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Task! Introducing the session … Sit in groups of 2-3

Ensure you have session handout Private discussion What do you understand by ‘Research based learning’? What do you think research reveals about teaching/research relations in universities?. Task! Introducing the session … Sit in groups of 2-3. Alan Jenkins

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Task! Introducing the session … Sit in groups of 2-3

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  1. Ensure you have session handout Private discussion What do you understand by ‘Research based learning’? What do you think research reveals about teaching/research relations in universities? Task! Introducing the session … Sit in groups of 2-3

  2. Alan Jenkins Emeritus Professor Oxford Brookes University : advisor to HEA on teaching /research links and QAA Scotland on the Teaching Research Nexus Enhancement Theme http://www.enhancementthemes.ac.uk/themes/ResearchTeaching/ Implementing Research Based Learning in your Teaching

  3. Clarified your view on the current relationship between (staff/faculty ) research and student learning in your current and future role(s), courses, discipline and in your department /institution Considered a range of discipline based and department wide case studies Considered how you could develop ‘research based learning in your courses –at undergraduate level/or at postgraduate level Explored how those relationships could be more ‘effectively’ constructed and/ or ‘managed’. Aims

  4. Geography undergraduate at London UK and post grad Madison USA Schoolteacher Canada and UK Long taught geography /contemporary China studies mainly UK at undergraduate level outside the research elite institutions Moved into educational /faculty development and worked on teaching /research relations . http://www.alanjenkins.info Alan Jenkins

  5. Available from the HE Academy http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/rtnexus.htm

  6. Developing research-based curricula in college-based higher education Mick Healey, Alan Jenkins and John Lea March 2014 http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/college-based-he/research-based-curricula

  7.  “Universities should treat learning as not yet wholly solved problems and hence always in research mode.” Wilhelm von Humboldt on the then future University of Berlin (1810) Teaching and Research :An Ideal view

  8. "The research universities have often failed, and continue to fail their undergraduate populations, thousands of students graduate without seeing the world - famous professors or tasting genuine research." University of Stony Brook (1998, 3) Reinventing Undergraduate Education: Boyer Commission on Educating Undergraduates in the Research University. In Scholarship Reconsidered Ernest Boyer (1990, X11) challenged US higher education to “break away out of the tired old teaching versus research debate.” Teaching and Research : Two contemporary views

  9. Faculty find it hard to balance teaching and research roles Undergraduate students often unaware of staff /faculty research or its relevance to their concerns At individual level limited ‘correlation’ staff research and teaching effectiveness At departmental and institutional levels little effective strategic links between teaching and research Students learning in active inquiry mode can have significant positive impacts on understandings of knowledge complexity Research evidence : ONE summary

  10. “The aim is to increase the circumstances in which teaching and research have occasion to meet…. Increase the skills of staff to teach emphasizing the construction of knowledge by students rather than the imparting of knowledge by instructors...... Ensure that students experience the process of artistic and scientific productivity." (Hattie and Marsh, 1996) Acting on the Research Evidence

  11. Research-led: where students learn about research findings, the curriculum content is strongly shaped by faculty research interests/current research in the discipline. Research-oriented: where students learn about research processes, the curriculum emphasises as much the processes by which knowledge is produced as learning knowledge that has been achieved, and faculty try to engender a research ethos through their teaching; or Research-based: where students learn as researchers, the curriculum is largely designed around inquiry-based activities, and the division of roles between teacher and student is minimised. Research tutored ; where students supported by staff in small group discuss current research ( papers) in their discipline. A ‘Language’ to Help Us Examine What We Do-see handout p 1-2

  12. Research-based Students undertaking research and inquiry Research-tutored Engaging in research discussions Research-led Learning about current research in the discipline Research-oriented Developing research inquiry and techniques STUDENT-FOCUSED STUDENTS AS PARTICIPANTS EMPHASIS ON RESEARCHPROCESSES AND PROBLEMS EMPHASIS ON RESEARCH CONTENT TEACHER-FOCUSED STUDENTS AS AUDIENCE

  13. Consider the case study of geography at University College London , page 4-5 Don’t get lost in is this ‘good’ or ‘bad’ practice ? Let’s see it as ‘interesting practice’ Using the language of the handout page 1- 2 ; what forms of teaching /research links do you see there ? Research led ,research orientated , research based, and/or research tutored. Tasks :Using that typology/language

  14. QUICKLY each of you choose a case study that you think may be suitable for ADAPTING to your practice /perhaps as developing in your project Individually read your case study Then share your views on adapting these case studies to your future practice You have till ….. Small Group Task : Consider the case studies at course team level on the handout p2-4 (Ignore departmental case studies 4-5)

  15. Which of these approaches might be relevant to your future practice /developing through your project? Strategy 1: Develop students’ understanding of the role of research in their discipline Strategy 2: Develop students’ abilities to carry out research Strategy 3: Progressively develop students’ understanding Strategy 4: Manage students’ experience of research : Course Design-see Section 4 pp 5-6

  16. Just from the case studies : Discuss what you see are the similarities and the differences in the ways these two departments handle the roles /relationships between teaching and research ? Considering two Departmental case studies :UCL and Imperial pp 4-5

  17. In your groups each of you state ONE thing I am taking forward ( in my project ) from this session …. Your conclusions/forward planning

  18. Understanding the complexity of knowledge lies at the centre of what makes HIGHER education distinctive That requires purposeful action at a variety of levels In one’s own teaching and to an extent at course team and departmental level one does have some freedom of action to ensure that your research in parts supports your teaching As you progress in your career then departmental and institutional leaders can do much to ensure some synergies between teaching and research Bringing your teaching and research more effectively together can help you balance what can be competing demands on your time and attention. My conclusions

  19. Research led teaching can make the two activities explicitly linked in content . Research orientated teaching can help you reflect /experiment in research methodologies Research based teaching can help you see these activities as explicitly linked Making explicit to students the importance /value of research to them –can help them better appreciate the importance of faculty involvement in research How your teaching can support your role as  a researcher.

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