1 / 35

Does where you teach matter?

Does where you teach matter?. Pam Woolner, Research Centre for Learning and Teaching. Learning can take place anywhere. ....can’t it...?. School buildings research evidence. The Impact of School Environments: A literature Review (2005) www.designcouncil.org.uk

china
Télécharger la présentation

Does where you teach matter?

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. Does where you teach matter? Pam Woolner, Research Centre for Learning and Teaching

  2. Learning can take place anywhere... ....can’t it...?

  3. School buildings research evidence The Impact of School Environments: A literature Review (2005) www.designcouncil.org.uk School building programmes: motivations, consequences and implications (2005) www.cfbt.com Woolner & Hall (2007) Oxford Review of Education 33(1), 47-70 • What effect(s) does the physical environment have….? • Physically inadequate places impact directly (eg noise on reading; poor air quality on health) and indirectly (poor maintenance on teacher and student attitudes) on learning • There is much less evidence for any benefit of much better setting • There are exceptions to both these generalisations! • What impact(s) does changing the settinghave? • History shows that changing the physical setting often doesn’t change teaching and learning practices • Participatory approaches seem to have benefits to place and participants Woolner et al (2010) Learning environments research13(1), 1-22 Woolner & Hall (2010) International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 7 8) 3255-3269 Woolner P. Educational and Child Psychology 2011, 28(1), 9-19

  4. This all suggests... • There is no ideal space for learning • The importance of ‘fit’ between the space and what teaching and learning you want to do in it • Teachers (and students and others) need to get involved in thinking about teaching spaces and facilitating change

  5. Fitting the space to your intentions Find the appropriate room Consider re-arranging the furniture Discuss how you teach with colleagues Feedback (to your school, faculty, T&L Spaces Group, Estates) about what you need

  6. TEACHING SPACES ON CAMPUS Bev Robinson , Estate Planner, Newcastle University, Estate Support Service

  7. Teaching & Learning spaces • Over £15 million of funding has been invested in teaching and learning spaces in the last six years. • The aim has been to create ‘Better not more spaces’ • Improve the quality of all teaching rooms • Standardise equipment • Improve utilisation and efficiency

  8. Number of Teaching rooms

  9. Fitness for purpose survey 2010LT’s, Teaching rooms & seminar spaces

  10. Lecture Theatres Claremont Tower 1.02 Capacity 252 Armstrong 1.46 Capacity 106

  11. RB Green 2009 Entrance to Lecture Theatre Lecturers view when teaching

  12. RB Green lecture Theatre 2010 Capacity 450

  13. King George VI LT1 Raked seating 2009 Teaching wall 2009

  14. King George VI 2010 Capacity 143

  15. King George VI LT5 2011 Capacity 64

  16. Standard AV equipment Percy G11 2008 Stephenson T 13 Capacity 60

  17. Teaching Rooms Stephenson T1 (3.02) 2008 Stephenson T1 (3.02) 2009 Capacity 48

  18. Teaching Rooms Stephenson T12 Capacity 60 Bedson Teaching Centre G36 Capacity 60

  19. Merz Court L201 Capacity 50

  20. Stephenson T10 Capacity 60

  21. Percy 1.05 Capacity 22

  22. Herschel Computer Cluster 2009

  23. Herschel Computer Cluster 2010 Green zone student study 25 capacity Purple (48), Red (36) and Blue (68) zones for teaching (Capacity full 172)

  24. Hershel Cluster 2010 Projection screen for Red zone Purple zone capacity 48

  25. King George V1 Computer Cluster 2007 split into 2 with screens 2008 One or two teaching spaces Capacity 90

  26. Stephenson Computer Cluster 2010 Capacity 124

  27. 2011 Refurbishment • Old Library Building Cluster - Student study • Robinson Library cluster - 24 hour student study • King George VI LT5 , seminar rooms 1.11 & 1.12 • Bedson 1.46 Lecture Theatre • Decoration & minor improvements to over 20 teaching and seminar rooms • Installation/upgrade of AV Percy 1.19 & 4 Dental seminar rooms • Conversion of 7 seminar rooms to boardroom style

  28. Old Library Building cluster

  29. Bedson Teaching Centre 1.46 Summer 2011 Refurbishment Wooden seating to be retained

  30. Refurbishments 2011/12 • Daysh Brae Cluster • David Shaw Lecture Theatre - AV • King George VI LT4 • Computer clusters - Bedson - Chart, Medical School - Pool, Merz Court - Oracle, Ridley - Neried • Creation of a film showing venue • Development of a number of social learning spaces • Decoration and minor improvements to a number of rooms • Creation of large flat floor teaching space

  31. Does Where you teach matter? • 1. How can we improve the spaces we’ve got ? • 2. Other institutions • 3. Something different?

  32. Merz Court L301 Capacity 78

  33. Merz Court L3.03 84 Capacity

  34. Claremont Tower 1.01 Capacity 60

  35. King George VI LT4 Capacity 117

More Related