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General Electives Group : John Dunnion - School of Computer Science and Informatics

General Electives Group : John Dunnion - School of Computer Science and Informatics Hilda Loughran - School of Applied Social Science PJ Purcell - School of Architecture, Landscape and Civil Engineering. Project Goals. Study and analysis of elective choice in UCD

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General Electives Group : John Dunnion - School of Computer Science and Informatics

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  1. General Electives Group: John Dunnion - School of Computer Scienceand Informatics Hilda Loughran - School of Applied Social Science PJ Purcell - School of Architecture, Landscapeand Civil Engineering

  2. Project Goals • Study and analysis of elective choice in UCD • Presentation of findings to SMT Plenary • Analysis and Review of the five new General Elective modules in 2009-2010 • Participation in call and selection of new General Elective modules for 2010-2011 • Gather feedback from Heads of School and Deans on electives • Papers on comparison of General Elective provision in UCD with other institutions

  3. Method • Perform a statistical analysis of elective choice (Follow-up of Bairbre Redmond's paper of May 2009) • Give presentation to and receive feedback from the SMT Plenary Meeting, (late) Summer 2010 • Analysis and review of five General Electives: • Attendance at lectures • Discussion with module co-ordinator/lecturer • Report on Electives and proposals for 2010-2011

  4. Method • Give input to call for General Electives for 2010-2011 and participate in selection process • Interviews with Heads of School and Deans: • School/Head/Programme/Dean/Staff interest in General Electives and electives in general • Academic/Educational/Promotion issues • Resource/Financial issues (including RAM) • Investigation of General Elective provision in other universities and third-level institutions, in Ireland and abroad

  5. Outputs • Papers on Elective choice, with particular concentration on the new General Electives • Presentation to SMT Plenary Meeting • Report on five General Electives in 2009-2010 • Involvement in proposal and selection of further General Electives for 2010-2011 • Report on interviews with Heads of Schools and Deans • Papers on General Elective provision elsewhere and comparison of UCD General Elective provision to that in other institutions

  6. Attitudes to Electives • Why give electives? • To give students "breadth" • To provide the opportunity for students of a subject to study the subject in greater depth ("depth") • To give staff in the School the opportunity to design and give an introductory module • Students from outside School/Programme may enhance/enrich a lecture experience (different perspective, etc) • Financial reasons

  7. Attitudes to Electives • And why not? • Students from outside the module may require extra work and/or resources (remedial tuition, more time/work by module co-ordinator/lecturer and tutors/demonstrators) • May slow class down? • Staff not recognised/rewarded (eg promotions) • Finances aren't important? (Or important enough?) • Zero-sum game (or is it?)

  8. Attitudes to Electives • Income • Extra income: "resources will follow the students" • BUT... • RAM (currently) doesn't drive the allocation of budgets to Schools, it "informs" the allocation of budgets

  9. Questionnaire • Questionnaire to Heads of School and Deans of Programmes • Heads may have to/want to/choose to poll their staff • Deans won't be asked about staff or resources/RAM • Follow-up interviews • To take place in May-June (after Semester 2)

  10. Elective choice • Analysis of elective choice in 2009-2010 • Follow-up paper to Bairbre Redmond's paper of May 2009 on 2008-2009 data • Preliminary analysis confirms findings of last year • Two most popular modules have been top two since 2006 • Number of elective modules went down in 2009-2010 • Number of places on key modules also went down

  11. Most popular Electives

  12. Missed Elective Places

  13. Elective choice • Further analysis: • What students chose next • How students chose their electives • Comparison of students taking modules as electives with students taking modules as core/options: • Performance • Drop-out rate • Flow of students and (potential) resources between Colleges

  14. A Tale of Two SystemsUCD Fellows in Teaching and Academic Development Group Project : Electives in UCD

  15. The Harvard Elective System It is less moment what a young man studies in college than how he studies, if he can be inducted to make a judicious selection of studies for himself, freedom of choice may of itself be beneficial Elliot Harvard University Annual Report NY Times 1886

  16. There is room in UCD Vietnam-era upheavals led to the American academy’s transformation into a politically correct multicultural smorgasbord seasoned to please the modern student palate. When today’s students demand to be entertained and scholars continue to narrowly train, is there still room on the plate for the best that has been said, thought, and written about the human experience? Nieli (2008) commenting on the American University

  17. UCD transition Then and Now • UCD Strategic Plan 2005: • Implement a modularised and symmetrised curriculum, with a rolling implementation beginning September 2005 and complete September 2007 • Drive curricular reform at programme and module level to focus on defining the core

  18. UCD Education Strategy • The further exploitation of the modular framework to allow a wider range of coherent pathways within programmes and to allow individual students to adapt the curriculum to their prior learning, aptitudes, abilities and goals • The enhancement of elective opportunities to provide a broader educational experience

  19. Key concepts in ‘elective’ rationale • Attracting the best • Electives as marketing strategy {Horizons} • Engaging • Electives offering choice • Retaining • Electives as motivation • Being the best • Electives offering breath and depth

  20. Elective Provision • All students will take 6 modules over a three year period = 30 credits • Need to research the best practice in terms of offering / not offering direction and structure in their selection process. • The group have identified a continuum of options for elective provision

  21. Those who favor the principle of the elective system, but doubt the capacity or disposition of the students to select studies wisely for themselves, very generally advocate a group or ‘block’ method, in which studies are laid out into groups of cognate studies. Elliot NY Times 1886

  22. Continuum of Elective Provision D E P T H BREADTH YALE

  23. Continuum of Elective Provision D E P T H 3 2 BREADTH 1

  24. Outline Other elective models Electives in Computer Science and Civil Engineering 5 New General Electives

  25. Undergraduate education models • Newman • Learning for its own sake • Broad education • Von Humboldt • Unity of research and teaching • Specialisation

  26. Other elective models • Major American Universities’ elective model • Distribution (breadth) • Concentration (depth)

  27. Yale • Typically 36 modules over 4 years • Breadth • 2 modules in arts and humanities • 2 modules in basic sciences • 2 modules in social sciences • 2 modules in quantitative reasoning • 2 modules in writing skills • >1 module in foreign language • Depth > 12 modules in a single discipline

  28. Second Civil Engineering 2008 - 2009

  29. Second Computer Science2008 - 2009

  30. Summary Civil Engineering • ~ 1/3 of students opt for in-programme elective • ~ 2/3 of students opt for general electives taken from approx 60 modules across University • ‘Traffic’ from Engineering to other disciplines. Only 5% of students taking Civil Engineering modules are non-engineering students

  31. Summary Computer Science • ~ 1/2 of students from within programme • ~ 1/2 of students from outside programme

  32. New General Electives

  33. Methodology Analysis of registration data Attendance at lectures Discussion with module co-ordinator

  34. AH 10070

  35. PSY 10090

  36. MUS 10100

  37. IRFL 20080

  38. GEOL 10040

  39. Comments • Motives of Schools • Class sizes • Modes of delivery • Advertising

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