon Barrie: Graduate attributes workshop Ray Land and George Gordon: Research-teaching links Jamie Wood and Phillipa Levy: Inquiry-based learning pedagogies Delia Marshall and Jennifer Case: Research-based curriculum in Physics Ruksana Osman, Shirley Booth and Hansa Venkatakrishnan: The experience of research in pre-service teacher education Anne Graham and David Coghlan: Insider inquiry: threshold concepts in observing organisations

Some difficult research evidence In view of the central nature of teaching and research in HE… it is surprising how relatively few institutions have … policies to maximise these beneficial synergies. … Some strategies may be having the unintended consequences of driving teaching and research apart (JM Consulting 2000, 36) There is a policy gap between policy intention and student perceptions at UEA. …While students value being close to research... there are many ways in which they feel excluded (Zamorski 2000, 1) Undergraduates feel excluded from direct involvement in research as stakeholders (Lindsay et al. 2002, 322)

Some positive research evidence The strongest policy claim that derives from this meta analysis is that universities need to set as a mission goal the improvement of the nexus between research and teaching. … Examples of strategies to increase the relationship between teaching and research include …. increase the skills of staff to teach, emphasising the construction of knowledge by students rather than the imparting of knowledge by instructors …. ensure that students experience the process of artistic and scientific productivity Hattie and Marsh (1966, 533, 544)

Some positive research evidence Students reported a varied experience of research across the three approaches (learning about others research, learning to do research, and learning through the research process) with no clear pattern emerging between these experiences and the research-intensivity of the institutions Turner et al. (2008) Overwhelmingly, students define Undergraduate Research as a powerful affective, behavioral, and personal discovery experience whose dimensions have profound significance for their emergent adult identity, sense of career direction, and intellectual and professional development Hunter et al. (2007, 69)

Different ways of linking teaching and research Learning about others research Learning to do research – research methods Learning in research mode – enquiry based Pedagogic research – enquiring and reflecting on learning (Griffiths, 2004)

STUDENTS AS PARTICIPANTS EMPHASIS ON RESEARCH CONTENT EMPHASIS ON RESEARCH PROCESSES AND PROBLEMS STUDENTS AS AUDIENCE Research-tutored Research-based Research-led Research-oriented Curriculum design and linking research and teaching Based on Healey (2005, 70)

EXPLORING AND ACQUIRING EXISTING DISCIPLINARY KNOWLEDGE PARTICIPATING IN BUILDING DISCIPLINARY KNOWLEDGE STUDENT-LED STAFF-LED Information-active Information-responsive Discovery-active Discovery-responsive Conceptions and modes of student inquiry (after Levy & Petrulis 2007)

What is undergraduate research and inquiry? An inquiry or investigation conducted by an undergraduate student that makes an original intellectual or creative contribution to the discipline Council for Undergraduate Research Adopts a broad definition of the undergraduate as researcher to describe student engagement at all levels in research and inquiry into disciplinary, professional and community-based problems and issues University of Gloucestershire

What is undergraduate research and inquiry? Programmes that seek to encourage or support undergraduate research should: –Encourage and enable students to learn in ways that parallel or reflect the ways faculty/staff themselves research/learn in their discipline/professional area. –Build research opportunities into the formative processes and summative outcomes of course assessment for students in ways that retrace and register how faculty/staff develop and disseminate their own research/learning in their own discipline/professional area, e.g. through undergraduate research journals, student research conferences, exhibitions …. –Ensure that the programme is clearly visible and recognised as undergraduate research by the university communities (in particular students) and parents, the local community, and possible external sponsors and stakeholders (Jenkins 2008).

Dimensions of undergraduate research and inquiry Student, process centred Outcome, product centred Student initiated Faculty initiated All students Honors students Curriculum based Co-curricular fellowships Collaborative Individual Original to the student Original to the discipline Multi-or interdisciplinary Discipline based Campus/community audience Professional audience Starting year one Capstone/final year Pervades the curriculum Focussed (Source: Adapted from Beckham and Hensel, 2007)

Mainstreaming undergraduate research and inquiry: discipline and department strategies How might undergraduate research and inquiry be mainstreamed into courses and departmental programmes? In pairs each skim read at least ONE different disciplinary case study (pp 9-25) OR at least ONE different department case study (pp ). 5 minutes

The Institutional Challenge Developing the Student as Scholar Model requires a fundamental shift in how we structure and imagine the whole undergraduate experience. It requires, as a minimum, the adoption of the Learning Paradigm in everything from the first introductory course through the final capstone experience. It requires a culture of inquiry- based learning infused throughout the entire liberal arts curriculum that starts with the very first day of college and is reinforced in every classroom and program. (emphasis added) (Hodge et al. 2007, 1)

Table 6 The Developmental Journey of the Student Developmental Level Student Traits Reliance on External Knowledge viewed as certain References Reliance on authorities (e.g., professors, [Foundations] parents) as source of knowledge Externally defined value system and identity Act in relationships to acquire approval At the Crossroads Evolving awareness of multiple perspectives [Intermediate Learning] and uncertainty Evolving awareness of own values and identity and of limitations of dependent relationships Self-Authorship Awareness of knowledge as contextual [Capstone] Development of internal belief system and sense of self capacity to engage in authentic, interdependent relationships Source: Hodge et al. (2008)

Mainstreaming undergraduate research and inquiry: institutional perspectives In pairs each skim read at least ONE different institutional case study (pp36- 45) Discuss whether any of the ideas may be amended for application in your institutional contexts 5 minutes

Mainstreaming undergraduate research and inquiry: your conclusions What conclusions / observations do YOU now make about the view that all undergraduate students should: experience the process of artistic and scientific productivity (Hattie and Marsh, 1966, 544) We believe an understanding of the research process … must be a key part of any undergraduate curriculum (Rammell, 2006) and in particular that this should be achieved by mainstreaming undergraduate research in the curriculum for all students in all HE institutions YOUR observations are …

Mainstreaming undergraduate research and inquiry: Our conclusions Developing student understanding of knowledge supercomplexity through their involvement as researchers should be central to curriculum design :both the formal curriculum and the co-curriculum The challenge is to mainstream undergraduate research so that all students may potentially benefit Adopting a broader definition of undergraduate research than is currently common is a way forward (Boyer et al.), which should benefit the learning of students in institutions with a range of different missions For some people though this may dilute what is undergraduate research

Mainstreaming undergraduate research and inquiry: Our conclusions The research evidence that guides our perspective is we think strong …. However, the impact of many of the case studies we have presented are with exceptions little researched. We think that provides a strong agenda for future research studies – particularly those that are addressed to individual department and institutional policies?

THE END Thank You Developing the Undergraduate Student as a Researcher through the Curriculum