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Dr John Willison Centre for Learning and Professional Development University of Adelaide

2 Australian Learning and Teaching Council. Developing and Assessing Students’ Research Skills in the Curriculum A seminar for the Faculty of Economics and Commerce, University of Melbourne. Dr John Willison Centre for Learning and Professional Development University of Adelaide. Overview.

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Dr John Willison Centre for Learning and Professional Development University of Adelaide

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  1. 2 Australian Learning and Teaching Council Developing and Assessing Students’ ResearchSkillsin the CurriculumA seminar for the Faculty of Economics and Commerce,University of Melbourne Dr John Willison Centre for Learning and Professional Development University of Adelaide

  2. Overview • Analyse collaboratively, and draw own conclusions about, the Research Skill Development (RSD) framework. • Examine examples from Business and disciplines that have used wikis • Apply the RSD to a context of relevance

  3. Disciplines Involved in Trialling RSD • Business (Melbourne and Monash) • Dentistry/ Oral Health, Electronic Engineering, Introduction to Academic Learning for International Students, Medical Science, Nursing, Petroleum Engineering (Uni of Adelaide) • Psychology (Macquarie) • Introduction to Tertiary Learning (University of South Australia) • Impending: Chemical Engineering and Computing Science • In train: VU (Engineering), QUT, USQ (Multiple)

  4. Why Research Skill Development (RSD) in the curriculum? • Undergraduate research experiences are claimed to increase student motivation, satisfaction, understanding of content, progression to, and completion of HDR, and to reduce attrition and plagiarism. But… • Without the modeling of research practices at a higher level of thinking students continue to engage in investigations at the introductory level, even though their exposure to content is considerably richer with each course they take. (Chaplin, 2003 p.238)

  5. Research Skill Development in Curriculum Design and Assessment • In 12+ Disciplines so far, changes that lectures have made are small • Lecturers take existing assessment, and rework the marking criteria according to the RSD • Use analogous criteria eg Oral Health used Business • Some missing facets e.g. ‘evaluate’, are incorporated • ‘Diagnostic’ Assessments have been changed or added • Otherwise, the nature of assessments is unchanged • The focus of the course is either renewed or clarified • Explicit nature of RSD changes curriculum

  6. Level I closed inquiry structured and guided Level II closed inquiry, structured Level III closed inquiry independently Level IV open inquiry, structured guidelines Level V open inquiry Levels of Student Autonomy Face ts Research Skill Development Framework Students: A. Embark, determining need for knowledge B. Find/generate C. Critically evaluate D. Organise information E. Synthesise, analyse, apply F. Communicate

  7. Lit RSD 3 Entry Level RSD I II III II I III A · · · F A · · · F Business Law Open-ended Research Entry Level RSD II I III II IV III I A · · · F A · · · F Business Ethics Assessments Based on the RSD framework In Business Courses (see pages 58-61 of RSD Handbook)

  8. RSD Framework • Provides the Big Picture and relates this to the assessment details for course coordinators, lecturers, tutors, and especially students • Informs assessment-first curriculum redesign • Same ‘facets’ for multiple assessments, various levels • Explicit &Transparent assessment criteria • Coherent & Incremental skill development • Revisited & (potentially) Cyclic Conceptual Framework

  9. References • Bloom, B., Engelhardt, M.D., Furst, E.J., Hill, W.H., & Krathwohl, D.R (1956). Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, NewYork: David McKay Company. • Australian and New Zealand Institute of Information Literacy (2004). Australian and New Zealand Information Literacy Framework: Principles, standards and practice (2nd Edition). Retrieved from http://www.caul.edu.au/info-literacy/InfoLiteracyFramework.pdf on 15/4/08. • Cohen, J. (1988). Statistical power analysis for the behavioral sciences (2nd edition). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. • Chaplin, S.B. (2003). Guided development of independent inquiry in an anatomy/physiology laboratory. Advanced Physiology Education27: 230-240, 2003 • Willison, J.W. & O’Regan, K. (2007). Commonly known, commonly not known, totally unknown: A framework for students becoming researchers. Higher Education Research and Development 26 (4). Web Site www.adelaide.edu.au/clpd/rsd Lots of downloadable RSD examples are available here.

  10. Acknowledgement Support for this activity has been provided by The Australian Learning and Teaching Council, an initiative of the Australian Government Department of Education, Science and Training. The views expressed in this activity do not necessarily reflect the views of Australian Learning and Teaching Council. ‘Application of RSD’ slides were provided by Dr Mario Ricci and Dr Eleanor Peirce, University of Adelaide For more Information… … or to discuss ideas further, contact John john.willison@adelaide.edu.au 08 8303 3219

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  12. Correlations between RSD Assessments 2005-2007

  13. Correlations between RSD Assessments 2005-2007

  14. Correlations between RSD and pre-RSD Assessments 2003-2007

  15. Facets associated with research processes In researching, students: • embark on an inquiry and so determine a need for knowledge/understanding • find/generate needed information/data using appropriate methodology • critically evaluate information/data and the process to find/generate • organise information collected/generated • synthesise and analyse and apply new knowledge • communicate knowledge and the processes used to generate it, with an awareness of ethical, social and cultural issues. (Willison & O’Regan, 2007; based on Bundy, 2004).

  16. Level I Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires a high degree of structure/guidance Levels of Student Autonomy Level I Students research at the level of a closed inquiry and require a high degree of structure/guidance Facets of research inquiry A. Students embark on inquiry and so determine a need for knowledge/ understanding B. Students find/generate needed information C. Students critically evaluate information /data and the process to find/generate D. Student organise information collected/generated E. Students synthesise and analyse and apply new knowledge F. Students communicate knowledge and understanding and the process used to generate them. • Appropriately identifies key ideas from 1 source. When using 2 or more sources, identifies some peripheral or duplicated ideas as key • Significance of the paper is stated, but not based on leads from, or gaps in, the literature • http://www.adelaide.edu.au/clpd/rsd/cells/a/a1.html

  17. Level I Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires a high degree of structure/guidance Level II Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires some structure/guidance Levels of Student Autonomy Level II Students research at the level of a closed inquiry and requires structure Facets of research inquiry A. Students embark on inquiry and so determine a need for knowledge/ understanding B. Students find/generate needed information C. Students critically evaluate information /data and the process to find/generate D. Student organise information collected/generated E. Students synthesise and analyse and apply new knowledge F. Students communicate knowledge and understanding and the process used to generate them. • Identifies key ideas across several sources • Significance of the paper is stated explicitly and is based on leads from, or gaps in, a limited number of references • http://www.adelaide.edu.au/clpd/rsd/cells/a/a2.html

  18. Level I Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires a high degree of structure/guidance Level III Student researches independently at the level of a closed inquiry Level II Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires some structure/guidance Levels of Student Autonomy Level III Students research independently at the level of a closed inquiry Facets of research inquiry A. Students embark on inquiry and so determine a need for knowledge/ understanding B. Students find/generate needed information C. Students critically evaluate information /data and the process to find/generate D. Student organise information collected/generated E. Students synthesise and analyse and apply new knowledge F. Students communicate knowledge and understanding and the process used to generate them • Significance of the paper is clearly stated and based on leads from, or gaps in, a substantial number of sources • http://www.adelaide.edu.au/clpd/rsd/cells/a/a3.html

  19. Level I Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires a high degree of structure/guidance Level II Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires some structure/guidance Level III Student researches independently at the level of a closed inquiry Level IV Student researches at the level of an open enquiry within structured guidelines Levels of Student Autonomy Facets of research inquiry A. Students embark on inquiry and so determine a need for knowledge/ understanding B. Students find/generate needed information C. Students critically evaluate information /data and the process to find/generate D. Student organise information collected/generated E. Students synthesise and analyse and apply new knowledge F. Students communicate knowledge and understanding and the process used to generate them Level IV Students research at the level of an open enquiry within structured guidelines • Aims/hypothesis clear, focussed and innovative • http://www.adelaide.edu.au/clpd/rsd/cells/a/a4.html

  20. Level I Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires a high degree of structure/guidance Level II Student researches at the level of a closed inquiry and requires some structure/guidance Level III Student researches independently at the level of a closed inquiry Level IV Student researches at the level of an open enquiry within structured guidelines Level V Student researches at the level of an open enquiry within self-determined guidelines Levels of Student Autonomy Facets of research inquiry A. Students embark on inquiry and so determine a need for knowledge/ understanding B. Students find/generate needed information C. Students critically evaluate information /data and the process to find/generate D. Student organise information collected/generated E. Students synthesise and analyse and apply new knowledge F. Students communicate knowledge and understanding and the process used to generate them Level V Students research at the level of an open inquiry within self-determined guidelines http://www.adelaide.edu.au/clpd/rsd/cells/a/a5.html

  21. 2 Australian Learning and Teaching Council Locating the Development and Assessment ofStudents’ ResearchSkillsin the CurriculumA workshop for the Faculty of Business and Economics,Monash University Dr John Willison Centre for Learning and Professional Development University of Adelaide

  22. Workshop Objectives Develop collaboratively a plan of action for Research Skill Development in a specific course Or Develop specific marking criteria for a particular assessment task Or Another RSD-based possibility that has come to mind

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