1 / 20

From Drop-in to Doctorate: flexibility as a principle for credit-bearing CPD

From Drop-in to Doctorate: flexibility as a principle for credit-bearing CPD. Nicola Reimann and Liz McDowell (Northumbria University) & Participants of the Academic Practice Programme: Linda Allin Richard Buckley Julia Charlton Joanne Smailes Teri Taylor Alison Venis Cath White.

zaide
Download Presentation

From Drop-in to Doctorate: flexibility as a principle for credit-bearing CPD

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. From Drop-in to Doctorate: flexibility as a principle for credit-bearing CPD Nicola Reimann and Liz McDowell (Northumbria University) & Participants of the Academic Practice Programme: Linda Allin Richard Buckley Julia Charlton Joanne Smailes Teri Taylor Alison Venis Cath White

  2. Overview of paper • Overview of Northumbria Academic Practice Programme • Key aspects of flexibility • Participants’ experiences • Problems of flexibility

  3. Northumbria Academic Practice Programme • Since 2005/6 • Suite of PG modules • Free-standing professional development OR • Credit-bearing study • Suite of PG awards • PGCert • PGDip • MA • ProfDoc • Paid for by institution

  4. Underpinning principles • Flexibility • Scholarship of Teaching and Learning • Relevance to work • Collaboration and networking • Career development

  5. Inclusivity • For everyone who teaches and/or supports students • Collaboration • Across Schools and Services • Across roles • Diverse teaching team

  6. Richard Buckley Students’ UnionRepresentation and Democracy Coordinator

  7. Range of opportunities • Informal → formal • Practice development → pedagogic research • Open session → module → award • Suite of awards • Drawing on provision across university

  8. Cath White,Lecturer in Geography

  9. Recognition of prior learning and achievements • AP(E)L • Against module learning outcomes • Against programme learning outcomes • Recognition • PGCert in HE L&T • Master’s in Education

  10. Julia Charlton,Lecturer in Nursing

  11. Responding to university strategies • Research-informed Teaching Initiative • ‘The Link between Teaching & Research’ module • Student Well-being Strategy & Duty of Care • ‘Guiding and Supporting Students’ module • Assessment for Learning in L&T Strategy • ‘Assessment for Learning’ module • Promotions scheme • ‘Constructing an Academic Practice Portfolio’ module • Work-based modules to address emerging issues

  12. Alison Venis, Project Officer,Research-informed Teaching Initiatives

  13. Relevance to practice • Link to work • Ownership • Impact • Work-based modules • ProfDoc

  14. Teri Taylor,Lecturer in Physiotherapy

  15. Assessment • Double use • Negotiable submission formats • Multiple deadlines • ‘Statement of CPD activity’ • Doctorate: • Thesis • Portfolio

  16. Linda Allin,Lecturer in Sports Development

  17. Joanne Smailes.Learning & Teaching Adviser

  18. Problems arising from flexibility • Clash with standard delivery, assessment and admin systems • Administration much more complex • Logistics of linking to other development opportunities within institution • Participants: • Workload issues • Progression less clear • Complexity of AP(E)L process

  19. Teri TaylorLecturer in Physiotherapy

  20. Questions for discussion • What do you think: should credit-bearing professional development programmes be as flexible as possible? Why? • How flexible is the credit-bearing programme at your institution? • Do the advantages outweigh the disadvantages (or vice-versa)? • How could your programme be made more flexible? • What problems might arise from making it more flexible?

More Related