Title: Evaluating PDP:
1Evaluating PDP
Lessons learnt from co-ordinators first year
experience in three Schools
Fergal Ennis, Felicity Savage, Claire Weston,
Coral Huang and Shumaila Yousafzai
2Project aims
- Review and compare approaches across three
Schools in Cardiff University - Evaluation of current approaches
- Action plans for improvement of provision?
3Background
- Dearing Report 1997 ? Progress File
- transcript of achievements
- means by which students can monitor, build and
reflect upon their personal development - ? PDP
- QAA 2001
- should be operational across the whole HE system
and for all HE awards by 2005/06 - a structured and supported process undertaken by
an individual to reflect upon their own learning,
performance and/or achievement and to plan for
their personal, educational, and career
development.
4CU minimum expectations for undergraduate PDP 1
- Provide opportunities to engage in PDP process
- Opportunities at every level clearly outlined
- Opportunities introduced at start of programme
- Opportunities/rationale to engage articulated in
e.g. handbooks, module outlines
5CU minimum expectations for undergraduate PDP 2
- Evidence of links between PDP and learning
outcomes/curriculum - Named individual to support the process
- Recording facility, to encourage / structure
- Promote as an holistic development process
opportunities inside and outside curriculum
6Recognised types of PDP (Clegg and Bradley, 2006)
- Professional for vocational degrees which are
job specific e.g. Optometry - Employment aimed at CV development etc for
specific job applications e.g. Biosciences,
Computer Science - Academic development of thinking and learning
skills, which may be subject specific - e.g. All three!
- Often occur as crossover / combinations
7School context
- Named member of staff as PDP coordinator
- Student numbers / staff training
- Avoid increase in workload
- Utilise current practice rather than create new
- Vocational aspects
- Accrediting body requirements
8School Approach BIOSI
- Induction week talks (PDP at 4.00 Friday)
- Literature packs
- Specific forms developed for skills audits,
achievements and evidence, and tutor meetings - Curriculum mapping
- Substantial use of personal tutoring system
9School Approach OPTOM
- Minimal support for named coordinator
- Zero effect on other staff workload
- Delivery of lecture in Study Skills module
- Generic PDP materials on Blackboard
- Substantial subject specific content already
present, although hidden e.g. clinic logbooks
10School Approach COMSC
- Minimum impact on staff working practice
- Skills modules in each year
- Induction talks and lectures within modules
- Blackboard and ePortfolio
- Personal tutor support
- Staff and student training
11Monitoring and Evaluation
- University requirements
- Verification against minimum expectations
- Inclusion in annual programme review
- During the year
- Sporadic, anecdotal
- More needed
- Facilitate review and comparison
- Inform iterative improvement
- Evaluation by staff, students and implementers
12Feedback
- Quantitative
- student questionnaire
- comparison and evaluation
- inform development of feedback and evaluation
- suitable across three Schools carried out same
in each School before summer - Qualitative feedback
- comments received from staff (BIOSI 7/85 tutors,
COMSC 2/35, OPTOM N/A) and students - reflections of PDP implementers
13Questions
- Skills development focus
- Awareness of PDP delivery
- Engagement with PDP-related activities
- Blackboard and PDP
- Students perceptions
- Awareness and understanding of PDP
- Skills development and recording
- Engagement / Reasons for non-engagement
14Awareness of PDP and Skills
- gt80 students had an awareness of PDP
- gt90 students say skills/learning cross over
- All expect to learn transferable skills at
university, but many did not expect to develop
reflective skills
15Hidden PDP
OPTOM
Despite the fact that all keep a clinic logbook
specifically designed for this purpose
16Lost PDP
- Induction week PDP talk at 4.00 Friday
BIOSI
17Delivery methodsPersonal Tutors
- Personal tutor support can work and does work
- Awareness/training, enthusiasm, time
- Doesnt work if tutor is disinterested
- Consistency across tutors essential
- Need feedback from students and staff on
particular individual interactions - Need monitoring procedures for PDP tutorials
18Encouragement
19Delivery methodsBlackboard
- 100 use Blackboard at least once a week
- 12 used PDP materials
- Very few with access used ePortfolio
- Promote Blackboard materials
- Providing starting points
20Is it worth doing / improving?
In BIOSCI, some students told by tutors that PDP
was a waste of time
21Non-engagement
22Conflicting objectives?
- Student-led, School-structured
- Encouraged, but optional with no concrete reward
- Poor distinction between Product and Process
- Explicit in own module, or embedded and / or
hidden, perhaps to the point of being lost? - Polarising staff views
23Approach
- Decide whether to take a minimal approach or to
do it properly half-baked doesnt work, wasted
effort - Portfolios and evidence increasing in the
workplace for promotion / accreditation - Requires resources staff time, training etc.
- Monitoring process links to credit bearing
modules, e.g. logbooks, CV for references
24Example proposals
- OPTOM accredited logbook with reflective
component more-so in 2nd and 3rd year. Evidence
gathering for skills / competencies. - BIOSI simplify forms and talks in response to
comments received, avoid induction week overload. - COMSC credit-bearing development of ePortfolio
within Communication Skills module.
25Monitoring and Evaluation
- Student engagement vs. School provision
- Delivery influencing engagement
- Value
- Students
- School
- Short- and long-term
- Process vs. product
- Mark-scheme contradicting personal reflection
26Evaluation next steps
- Follow-up questionnaire to develop points of
interest - Alter existing monitoring questionnaires in
Schools - Look into more in-depth periodic interviews by an
independent person - Look into improved online statistical tracking
- Focus on student engagement and the (short- and
long-term) value to students - Emphasis on value of process rather than simply
work product