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Setting up an in-house reading scheme
Mike Dann Learning Resources Manager New College Durham Over the Horizon – Mini-conference, CILIP Members NE - Thursday 25th May 2017
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Our reasons for joining Falling issue figures.
Fewer students interested in borrowing books. Fewer students interested in using books. Library - added value. Reading Ahead 2015 – 16 PowerPoint – Excellence Gateway – The Education and Training Foundation www. excellencegateway.org.uk
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Positive experiences for those who join in.
A successful scheme Lots of participation. Positive experiences for those who join in. Improves overall achievement. Benefits for mental health. Popular with Ofsted. Reading Ahead 2015 – 16 PowerPoint – Excellence Gateway – The Education and Training Foundation www. excellencegateway.org.uk
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Where it all started – The Six Book Challenge 2014 - 15
The benefits of The Six Book Challenge (now called Reading Ahead) Improves literacy, language skills & vocabulary. Improves overall achievement. Benefits for mental health. Popular with Ofsted. Increase library usage and raise it’s profile.
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Initial success with The Six Book Challenge
This is easy! Several enthusiastic lecturers on-board. Lots of their students enjoyed the scheme. Lots of books were read. Year 1 closed with a successful presentation ceremony. Expected more groups in year 2, then year 3. Uptake would grow as student achievement improved.
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Problems with The Six Book Challenge at NCD
Where did it all go wrong? Year 2 – fewer lecturers on-board. No increase in uptake after publicity drive. Fewer students benefitted. Year 3 – even less interest. Loss of staff member to drive it forward.
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Another look at The Six Book Challenge
Re-assessing the scheme Diaries and certificates - cost. Very basic format. Not exciting enough for students? Reading Ahead - online accounts might have helped – not used.
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Questioning The Six Book Challenge
Basic format of diaries Overall design not changed each year. Same prompt question. Brief comments from students.
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Is there another way? Some very vague ideas Use the VLE and allow:
Easy access for students. More flexible – different styles for different groups. Can exploit VLE functions – add interest. Easier to collect usage data.
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Things move forward A chance meeting:
Christine Davis – Lead Practitioner (Maths & English). Outlining her literacy role – course team meeting. An opportunity for a reading scheme. Informal meeting to share ideas.
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More progress Follow-up meeting:
Colin Galley – Lecturer & TEL Advisor. Experience & expertise with new VLE. Had ideas on how to exploit functions. Scheme name - Tap into Text.
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Outline design – our scheme would:
Allow participants to read a range of media types. Books, e-books, online articles & documents. Materials separated into categories: Fiction - Book of the Film, sci-fi, crime, historical etc. Factual - News; biography, history, guides etc.
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Allow participants some choice – but with guidance.
Lots of categories but students choose which ones to go for. Lists of suggested reading – both print and online. Encourage students to reflect. Provide a range of prompts.
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The Future with Tap into Text
Once set-up should be low maintenance. Any number of students can join with no added cost. Scope for development – same format, new design. Introduce new themes or topics. Budget pressures. Course validations & re-validations.
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Setting up an in-house reading scheme
Mike Dann Learning Resources Manager New College Durham Over the Horizon – Mini-conference, CILIP Members NE - Thursday 25th May 2017
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