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Equality and Diversity in the Curriculum

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12.25 Dr Richard Brown. Keele University E and D in the Curriculum. ... ( Please give the summary notes to Berry Dicker or Neil Gordon at end) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Equality and Diversity in the Curriculum


1
Equality and Diversity in the Curriculum
  • University of Wolverhampton Biennial Conference
  • 2008
  • Berry Dicker

2
Equality and Diversity in the curriculum.
  • What this day consists of.
  • Some points of interest of how we got here.
  • A short summary of the stage one research.
  • An end note.

3
What this conference covers
  • 10.30 Dr Katherine Pinnock. (Video) Research
    Project Two
  • Embedding Equality and Diversity in
    the curriculum
  • Developing and Disseminating
    Effective practice
  • 11.00 Dr Glynis Cousin. University of
    Wolverhampton. The Internationalisation agenda
  • 11.45 Dr Margaret Sills. HEA Mental Well Being in
    the Curriculum
  • 12.25 Dr Richard Brown. Keele University E and D
    in the Curriculum. Online E and D in the
    curriculum.

4
Programme continued
  • After lunch
  • 13.40 Professor Sally Glen. PVC. University of
    Wolverhampton
  • Introduction to Sharing good
    practice
  • 14.00 Sharing good practice
  • Brief presentations from 4 University of
    Wolverhampton Schools.
  • Paul Lister. School of Engineering and the
    Built Environment
  • Barbara Canning. School of Education
  • Meena Dhanda. School of Humanities,
    Languages and Social Sciences
  • Patricia Bond. School of Health
  • 14.45 Discussion Groups
  • 15.45 Plenary

5
What to do in the discussion groups.
  • Discussion Groups
  • 1) Select a chair and a spokesperson for the
    plenary. (Please give the summary notes to Berry
    Dicker  or Neil Gordon at end)
  •  
  • 2) Share comments and observations arising from
    the conference.
  •  
  • 3) Share how you would advise a colleague wishing
    to design a curriculum with ED embedded. What
    are the main aspects for her/him to consider?
  •  
  • 4)How do you think students might be involved in
    future ED in the curriculum research? 
  •  
  • 5)What  would you like to see the ED in the
    Curriculum Working Group/University do to further
    promote ED in the curriculum.
  •  (Though we make no promises)
  •  

6
Some milestones local and national, for the
University of Wolverhampton
  • 1995 EOC with UW Department of Total Quality
    Management develops some Equal Opportunities in
    the curriculum guidance questions
  • c1996 this guidance dropped by UW as staff seen
    as dealing with too many demands
  • March 1997 HEFCE Quality Assessment Division
    produce guidance notes for academics on Equal
    Opportunities in the Curriculum
  • 1997 CVCP (now UUK) CRE, CVCP publish HE and
    Equality which has a large (and very useful
    section on the curriculum.

7
Some milestones local and national, for the
University of Wolverhampton
  • No mention of EO in the QAD Quality Assessors
    Handbook 1996-8 on how to do an HEI visit.
  • 1999 UW Project Tecknowledgable on making
    learning more accessible for students with
    disabilities.
  • 2000The Excellence Challenge David Blunkett
    announces target of 50 18-30 yr olds in higher
    education by 2010. Funding is made available to
    support this.
  • 2000 RRAA requires HEIs to have a race policy
    and has a specific duty to promote good race
    relations. First of the positive duties

8
Some milestones local and national, for the
University of Wolverhampton
  • 2002 UW has an Equal Opportunities in the
    Curriculum biennial conference.
  • 2003 HEFCE consultation on widening participation
    and curriculum access
  • developing policies on admissions and
    curriculum can help widen participation.
  • 2003 employment regulations on Sexual
    Orientation, Religion and Belief, and in 2006
    Age.
  • Positive duty to promote also in DDA 2005 and
    for gender in the Equality Act 2006.

9
Some milestones local and national, for the
University of Wolverhampton.
  • 2005 HEFCE funds 74 CETLs. UW wins one Enabling
    Achievement in a Diverse Student Body
  • 2005 Equal Opportunities in the Curriculum
    Working group of the Equality and Diversity
    Committee formed.
  • Research on Equal Opportunities in the curriculum
    commissioned from PRI
  • Project One Approaches, resources and barriers
    to embedding equal opportunities in the
    curriculum, completed December 2006
  • Project two on embedding Equality and Diversity
    in the curriculum completed April 2008

10
Project OneApproaches, resources and barriers
to embedding equal opportunities in the curriculum
  • An in-depth documentary analysis was conducted
    of
  • Quality Assurance Agency subject benchmark
    statements, (10 studied)
  • School policy documents,
  • School Programme Specification Template (PSTs).
  • (UW New PST since Nov includes RRAA and SENDA
    reqts. At this time only 3 done under the new
    template. 3 referred to RRAA and 2 to SENDA in
    defining their module aims and learning outcomes.
    20 modules out of about 240 gave explicit
    consideration to Equality and Diversity )
  • In-depth interviews were conducted with
    University staff at two different levels.
  • Macro-level interviews face-to-face
    interviews (26 in all) with
  • Associate Deans,
  • Learning and Teaching representatives,
  • Equality and Diversity representatives from each
    of the 10 schools.
  • Micro-level interviewing involved conducting
    telephone interviews with eight other key
    representatives in the University..

11
Approaches, resources and barriers to embedding
equal opportunities in the curriculum
  • Findings from the documentary analysis of
    10 QAA subject benchmark
  • statements no consistent template for the
    statements, but that despite some variation in
    structure, each statement made reference to
  • an introduction
  • defining principles
  • nature/extent of the subject
  • subject knowledge
  • subject skills transferable skills
  • areas of performance
  • learning, teaching and assessment
  • learning environment resources

12
Project One Approaches, resources and barriers
to embedding equal opportunities in the curriculum
  • Subject benchmark statement analysis indicated
    that they generally place more emphasis on
    EO/diversity as an area of knowledge as opposed
    to an issue, which should be considered in
    relation to the context in which the programme is
    delivered.
  • (roughly 55 refs to Equal Opportunities
    /diversity in the knowledge section, 25 in the
    skills section, 11 in the introduction, fewer
    than ten in all others but in the sections on
    resources, achievement and performance there were
    none.)
  • Findings also indicate that very little emphasis
    is placed on EO/diversity issues within sections
    of the subject benchmark statements that relate
    to the student experience of a programme.

13
Project oneApproaches, resources and barriers
to embedding equal opportunities in the
curriculum
  • Barriers to embedding EO in the curriculum
    identified through the macro-level interviewing
    phase included
  • process issues, in terms of how curriculum focus
    can be shifted away from EO issues due to
    administrative tasks, and also included
  • curriculum requirements from external governing/
    accreditation bodies.
  • gaps in understanding when asked about
    resources for embedding EO/diversity for each of
    the six equality strands, sexual orientation/LGBT
    and religious beliefs showed a greater number of
    uncertain responses than negative responses.
    Findings also pointed towards
  • a need for more practical guidance on how
    EO/diversity may be further embedded into the
    teaching curriculum. This practical guidance is
    what is required to pave the way for a move
    towards more pro-active activity instead of a
    reactive response to fit in with legislation.

14
Project One Approaches, resources and barriers
to embedding equal opportunities in the
curriculum
  • the focus of the micro-level interviews was on
    the barriers to embedding EO/diversity in the
    curriculum.
  • variability was highlighted in relation to the
    extent to which EO/diversity issues were
    mainstreamed into the curriculum.
  • Several examples of good practice were
    highlighted by the interviewees.
  • The role of teaching staff was seen as crucial in
    terms of effecting change in this area. However,
    it was also felt that they had to have the
    support structures in place to assist them.
    (Individual and institutional response required)
  • Some Staff non-attendance at training workshops
    was felt to be an issue. Negative staff
    attitudes were mentioned, as was lack of staff
    time. Students were seen as a vital group whose
    attitudes needed to be explored further.

15
Stage two research project
  • Embedding Equality and Diversity in the
    Curriculum Developing and Disseminating
    Effective Practice
  • The stage two project took forward the
    recommendation from stage one
  • Follow -up research is required to compare the
    opinions of those interviewed for this research,
    to those who are at the fore front of curriculum
    delivery.

16
A ground swell of staff have been engaging with
Equality and Diversity in the curriculum as a
matter of good practice throughout this period.
Source of pictures The Open University
17
(No Transcript)
18
  • .
  • Questions to think about during course
    development
  • Every course is different, but the following
    questions may be useful as you develop your
    thinking
  • Can you incorporate materials representing
    non-traditional perspectives of your subject
    area?
  • Are there specific issues relating to diversity
    and equal opportunities for this subject that
    should be incorporated?
  • Does your course encourage students to be curious
    beyond their own cultural boundaries?
  • Is it possible to include global perspectives of
    your subject within the course?
  • Are you able to acknowledge and incorporate
    within your materials the knowledge and
    understanding that students from diverse
    backgrounds will bring to your course?
  • Can you give students the opportunity to
    recognise the influence of their own cultural
    experience and identity in their response to
    course materials?
  • Will there be consistency across an award in the
    handling of diversity issues for students?
  • The Equality and Diversity Office, The Open
    University, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA

19
Ongoing work as the ground swell continues
  • Inclusive-curriculum mailbase (Jiscmail)
  • What I did in The Netherlands was indeed
    curriculum-oriented review the curriculum
    (approaches, materials, assessment et cetera), on
    diversity and develop an action plan to infuse
    the curriculum with (more) diversity where
    necessary. I intend to . broaden it by looking
    at students and staff representation as well as
    their experiences, and policies and procedures
    (e.g. recruitment, workload allocation,
    promotion) that are related to this. I could even
    go further and look at the diversity subtext,
    i.e. how values and beliefs prevent the
    curriculum, staff and students from becoming more
    diverse.Gaby Jacobs. Keele University
  • Anglia Ruskin University are running a project on
    equality proofing the curriculum.
  • HEA conferences, dissemination events, special
    interest groups Equality and Diversity in the
    curriculum
  • The InCurriculum project is a 3-year project that
    began in August 2008. It is a collaboration
    between Norwich School of Art and Design,
    University of Westminster and De Montfort
    University. The website link is
    http//www.incurriculum.org.uk/ however it is
    still under development 

20
  • End of Presentation
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