1 / 7

LEAP Case Studies

LEAP Case Studies. Neil Ringan & Gill Robinson The University of Huddersfield. Institutional Context. Relatively typical “Post-92” university Wide range of subject disciplines science, engineering, design, technology, business significant proportion of arts, humanities and related subjects

lovey
Download Presentation

LEAP Case Studies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LEAP Case Studies Neil Ringan & Gill Robinson The University of Huddersfield

  2. Institutional Context • Relatively typical “Post-92” university • Wide range of subject disciplines • science, engineering, design, technology, business • significant proportion of arts, humanities and related subjects • work experience a common component within courses • 13,000 FTE students • Significant proportion of part-time learners (even FT registered) • Majority categorised as ‘mature’ • Majority from local geographical area • Widening participation a key institutional strategy

  3. E-learning @ Huddersfield • Development of e-learning over several years • coMentor (JISC JTAP) • ELLEN (TLTP Phase 3) • Use of commercial e-learning products • Adoption of an institutional VLE in 1999 • Blackboard chosen based on experience with ESF projects • Learning Innovation Centre to co-ordinate implementation • Pedagogic, web development and multimedia advice • Roll-out campus-wide from September 2000 • Early adopters used as champions to share experience

  4. Distance Learning in Law • PG Diploma conversion programme for non-lawyers • Introduction to the English legal system • Part-time over 2 years • 7 subjects plus research project • Initial face-to-face induction session • Delivered since 1998/9 academic year • 8 students on initial programme • Content delivered via web • Discussion boards to expand issues (“postgraduateness”) • Tutor email support • Extremely limited use of discussion boards

  5. Distance Learning in Law • Blackboard introduced from 1999/2000 academic year • 20 students recruited • Email tutor support impossible for off-campus students • University security issues – now addressed • Use of discussion boards still minimal • High withdrawal rate from Year 1 (25%) • Many due to lack of clarity about commitment required

  6. Distance Learning in Law • 2000/2001 cohort • 32 students recruited • Still 25% withdrawal rate from Year 1 • Discussion boards still not being used • 2001/2002 cohort • 44 students recruited • Use of discussion boards mandatory and being used … until … • Severe hardware and network problems

  7. Main Lessons • Programmes delivered innovatively on-line can increase student numbers • The teaching and learning programme must be highly structured and clear to learners • Student motivation requires a stable and usable VLE • Collaborative student learning via discussion boards is possible • It has to be designed into the programme from the start • Use has to be mandatory, moderated and monitored

More Related