Saturday 15 October 2011

IOS 5 - Teaching

Well, I've not posted for awhile which is rather naught of me but I have been a bit busy in my defence. Lots has happened and I will try to update this blog over the weekend. I thought I would just post a few thoughts on the new IOS 5 and in particular the iPad2. I have to admit, I am very excited about the possibilities. The University of Greenwich, led buy the EDU is running an iPad project and there is one thing I really want to use and that is Apple TV. I love the new mirroring feature and this offers such a wonderful potential in classrooms. Imagine this:

An Apple TV plugged into a projector and the students working on projects using their iPads. With just one flick of a button the class will be able to see each others' content and interactively view each others' work. There is such great potential here I cannot wait! Yes, I know there was software out for PCs that did something similar for Powerpoint (I think it was called Sandra) but the ease of this, the flexibility it offers I am really looking forward to.

Anyway, just a thought.

Saturday 20 November 2010

The Annual Publishers' Conference

This week was the APD conference and I was asked to give a talk on my current experiences of HE and the relationship with publishers. The title was:

Teaching and Learning Resources in Universities: how they are used and how they can be improved


I was also asked to chair the student panel comprised of UG and PG students from two different institutions. It went well. The students were fantastic and I have received some good feedback on my presentation. The basis of my work was about relationships and how, during these interesting educational times, were all need to work together. We explored the validation model, social learning and the control aspects of delivering an online learning package.

Going to upload the slides and will post a link as soon as I am done.

Mark.

A sunday morning update

Well, I just updated The Catalyst and we are doing well!

Thursday 4 November 2010

The Catalyst

Fabulous news - We are up to 1,200 page views in under two days!

YIPPIE!

Wednesday 3 November 2010

Yesterday, we launched the Schools first staff-student e-magazine called The Catalyst. This was borne from the work I do as the School Student Experience co-ordinator and it is designed to help build a community of learning and strengthen relationships between the staff and the students. A secondary aim is to help put the School in the context of the HE community and give the students ownership of ‘their’ University and make them feel proud to be part of us. A video of me discussing The Catalyst is below:


So, how are we doing? Not too bad to be honest! In one day we have had over 800 page views and some excellent feedback from staff and students. I am confident, that this is going to be a huge success. A key to this is that fact that the e-magazine has shared ownership with both a staff (me) and student editor. This sends a strong message to the student and staff community that this really is a true collaboration and needs all to engage. Watch this space!  

Friday 26 March 2010

JISC CAMEL


As a lot of you know I am heavily involved in JISC funded project termed ‘Making Assessment Count’. Today, we just finished our third CAMEL cluster meeting and it, as always, has provided food for thought. It was great to see everyone again and good to know we are all at the same stage of project deployment. Whilst, these meetings works under ‘Chatham House Rules’ there was a lot of food for thought. We focused on the areas of sustainability and evaluation and really how these two linked concepts can be measured. A question I asked and have been pondering ever since is:

What is the definition of a successful project?

A superficial answer would be: ‘a project that did was it said it was going to do’, but I would argue that ‘successful’ is subjective and therefore is the evaluation of success dependent upon the person to whom we report to? For example, in our work we have (in conjunction with corporate services), development a scalable tool for the integration of coursework feedback with a new model of reflection feeding into our face-to-face tutoring scheme. This is a success. Did we get 100% compliance with staff and students? No; but is this a failure? We did have excellent staff and student engagement (something we are proud of) and this needs to be shown in any evaluation. So I suppose the question to be asked is: Is our evaluation strategy inclusive so that it offers a valid reference for other people to help inform their practise?

Saturday 30 January 2010

The Student Voice (by Ann Rumpus)

Some of you may remember a previous project undertaken by the EIC with Edinburgh Napier University, Birmingham City University and Leeds Metropolitan University (funded by ESCalate, the HEA’s education subject centre) which looked at using the “Student Voice” in staff development.

A second stage of this project has just been completed; this looked at gathering and using students’ voices in informing curriculum design. This consisted of a number of case studies from across the 4 institutions, using different ways of collecting students’ input and applying their views to the development of both the subject content and learning and teaching elements of the curriculum.  Westminster participated in this with case studies looking at direct interaction with students within modules in Life Sciences (Mark Kerrigan and Mark Clements) and in Media, Art and Design (Katie Hayes, this was linked to the InCurriculum project) and through online comments in SSHL and ECS (Tim Taylor with Maggie Sumner and Sue Black). These cases studies, with 7 from other Universities, are included in the final project report; with an overview of the issues involved and the ideas which emerged about gaining student input to curriculum design. 

This can be found on the website and presents a useful source of ideas about gaining input generally, not only at the point of course development: please visit the website at:

or ask Ann Rumpus for more information.