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The Anthology Project: Giving Voice to the Silent Scholars

The Anthology Project: Giving Voice to the Silent Scholars. North Lindsey College Presenters: Stephanie Codd and Glenys Richardson . Ideas behind the project. ‘Silent Scholars’ Student as producer Student as an agent for change Sharing good practice. The Process.

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The Anthology Project: Giving Voice to the Silent Scholars

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  1. The Anthology Project: Giving Voice to the Silent Scholars North Lindsey College Presenters: Stephanie Codd and Glenys Richardson

  2. Ideas behind the project • ‘Silent Scholars’ • Student as producer • Student as an agent for change • Sharing good practice

  3. The Process • Financial support from the Consortium • Encouraging students to submit their papers • Identifying a range of suitable papers • Working with the contributors on their papers • Format of the Anthology • Launch event

  4. Developing the papers • Balance of Cert Ed and PGCE contributors • Reading the papers and agreeing the standard • All papers submitted were included • Not “publishable” quality • Development event: student input on launch, advice on improvements • One to one support

  5. The launch of the Anthology • A celebration • Inspirational speakers • Guests included current students, mentors, managers and family members

  6. Our Speakers • Ian Staples: Motor Vehicle tutor • Dr Denise Robinson: Consortium Director • Alan Rayment: Sports instructor and gym manager

  7. Impact • Increased confidence in the participants • Raised the profile of the course and the trainees • Launch event was inspirational to current students • We intend to use the Anthology to help students to prepare for conference

  8. More than a celebration? • The original rationale remains pertinent • Work should not remain in the collection • Should be revisited • Should be disseminated to managers • However, a first influential step – thanks to the original funding

  9. Discussion The Anthology project has been worthwhile in the NLC context • Would a similar project work in your setting? • Do you have any other ideas to share on promoting scholarship and sharing good practice?

  10. Bibliography Bell, L., Neary, M. and H. Stephenson, H. (Editors), Towards Teaching in Public: Reshaping the Modern University. Continuum Publishing: London. Cox, P. and Smith, V. (2004) From little acorns towards a strategy for spreading good practice within colleges. Learning and Skills Development Agency: London. Dunne, E., Hutchinson, J. and Kay, J. (2010) Rethinking the values of higher education – students as change agents. Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. http://www.qaa.ac.uk/Publications/InformationAndGuidance/Documents/StudentsChangeAgents.pdf [Accessed 30.05.2012] Taylor, P. and Wilding, D. (2009) Rethinking the values of higher education: the student as collaborator and producer. Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. http://www.qaa.ac.uk/students/studentengagement/undergraduate.pdf [Accessed 30.05.2012]

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