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Transcript of Conceptualising student engagement in order to improve policy and practice Colin Bryson, Newcastle...
Conceptualising student engagement in order to improve policy and practice
Colin Bryson, Newcastle University
Goals
A shared understanding of the nature and meaning of student engagement
Develop a concept map Develop a set of shared principles Consider how this should guide practice and
policy and consider some current good practice
Reconceptualising student engagement
Conceptions of engagement – the dominant paradigm - NSSE Roots (Becker, 1961: Pace, 1979: Astin, 1977: Chickering and
Gamson, 1987: Pascarella and Terenzini, 1991, 2005)
A focus in USA on active classroom behaviours - (National Student Survey on Engagement) – George Kuh
Survey used very widely - Over 100 publications Survey used very widely http://nsse.iub.edu/index.cfm Australia – the FYE…convergence with US thinking Coates developed NSSE into the AUSSE (and now we have
SASSE etc)
Reconceptualising student engagement
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NSSE used as a proxy of quality
Student engagement is defined as students’ involvement in activities and conditions that are linked with high-quality learning. A key assumption is that learning outcomes are influenced by how an individual participates in educationally purposeful activities. While students are seen to be responsible for constructing their own knowledge, learning is also seen to depend on institutions and staff generating conditions that stimulate student involvement.
Is that better than the NSS?
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Australian perspectives
Focus on first year experience – big surveys in 1994, 1999, 2004 and 2009
Connectedness (McInnis, 1995) Multi-dimensional engagement (Krause
and Coates, 2008) -7 scales transition; academic; peer; staff; intellectual; online; beyond-class
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Problems with that paradigm SE is holistic and socially constructed Every student is an individual and different (Haggis, 2004) Engagement is a concept which encompasses the perceptions, expectations and
experience of being a student and the construction of being a student in HE (Bryson and Hand, 2007).
Engagement underpins learning and is the glue that binds it together – both located in being and becoming. (Fromm, 1977)
More than about doing/behaving and quantity Method, validity and reliability issues SE is dynamic and fluid SE is multidimensional, includes student’s whole lives and it is the
interaction and pattern that matters not any specific variable – avoid reductionism
SE needs to sensitive to the local context Closed question surveys do not allow student voice
Reconceptualising student engagement
A different form of student evidence….my own work
Drawn from three studies since 2003, mainly qualitative
Includes a longitudinal study Also researched the staff perspective on SE
Identified both levels and influences – and the dynamic nature and fragility of engagement
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Key influences on engagement
1. Student expectations and perceptions – match to the ‘personal project’ and interest in subject
2. Balances between challenge and appropriate workload
3. Degrees of choice, autonomy, risk, and opportunities for growth and enjoyment
4. Trust relationships
5. Communication and discourse
6. A sense of belonging and community
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A wider exploration of the lit Strong evidence base and critical
perspective from schools SE research(Fredricks et al; Zyngier; Gibbs & Posskitt; Harris)
Metaconstruct (includes emotional)
Pattern rather than variable centred
Critical take on SE
Reconceptualising student engagement
More perspectives
Professional formation and authentic learning (identity projects) (Holmes; Reid and
Solomonides) – an ‘ontological turn’ Willingness ….and readiness…to engage(McCune; Handley et al; Barnett) Inclusivity (Hockings)
Ways of being a student (and SOMUL)(Dubet; Brennan et al)
Reconceptualising student engagement
Engagement to what?
Engagement to and with different levels(Bryson and Hand)
Collective SE – but also participation and partnership
(Little et al: Bovill: Healey et al) Integration, belonging and community (Tinto:
Kember: Wenger and several others) Perspectives on education (Trowler)
Intellectual development (Perry: Baxter Magolda: Belenky)
Reconceptualising student engagement
The flipside of SE Alienation, inertia/anomie and
disengagement (Mann: Krause) Performativity Being ‘other’ Disciplinary power
Inertia Battle between cultures and values
Reconceptualising student engagement
A revised definition of SE
Student engagement is about what a student brings to Higher Education in terms of goals, aspirations, value and beliefs and how these are shaped and mediated by their experience whilst a student. SE is constructed and reconstructed through the lenses of the perceptions and identities held by students and the meaning and sense a student makes of their experiences and interactions. As players and shapers of the educational context, educators need to foster educational, purposeful SE to support and enable students to learn in constructive and powerful ways and realise their potential in education and society.
Reconceptualising student engagement
To aid clarity -separate the dual
Engaging students
Students engaging
Reconceptualising student engagement
Students engaging - conceptual maps
The black box
Reconceptualising student engagement
Existing models
Astin (1991): Input - Environment – Output Dubet (1994): Ways of being a student Zepke and Leach (2011): Conceptual
organiser Reid and Solomonides (2007): Relational
SE
Reconceptualising student engagement
The dynamic cycle of student engagement
Reconceptualising student engagement
SE derived from relationships
Reconceptualising student engagement
Engaging students - principles
We should:1. Foster student’s willingness and readiness to engage by enhancing their
self-belief
2. Embrace the point that students have diverse backgrounds, expectations, orientations and aspirations – thus different ‘ways of being a student’, and to welcome, respect and accommodate all of these in an inclusive way
3. Enable and facilitate trust relationships (between staff:students and students:students) in order to develop a discourse with each and all students and to show solidarity with them
4. Create opportunities for learning (in its broadest sense) communities so that students can develop a sense of competence and belonging within these communities
Reconceptualising student engagement
5. Teach in ways to make learning participatory, dialogic, collaborative, authentic, active and critical
6. Foster autonomy and creativity, and offer choice and opportunities for growth and enriching experiences in a low risk and safe setting
7. Recognise the impact on learning of non-institutional influences and accommodate these
8. Design and implement assessment for learning with the aim to enable students to develop their ability to evaluate critically the quality and impact of their own work
9. Seek to negotiate and reach a mutual consensus with students on managing workload, challenge, curriculum and assessment for their educational enrichment – through a partnership model – without diluting high expectations and educational attainment
10. Enable students to become active citizens and develop their social and cultural capital
Reconceptualising student engagement
So what works? Kuh (2008)i. First year seminars (e.g. SI and PAL)
ii. Learning communities – cross module
iii. Service learning – experiential
iv. Common intellectual experiences
v. Writing intensive courses
vi. Collaborative projects
vii. Undergraduate research
viii. Diversity learning
ix. Internships
x. Capstone courses22
A whole institutional approach
Sally Kift http://www.altc.edu.au/resource-first-year-learning-experience-kift-2009
Transition Pedagogies in FYE at QUT A holistic curriculum design approachTransition Diversity
Design Engagement
Assessment Evaluation and Monitoring
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At the module level
Sarah Cant and Peter Watts http://www.slidefinder.net/F/Familiarity_Breeds_Contentment_Sarah_Cant/9136815
First year sociology module at Canterbury Christchurch Drew on application of sociological theory Year long induction Tiered learning PAL PDP Portfolio assessment
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The student partnership approach HEA and NUS based on HEFCE funded CHERI
Report (http://www.hefce.ac.uk/pubs/rdreports/2009/rd03_09/ )
Student representation and feedback “students as partners in a learning community” Liz Dunne at Exeter – Students as Change Agents Stuart Brand & Beccy Freeman, Birmingham City University - Academic partners
scheme CEEBL – interns at Manchester Curriculum innovation at Southampton!
But need to ensure real partnership not ‘pseudo-participation’
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A holistic approach to a degree programme Combined Honours at Newcastle
Do not share curriculum and problematic identities/coherence/equity issues
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Enhancing engagement in Combined Honours Codetermination – deliver the student agenda
through empowerment and strong student voice – student led SSC and wider fora
Redesign of transition, a new ‘combined’ module, other co-designed modules based on innovation
Building community – facilities, shared spaces, social events, awards night etc
Peer mentoring – this group even more than the reps has become the catalysts and the ‘doers’
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To meet regularly to discuss SE. An early goal is to develop a concept map and set of principles that underpin the promotion of
SE To establish an annual conference drawing together leading edge work on SE - and to feed
into publication through journals and books. (Inaugural conference – Sept 15/16th 2011, Nottingham)
To gain funding to support these events and activities. To create a bank of useful resources for us to share. To facilitate communication between us (web, email network etc)
http://raise-network.ning.com/
Essential that students play a full part
Reconceptualising student engagement