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Sydney Institute Head Teacher Forum 29 th August 2012 Gaining and Retaining Students

Sydney Institute Head Teacher Forum 29 th August 2012 Gaining and Retaining Students. Professor Geoff Scott University of Western Sydney. Summary “ Good ideas with no ideas on how to implement them are wasted ideas”.

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Sydney Institute Head Teacher Forum 29 th August 2012 Gaining and Retaining Students

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  1. Sydney Institute Head Teacher Forum 29th August 2012Gaining and Retaining Students Professor Geoff Scott University of Western Sydney

  2. Summary“Good ideas with no ideas on how to implement them are wasted ideas” • The new operating context for tertiary education & the emergence of the ‘standards’ agenda • A case study of a productive approach • How this has been achieved • What has been the focus • How this agenda has been addressed • The importance of a helpful tracking & improvement system • Change doesn’t just happen – it must be led, and deftly

  3. The emerging context & standards’ agenda for Tertiary Education • How best to balance growth with quality; access with excellence • Growing competition within and beyond Australia – tackling patchy standards & assuring the TE ‘export market’ • A new consumer and demand driven system – ‘user pays’ • Rapid developments in ICT-enabled learning • Who should determine standards and decide what constitutes ‘excellence’ in such a context? • How do we determine what should be given focus in this new context and then how to make sure it is implemented consistently and effectively

  4. UWS as a case study: performance trends on L&T since 2005 • Overall satisfaction up 25% • Retention up 4% • L&T awards 2011 12 ALTC awards including Teacher of the Year (Nil in 2005) • Commissioned report to Bradley • UWS was commended in its cycle 2 audit by AUQA for its Academic Quality & Standards Framework for L&T • The UWS Tracking & Improvement System for L&T is on the AUQA good practice database • National assessment moderation project

  5. How has this improvement been achieved? • A focus on the right combination of ‘what’ and ‘how’ • Building a change capable culture • Culture = ‘how we do things around here’

  6. The ‘what’: the UWS Academic quality & standards framework 2. Support 3. Delivery 4. Impact 1. Design

  7. UWS Academic Quality & Standards Framework for Learning and Teaching 4. Impact 4. Impact – Academic Learning Standards • Validation • Retention • Assessment Quality • Progression • Employability • Further study

  8. UWS Academic Quality & Standards Framework for Learning and Teaching 4. Impact 1. Design 4. Impact – Academic Learning Standards • Course design standards • Relevance • Active Learning including eLearning • Theory-practice links • Expectations clear • Direction & unit links clear • Capabilities that count are the focus • Learning pathways are flexible • Assessment is clear, relevant, reliably marked with helpful feedback • Staff are capable, responsive & effective teachers • Support is aligned • Access is convenient • Validation • Retention • Assessment Quality • Progression • Employability • Further study

  9. UWS Academic Quality & Standards Framework for Learning and Teaching • 2. Support standards • Orientation • Library • Learning Guide Standards • vUWS & ICT standards • Staff selection & training • Peer support • First year adviser • Learning support standards 2. Support 4. Impact 1. Design 4. Impact – Academic Learning Standards • Course design standards • Relevance • Active Learning including eLearning • Theory-practice links • Expectations clear • Direction & unit links clear • Capabilities that count are the focus • Learning pathways are flexible • Assessment is clear, relevant, reliably marked with helpful feedback • Staff are capable, responsive & effective teachers • Support is aligned • Access is convenient • Validation • Retention • Assessment Quality • Progression • Employability • Further study

  10. UWS Academic Quality & Standards Framework for Learning and Teaching • 2. Support standards • Orientation • Library • Learning Guide Standards • vUWS & ICT standards • Staff selection & training • Peer support • First year adviser • Learning support standards • 3. Delivery standards • Staff accessibility, responsiveness and skills • Consistency and quality of delivery of support systems • Consistency of delivery of design features 3. Delivery 2. Support 4. Impact 1. Design 4. Impact – Academic Learning Standards • Course design standards • Relevance • Active Learning including eLearning • Theory-practice links • Expectations clear • Direction & unit links clear • Capabilities that count are the focus • Learning pathways are flexible • Assessment is clear, relevant, reliably marked with helpful feedback • Staff are capable, responsive & effective teachers • Support is aligned • Access is convenient • Validation • Retention • Assessment Quality • Progression • Employability • Further study

  11. Key reference points for learning standards: whose voice counts most/least? • The Australian Qualifications Framework; National Training Packages • The University’s mission and agreed graduate attributes • Learning outcome standards determined by ALTC discipline groups, the UK subject benchmark process, AHELO etc; • External professional accreditation standards (when applicable); • Results from inter-institutional benchmarking, peer review and moderation • Key capabilities identified by successful early career graduates • The results of School/Department Reviews • The learning outcomes for courses of the same name in other unis • Employer feedback; input from External Course Advisory Committees; • Government policy and funding incentives; • What parents, prospective students & others say they want • Plus?

  12. UWS Quality Framework for commencing transition & retention

  13. Your framework for assuring L&T standards & quality • What is your framework and where is it similar or different to the UWS one? • Which aspects of that framework do you track? • How do you ensure that staff act on the key areas of improvement that emerge?

  14. The ‘how’: key lessons on the effective implementation & continuous quality improvement • Consensus around the data not around the table • A small number of agreed priorities for action • Ready, fire, aim not ready, aim, aim, aim… • Steered engagement • ‘Why don’t we’ not ‘why don’t you’ • Change is learning

  15. The ‘how’: key lessons on the effective implementation & CQI cont’d How staff like to learn is how students like to learn • Motivators are both extrinsic (External audit/TEQSA/My University/promotion) and intrinsic (moral purpose/student response) • RATED CLASS A • Just-in-time and just-for-me solutions to experienced gaps • From successful travellers down the same change path • Peer group counts • Knowing where I fit and getting acknowledgement for a job well done

  16. The ‘how’: key lessons on the effective implementation & CQI cont’d Learning from others – targeted benchmarking with like institutions Using an audit as an external lever for internal (culture) change • Consistency & equivalence • Outcomes not just inputs • Action on agreed improvement areas • Understanding where I fit, what has been achieved and still needs to be done • Using critical friends to assess the veracity of your claims

  17. The UWS system for Tracking & Improving L&T (TILT) • Items focus on what counts – each section of the academic standards & transition frameworks • Importance as well as performance • Clear performance standard of 3.8/5 (70% explicit satisfaction) • Qualitative as well as quantitative (500,000 UWS CEQuery comments) • Annual course diagnostic reports & action plans • First class tell students actions being taken • Benchmarking for improvement at the unit level with clear roles

  18. Quality improvement doesn’t just happen – it must be led the Learning Leaders research (n=500) • Listen, link then lead – ‘steered engagement’ • Model, teach and learn • A change capable culture is built by change capable leaders • Everyone is a leader in their own area of expertise and responsibility • Most challenged when things go wrong – this is when you learn • Key findings are available for every L&T role

  19. Higher education leadership capability framework • Helen please insert the five circles Interpersonal Capabilities Cognitive Capabilities Personal Capabilities Capability Role-specific Competencies Generic Competencies Competency

  20. Further reading • Fullan, M & Scott, G (2009): Turnaround Leadership for higher education, Jossey Bass, San Francisco • Scott, G (2008): University student engagement & satisfaction, commissioned report to the Bradley Review • Scott, G, Coates, H & Anderson, M (2008): Learning leaders in times of change, ALTC • Scott, G & Hawke, I (2003): & Hawke, I. Using an external quality audit as a lever for institutional change, Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Educations, 22 (3)

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