Title: Developing your teaching practice in Islamic Studies
1Developing your teaching practice in Islamic
Studies
- Dr Deirdre Burke
- Course Leader Religious Studies,
- University of Wolverhampton
- Deirdre.burke_at_wlv.ac.uk
2Session contenthttp//www.humbox.ac.uk/1444/
- Changes
- Phenomenology
- First-hand contacts
- Technology
- Pedagogy
3Changing times
- the times they are achangin!
- 1967 Ist department of Religious Studies
Lancaster - Religious Education in the school curriculum
- - 1971 School Council Working Paper 36
- 20 years for curriculum change to filter
through - 1988 Education Reform Act
- 2010 Reform of Higher Education and student
finance
4Times have changed
- Students from all faith/ belief backgrounds study
religion/ employed as teachers - Phenomenological approach to religions
- Faith literacy valued by many employers
- Incitement to religious hatred monitoring
Islamophobic/ antisemitic acts
5Changes experiences teaching Islam
- Islam in School Textbooks
- Muslims in South Yorkshire guidance for
teachers/ - faith trails
- Wolverhampton Inter Faith Network
- Faith Guides
- English Heritage
6Phenomenology
- Underpinning method for approaching religion in
the classroom - Epoche see from
perspective - Eidectic vision of believer
- Empathy
- Methodological skepticism/ atheism
7Case Study
- http//eportfolio.wlv.ac.uk/viewasset.aspx?oid192
7100typewebfolio - Critical essay on non-Muslim biographies of the
Prophet Muhammad (p.b.u.h.)
8Information literacy
- Quality of discernment CARS
- - Credibility
- Accuracy
- Relevance
- Support
- Emic (insider) / etic (outsider) sources
- Case Study Biographies of the Prophet Muhammad
(p.b.u.h.) - Awareness of perceived weaknesses
- Assess Western biographies against emic criteria
9Uses of technology
- HumBox Open Education Resources
- Muslims in Wolverhampton Collection
http//humbox.ac.uk/1444/ - Opportunity to share resources
- Handouts
- PowerPoints
- Media resources
- Peer Review- can add comments, share adaptations,
suggestions, developments.
10Pedagogy supporting learning from tutor feedback
- Feedback collection in Humbox http//humbox.ac.uk
/2333 - Linked webfolio http//eportfolio.wlv.ac.uk/viewa
sset.aspx?oid2211482typewebfolio
11Making written feedback more effective
Tutors providing feedback
how can we make it easier for students to
understand our comments and act on them?
Students using tutor feedback
Text
what strategies can students use to unpack
feedback and take actions to develop skills?
12How can we help students get more out of feedback?
13- Stephani, 1998
- students want information on
- how to develop their work.
- Students often fail to follow up tutor feedback
because they dont know what to do with it (Burke
2007). - This process can help to make transparent the
academic conventions that tutors may take for
granted (Lillis Turner, 2001 66). - use of subject specific examples helps students
see how skills requirements for planning,
structuring and referencing look within their own
discipline. - Linked webfolio The Study of Islam
http//eportfolio.wlv.ac.uk/viewasset.aspx?oid192
7100typewebfolio
14- Template provides a way of structuring and
recording tutorials - The learning need identified in the essay
feedback is identified - discussion with student indicates their
understanding of this learning need - follow-up
- information
- online tutorials
- Exemplars
- Hyperlink added
- form emailed.
14
15Lecturing/ teaching careers options
- Higher Education time of change/ cutbacks/
-
- See if there are options to undertake a course at
your university for a PG Cert in HE, such
qualifications are required for new lecturers in
higher education. - There is a teaching practice element in such
courses, and you may be able to negotiate some
teaching (even if it is unpaid).
16School Teaching
- You need to have appropriate subject knowledge
for a curriculum subject to qualify for a PGCE
course. It is worth contacting providers for
guidance on how to develop your subject
knowledge. Religious Education- one year
conversion course covering main religious
traditions - PGCE (Post-Graduate Certificate in Education)
http//www.gttr.ac.uk/ - Graduate Teacher Program http//www.tda.gov.uk/ge
t-into-teaching/teacher-training-options/gtp/Searc
h.aspx
17- Burke, D. (1986) An Analysis of School Textbooks
on the life of the Prophet Muhammad and eth
Quran, in A. Ashraf. (ed.) Resources for the
Teaching of Islam in British Schools. Pp. 67- 89.
Cambridge The Islamic Academy. - Chapter drawing on research for MA to assess the
suitability of textbooks, considering factual
accuracy, and appropriateness of presentation. - Burke, D. (2007a) Engaging students in personal
development planning profiles, skills
development and acting on feedback. Discourse
Learning and Teaching in Philosophical and
Religious Studies, 6(2) 10742. - Report on personal development planning approach
with Religious Studies students, which focused on
the benefits of resubmitting assignments in the
light of tutor feedback. - Burke, D. (2007b) Getting the most out of
feedback, in D. Nutt and J. Tidd (eds) European
First Year Experience Conference April 2006,
Teesside, University of Teesside 3649. - An exploration of the benefits for student
learning from tutor feedback by way of the Using
Feedback Effectively form. - Burke, D. (2008) Using electronic sources to help
students get more out of tutor feedback, in J.
Pieterick, M. Lawton and R. Ralph (eds) European
First Year Experience Conference 2008, University
of Wolverhampton. - Report on the use of hyperlinks in tutor feedback
to direct students to materials to enable
students follow up issues in feedback. - Burke, D. (2009a) Strategies for using feedback
that students bring to their degree course an
analysis of first year perceptions at the start
of a course in Humanities. Assessment and
Evaluation in Higher Education, 34(1) 4150. - Report on induction research with a large cohort
of humanities students, which identified the
range of starting points in relation to
understandings of tutor feedback and its place in
student learning. - Burke, D. Pieterick, J. (2010) Giving Students
Effective Written Feedback. Maidenhead
McGraw-Hill Open University Press. - Text for lecturers to explore their feedback
practices, with an aim to making feedback more
effective for student learning- in both provision
by tutors and use by students.