Title: Dominic Newbould
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2Dominic Newbould
- Open University Communications
- External Relations
- Community Relations
- Background in research, tutoring OU courses and
publishing in the OU
3 - The Open University
- in 2005
- Over 2.5 million students since 1971
- 200,000 students
- 35,000 outside UK
-
4The OU in a global market
The OU has students and works in partnership in
the following countries.
-
- Austria
- Belgium
- Brazil
- BulgariaNBU
- Canada
- China
- Cyprus
- Czech RepublicCUB
- Denmark
- EthiopiaMDP
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hong KongOUHK
- HungaryECBS
- IndiaACME
- Ireland
- Italy
- Luxembourg
- Middle East AOU
- Netherlands
- New Zealand
- Portugal
- RomaniaCODECS
- RussiaLINK
- SingaporeSIM
- Slovak RepublicCUB
- South AfricaSBL
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- UK
- USA
5The Open University
RAE
QAA
HEFCs
Teaching
Research
Fees
Q A
Production( LTS )
StudentSupport
6 Why have an Open University?
- To make higher education (HE) available to many
more people widening participation - To exploit technologies, methods and pedagogy to
achieve increased access to HE - To pioneer a new system of educationsupported
open learning - To take the university to the student
- High quality, cost-effective, open learning
accessible and inclusive
7 What is an Open University?
- Open to peoplePlaying a leading role in the
transition to mass higher education by serving an
increasingly large and diverse student body - Open to placesContributing to a widening of
educational opportunities by making our
programmes, courses and services available
UK-wide and internationally - Open to methodsExploiting distance-teaching
methods, new learning technologies and teaching
techniques to serve home- and work-based students - Open to ideasThe OU will be a vibrant academic
community dedicated to the expansion, refinement
and sharing of knowledge
8- and
- open to time
- Increasingly, students will study in a time of
their own choosing and at a pace that suits them.
- The OU will help students manage home, family,
work and study.
9 Open all hours a single dayslog-on record of
students on-line to the OU (Course M206
Object Oriented Programming 1996)
10 Study with the OU
- Open entry no entry qualifications are usually
required for undergraduates - Exit levels more important than entry levels
value added greater - All registered students have a local tutor
- Network of over 300 UK study centres
- A typical undergraduate course involves about
1014 hours study per week over 32 weeks
11 Who are OU students?
- Median age 33. Youngest student 9 youngest
graduate 17. - Fastest growing cohort of OU students 1824
age-group - About 35 studying for a second degree or
additional qualification - 40 of OU students do not have the school-leaving
qualifications that usually enable university
entrance - Currently some 10,000 disabled students are
studying with the OU - Over 75 OU students are in employment
- About 80 of finally-registered undergraduates
pass their first-year examinations
12Student Value chain How the OU tracks its students
1st assignment completed
Completed 33 of course
Potential Student
Completed Course
Enquired
Continued
Graduated
Reserved
Registered
13 Academic organisation
- 7 Faculties Arts, Social Sciences, Maths
Computing, Science, Technology, Education
Language Studies, Health Social Care - OUBS Open University Business School
- Institute of Educational Technology (IET)
- Knowledge Media Institute (KMi)
- 13 Regional Centres covering the UK
- 1250 full-time academic staff
- Research and teaching throughout the OU
14 Regional Centres
- The University has 13 regional centres in the UK
- each has a Director and a staff of academics and
administrators. Staff Tutors are based in
Regions. - Staff in the centres are responsible for
- the practical support and advising of students
- the recruitment, training and supervision of
8,000 part-time associate lecturers (ALs) - the organisation of tutorials, residential
schools, examinations and events
15 Qualifications
- Defined set of courses, with regulations about
academic levels, combinations, etc. - pre-Degree or Access courses
- Certificates and Diplomas
- Bachelors degrees
- Masters degrees
- Research degrees
- 325,000 OU graduates since 1971
16 Credit Structure (CATS)
- Modular structure credit awarded for courses
- Module or course size 30 or 60 points (120
points full-time year) - 360 points BA or BSc degree
- Each course is at one of four academic levels
- levels 1, 2 and 3 for bachelors degrees
- level M for taught graduate programmes
17 Course Components
- Study Guide and workbooks
- Computing software, practical kits
- Face-to-face or on-line tutorials
- TV or radio broadcasts on BBC
- Alternative eLearning options
- Audio-,video-tapes, CD-ROM, DVD
- Day Workshops or Residential Schools
- Assessment and Examination
18 Typical Assessment Model
- 50 Continuous Assessment(Tutor-marked
Assignments) - 50 End-of-course Examination
- New forms of assessment introduced
- One 60 point OU course is roughly equivalent to
one semester in a traditional university at
undergraduate level...
19 Quality Learning and Teaching
The Open University Course Development Process
20Vision of the Future? (c. 1898)
21What e-Learning is Not
22 Innovation in teaching methods and media
- OU offers an alternative higher education,
student-centred - The OU has pioneered new curriculum,
instructional design and use of media learner
focused - Academics and teaching support staff need more
professional skills
23 Course Production Team
24 Quality depends on people and on process
- Multi-skilled course team
- Peer group review
- Reiteration
- Briefing and training
- Objective scrutiny of the results research
25 Quality Assurance
- OUs own processes course teams, external
assessors, external examiners, student surveys - Teaching quality assessments
- Research assessment exercise
26Rapid growth of online conferencing at the OU
160,000 users by 2001 180 courses 16,000
conferences 2,000 student moderators
Average daily activity 51,000 connections
7,000 different users 20,000 messages
sent 150,000 messages read
27Issues and challenges
- Bologna process and harmonisation of award and
QA frameworks - Recognition of awards gained by distance learning
- Globalisation of HE academic imperialism or
social justice? - Tension between valuing diversity and bringing
systems together for common good
28The Open University in 2005
- Europes biggest University
- Largest Business School in Europe
- In the top five UK universities on teaching
quality ratings - Blended learning in a multi-modal system
- 250,000 current students and clients
- 160,000 students studying online
- Excellence without exclusivity
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