Category Archives: Portfolio 2

Some new online study skills!

Trying out Padlet as tool for note-taking

As I’ve been trying to work on the PG Cert, I’ve become more and more in need of those organisational and referencing (who knew that would have become so different! – Everyone, I guess…) skills. So…

I talked to Bethany Moulange, from academic support about referencing material, especially from the internet, and she was great. She made me feel less scared by CiteThemRight, by just showing me how it works and what she uses it for. She did the same for Zotero, which I’d already installed, but felt intimidated by. I still do a bit as I can’t work out if it’s the right way for me, but I suspect it is.

One of the hardest things about this is that I suspect I might need different tools for different things and I can’t really cope with the disorganisation of that.

So… I’ve just tried OneNote, which I hoped might do a few different things. Here’s my first page:

And trying out OneNote…

I watched this video which was by Dr Paul Penn, recommended by Santanu and it confirmed what I thought really. I need something that allows me to take notes in the way that write, but online.

I’m really interested in how all this is for students and how using laptops might be removing some the benefit we could be getting from studying, by reducing the potential cognitive benefits of hand writing, whilst at the same time opening so many doors, particularly in terms of accessibility. There are so many skills you need to effectively study. I’m hoping that through two projects with our team we can look at them in more detail. One is supporting an academic colleague in a bid to do some research into effective online notation. The other is some work we’re doing on Digital Capabilities. In a recent focus group with students for this project, a student said she uses Padlet to collate her notes which made me think we should develop a bank of different methods from students themselves as part of our student-facing support.

I tried out mindmapping with Padlet for an online talk I attended last week and found it was great for incorporating all the links people sent in the Chat as well as organising my thoughts in the way I would usually on paper. I wonder if I can embed it into OneNote…?

What do I need to do? And what am I going to learn?

Reflections on ‘Learning outcomes and assessment criteria in art and design. What is the recurring problem?’ Allan Davies, Independent consultant

I think this article raises really interesting questions about the use of learning outcomes and assessment criteria and the way that they can shape education, or the opposite, be ignored. From my own background in Further Education, it reminds me of the endless arguments about the use of SMART targets, in particular the ‘Measurable’ element which, in my view, rendered them completely meaningless in most cases. I was a language teacher so ‘Describe a place, using 3 adjectives correctly.’ was a common target. The only reason to do this is to meet the needs of a poorly designed exam paper.

I am torn because I have rarely, if ever, seen a matrix of assessment criteria which has sufficient nuance to make it meaningful on any course I have taught on or studied. On the other hand, as a student on this course, I want to know how we will be assessed and what we are aiming for in terms of criteria, and in more detail than is included in the learning outcomes.

‘Our obsession with establishing the accuracy/clarity of learning outcomes in the belief that this an essential prerequisite for quality learning to take place is undermined by those courses in which the written learning outcomes are largely unclear but the students are performing well.’

I am interested in this quote from the article because it immediately makes me feel that the institution has missed a key element of their responsibility, or at least there is a good chance that they have. Why are the learners ‘performing well’, are they sufficiently challenged? Are they all doing well, or just the learners who are comfortable and familiar in the particular art and design environment? What about everyone else? I feel there is a big possibility that this is working for everyone on the inside, not so much for anyone trying to get in.

However, Davies goes on to say:

‘Indeed, learning outcomes, ambiguous or otherwise, appear to be no substitute for established learner support systems and other frameworks that help students understand what they have to do in order to successfully complete a programme of work… It is during these supportive scenarios that art and design students formulate their intentions and actions and come to understand what ‘imagination’, ‘creativity’, ‘risk-taking’, etc, (the very terms regarded as potentially ambiguous) actually mean for them.’

I fully agree that there needs to be an ‘established learner support’ system and that learners really understand what is required of them through actual teaching, workshops, interactions and tutorials. I also agree that without this, the LOs and assessment criteria as completely useless. However, I still worry that this is too much left to chance in a large university with many HPLs who may or may not be fully briefed on the overall plan for the course and how everything fits together.

Davies also writes:

‘Only the course designers have a real understanding of how things fit together. New or part-time teachers, for instance, have to take the module outlines at face value and make sense of them in terms of their own professional experience.’

I think this leaves too much to chance. So I agree that LOs and assessment criteria are nowhere near enough, but I think in the writing and wrangling out of them, the real work is done in terms of demystifying what is required and desired and what everyone is talking about. It stops it from being magical and mystical and unattainable except for the few, and turns it into something students can really run with, a springboard for something new.

I couldn’t agree more with the comment, ‘Rather than measurability, the focus should be on meaningfulness.’ And I also like the example Davies uses of the Graphic Design course and the reference to the ‘spiral’ nature of learning.

‘The following scale is indicative and will vary depending on the nature and nuances of the discipline. Again, the categories are nested with each one incorporating the one below it. The hierarchy is based on students’ abilities to integrate their thinking and progressively apply their thinking and abilities to more elaborate contexts. The scale can be applied at all three stages as the context and level of challenge is determined by the stage descriptor.’

I really like the design of the scale so that it can be applied at all stages (operational simplicity), but that the contexts in which it’s applied add the additional rigour. The incorporation of lower categories within the higher levels is much more realistic and applicable to actual learning and teaching.

In short I think the creation or devising of outcomes, aims, assessment criteria and contexts (briefs) are all essential to the teaching team in understanding what they are trying to do. They add a layer of transparency between themselves and then for the students. It is a necessary rigour. On the other hand, the tools and constraints within which this is done often defeats the object and provides little help to the students or direction to the staff. If a course is well devised with an experienced and collaborative teaching team who welcome in the learners, this might work well in any case. If not, there is a lot of space for students to feel confused, uncertain and let down.

Reference:

Davies, A (2012) Learning outcomes and assessment criteria. What’s the recurring issue? Available at: http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/projects/networks/issue-18-july-2012/learning-outcomes-and-assessment-criteria-in-art-and-design.-whats-the-recurring-problem (Accessed 19 Jan 2023)

Things that might help a student…

Just to help me with my day job, I’m going to try and keep a list of things that I think might help people on other courses. It’s just for me to keep in mind during this time as a student, which is so valuable. (I realise these things might be coming up on this particular course, just making a note in case I forget. No criticism intended, I’m obviously not aware of the full rationale 🙂 )

  • Participation tick boxes on Moodle to help me keep track of what I’ve done/need to do. Not for testing, just personal time management.
  • Inductions – Library, myblog, workflow, Moodle, who can help in the library and academic support?
  • Clickable reading lists? and ensuring material is in the library. This would be great, alongside a library induction. Even for people who know the library well, understanding how it is for students would be great.
  • Signposting on Moodle – the signposting that there is for each session is great, but a little more for the other sections would be good. The tone of voice on Moodle is also v useful, explaining what is/isn’t necessary and what should be prioritised
  • Lots of support and questions answered, very quickly via the forum. Good to set up email forwarding early on and to gradually bring this in so everyone had a chance to do it. Friendly, informal tone. Peer to peer support.
  • Assessment How are we being assessed? What is the criteria? Can we fail? If so, how? It would be good to have a more detailed overview of this in advance. Doing one of the case studies earlier on and linking it to one of the observations, would provide useful feedback and help us understand what is required. It would also get us more focussed on exactly what we want to read, earlier. I wish I’d started this earlier.
  • Unit brief, course handbook and maybe other key documents – there are loads of useful materials in here but it would be good to be part of a Moodle induction.
  • Be specific about what is required/advised/etc re reading – The unit brief gives some reading and says that we will be informed about any required reading in advance (which is great), but doesn’t help with whether we need to read these things or if they will all be used later. Just a detail, but it would help with time management.
  • Lots of reading recommendations personal to particular areas of study.
  • Myblog and Workflow inductions, plus ongoing support. Some short videos showing just how these platforms should be used on the PG Cert would help. Maybe less so for Workflow (just the getting set up?) but definitely for myblog
  • Everyone loves the face to face sessions – how to maintain this or maintain contact when we’re online.
  • Lots of interaction in the face to face sessions and also some social time in quite long breaks
  • Some people really like the dates on the collapsed topics on Moodle

It’s interesting to me that this felt much more pertinent at the start of the unit, I guess while you’re trying to process a lot of information and get to grips with a lot of different things. As things have settled down this feels less urgent – something else to keep in mind, about the timing of support/information.