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The University College for Interdisciplinary Learning

The University College for Interdisciplinary Learning.

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The University College for Interdisciplinary Learning

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  1. The University College for Interdisciplinary Learning • From September 2012 the University of Manchester has a new institution: The University College for Interdisciplinary Learning. It aims to offer a range of innovative undergraduate courses intended to help fulfil the university’s educational mission as laid out in the Manchester Matrix and our 2020 vision • UCIL is in essence an ethos-driven commissioning and co-ordination unit located outside of the existing faculty/school structure. The academic director reports to the VP TL&S. Core academic management will remain small but administration staff may have to expand to address rising student demand and throughput. Courses will be delivered by contributing schools on behalf of UCIL • The goal is for all students to have access to at least 30 credits of UCIL courses in the lifetime of their degree • UCIL courses funded through a modified version of the existing load transfer model • Some funding/resource available in establishment phase to facilitate course start-ups through compensation for low initial enrolments

  2. Why create the College?

  3. How doesthe college work? • By offering a range of innovative courses that will take students (and staff) outside of their ‘silos’ • The commissioning and selection of courses is guided by: • Innovative and exciting content (multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, or discipline-based but explicitly designed for non-specialists) • Relevance to the delivery of the ‘Manchester Matrix’ • Courses mostly designed explicitly for the College • A demonstrable commitment to teaching excellence and use of innovative teaching methods (e-learning, PBL. EBL, etc) • Varied yet rigorous assessment that is sensitive to atypical student audiences • Utilisation of the university’s cultural assets and those of the City of Manchester • Emphasis on skills development (use of skills flags to help students own their own skills development)

  4. UCOL Courses 2012/13 Semester 1 • Leadership in Action (MLP) • Introduction to British Sign Language (SALC) • French for Professional Purposes (SALC) • Essential Enterprise (MEC) • Science and the Humanities (CSEP/Law/FLS) • Leadership of Learning (Education) Semester 2 • You can’t say that! Learning to Think and Argue Critically (Law/FLS/Medicine) • Creative encounters: Science and the Arts (SALC/CHSTM) • Physics and the Grand Challenges of Today (Physics) • Diverse Britain in a Globalising World (SoSS//Medicine/SALC) • Becoming Global (Education) • Who wants to Live Forever? Challenging Myths in Human Ageing (SoSS/Medicine) • Bioethics: contemporary Issues in Science and Biomedicine (FLS) • The Digital Society (UoM Library) • The Art of Enterprise (MEC) • Leadership n Action (MLP) • Introduction to British Sign Language (SALC)

  5. The college: the larger vision

  6. Challenges Launching the college has proved to be challenging – a difficult first year, largely because the college only became visible to students at the end of the last academic year. What has not proved to be a challenge (yet) is the commissioning of innovative courses. Lots of good proposals and expressions of interest from across the university. However, through discussions with colleagues and extensive consultation with students, we have begun to identify the key challenges ahead: • Changing the student culture Lack of knowledge of UCIL Risk aversion mostly connected with employability Fear of failure outside of disciplinary comfort zone Unfamiliarity with the idea of interdisciplinarity and uncertain of its value Students more readily attracted to courses with a visible, concrete ‘value- added’ (e.g. an additional award, acquisition of a concrete skill, evident enhanced employability) – early signs of real success here Perceived lack of clear support/encouragement from schools

  7. Challenges (cont.) • Changing the academic culture Convincing academic colleagues of the merits of UCIL and its mission - there is widespread support but also some scepticism The challenge of establishing UCIL in a very large, decentralized institution with diverse teaching and assessment cultures - the ‘Silo’ effect Finding space in curricula for UCIL courses Timetabling ‘What’s in it for us?’ - workload/recognition implications for colleagues, financial/resource issues for schools (but note here opening remarks on support for new, low-recruiting courses) Drilling down knowledge and support for UCIL to the academic advisement level And the good news is … Initial feedback for our first semester courses looks very good Student consultation indicates that when fully informed about UCIL and its mission students are very enthusiastic

  8. More information? • Check out the UCILwebsite (which will be upgraded substantially over the next few months) at: www.college.manchester.ac.uk • Or contact the academic director: Peter.lawler@manchester.c.uk

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