Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClare Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Gwen van der Velden, Director, Learning and Teaching Enhancement Kyriaki Anagnostopoulou, Head of e-Learning University of Bath
2
National context Funded by JISC, match funding by HEIs 1 of 12 HEI-based projects in the UK Each project provides a different perspective on digital literacies 2 year project (Aug 2011 – July 2013) Funding up to £100,000 per project UK-wide funding £1.5m Sector body and association involvement University of Exeter University of the Arts University of Reading University College London Institute of Education Cardiff University Plymouth University University of Greenwich Oxford Brookes University Worcester College of Technology Coleg Llandrillo
3
Institutional context Single campus, research intensive Strong student engagement Very high student satisfaction Well-defined community with many stakeholders ‘Generatim discite cultus’ (learn each field of study according to its kind) Leads change through the disciplines supported by a robust administrative and physical infrastructure Subjects have a strong physical presence (labs, engineering workshops, etc)
4
Digital environment For Staff Students Other stakeholders When Pre-entry Whilst at uni Alumni Manifests Online In physical spaces Need to develop Skills, competencies and capabilities Infrastructure and systems Provides access Info Resources Administration Learning Experiences Research Functions Communication Collaboration Administration Learning
5
Project’s context Academic TechnicalAdministrative
6
Aim Establish an institutional vision for the development of digital literacies Embed digital literacies in core institutional strategic processes Engage students in the process as change agents Map how disciplinary differences and cultures shape the development of digital literacies Explore how institutional structures and processes enable and/or hinder the embedding of digital literacies Outputs Discipline-specific statements for digital literacies Good practice case studies on embedding digital literacies Change management tools/staff development resources (OERs) Guidance on effect organisational change Institutional processes A framework for evaluating the impact of digital literacies projects
7
Define & articulate ‘digital literacies ’ Audit & carry out needs analysis Propose & develop appropriate interventions Run & facilitate pilot projects Evaluate projects Methodology
8
Students (UG, PG) Academic Placemen ts Officer Prog. Admin Manager Etc Faculty learning community School learning community Institutional learning community UKOLN VITAE SCAP STUDENTS UNION HEA PriDE Project Team PriDE Steering Group Student engagement
9
Define and articulate ‘digital literacies in the disciplines’ Baseline/audit and carry out needs analysis for students/staff Faculty learning communities
10
“A digitally literate person in the Faculty of Engineering and Design should be proficient in retrieving, managing, evaluating, sharing, presenting relevant information, supported by access to the appropriate hardware and software.” “A digitally literate person in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Science is critically and ethically aware, confident in engaging in a wide array of digital practices, resources/tools and academic and professional environments, and in establishing coherent identities.”
12
Analysis Science ManagementHumanitiesEng & Design 50%
14
Outcomes of PriDE are informing the University’s student development provision
15
Self-assessment
16
Work in progress Map against what is important in each faculty Direct each student to appropriate developmental opportunities – overcome fragmentation of experience Part of our FYE provision Analysed by students, built by students
17
Developmental activities/events Careers Service – new workshops on managing digital identity Student Union skills development– by students for students
18
Outcomes of PriDE are informing the University’s staff & student development provision
19
Researcher Development Framework (VITAE)
21
Job descriptions
22
Outcomes of PriDE as part of student recognition schemes
23
The Bath Award Accreditation of digital literacies through extra-curricular activities, work experience, volunteering and additional learning (portfolio submission) Appears on degree transcripts
24
Outcomes of PriDE are informing and influencing developments in the wider sector
25
Sector developments VITAE Researcher Development framework – we helped design a digital literacies lens for it We mapped the statements against SCONUL’s 7 pillars of information literacy and provided them with feedback We brought together a discipline-specific digital literacies interest group We developed and evaluation framework for DL projects, tested at two HEIs Change management materials available as OERs Case studies are being produced – showcasing good practice Dissemination events, conferences, workshops Journal articles
26
Still to achieve Build even greater ownership Embedding digital literacies into the curriculum Only half are probably assessed? Can we influence the design/review of programmes? We are bringing together staff development providers from across the institution offering technology-related developmental opportunities. Currently exploring: Joint calendar of events Building on each others’ offerings Means of recording digital literacies development Consider other institutional processes in which digital literacies can be embedded.
27
Questions? http://digilitpride.wordpress.com/ Project sponsor: Gwen van der Velden Project manager: Kyriaki Anagnostopoulou Project officer: Julian Prior Project officer (Dissemination): Sarah Turpin Project Adviser: Alex Pool, VP Education BUSU
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.