Title: APEL
1APEL
- Testing the assumptions where is the evidence?
Dr. Ian Scott
2Where does most of the learning you use at work
come from?
3Justifications
Social Justice excluded groups
Economic argument
Lueddeke 1997, European Commission 2000, 2001,
Cretchley Castle 2001, Gallacher Feutrie
2003.
4Why APEL
- Challenges ownership
- Recognises prior learning in all its forms
- Makes for better learners?
- Stimulates learning?
- Its Empowering
- Encourages ownership of learning
- Good for marketing?
- Encourages life long learning?
- It helps to widen access?
5(No Transcript)
6Trevor Baylis
7History
- Developed in states as a method to recognise
skills and experience that servicemen had gained
during active service. - Started to move to UK in early 80s in
polytechnics ( employment and unemployed focus). - Main stream (on paper) in most CNAA institutions-
use of CATS. - Recognised by EU
- QAA guidelines published
- QCA draft guidelines
- Called AP(E)L, LOFT, RPL, PLA, PLAR etc etc
8My Research
- Based around finding evidence to support or
refute claims I am an empiricist.
9APL/APEL thing
- APL is easy it is about finding equivalence,
learning has been assessed and QAed. - APEL is about experience, the learning needs to
be validated (here in lies the problem).
10Social inclusion
No direct empirical evidence that APEL has led to
increased participation in HE from previously
excluded groups.
Cleary et al 2002 looked at APEL in England,
France, Finland, Spain Scotland APEL learners
from middle class, population who already had a
good education (n 110).
Fraser 1995 concluded similarly, for students on
APEL access programme
Similar conclusions for NZ (Melrose Reid 2000
and Aus (Flowers and Hawke 2000).
11the however bit
Swift 1985 asked was APEL a significant factor
in determine if students entered a liberal arts
programme in states. Programme was aimed at those
who had not attended college before.
Of 436 respondent 68 said they were strongly
influenced to join by the availability of APEL
not clear if APEL was important for choice of
programme or entering education. Also, many
deferred beginners rather than socially excluded.
But,
Swifts is the only paper I found looking at the
relation ship between APEL and student
pre-admission choice.
12The Process
Credit exchange
Developmental
Experientially derived knowledge
Translation
Academy Outcomes
Loss and other costs
Disempowerment
13Leaping limnality
Tacit, Practical, experiential knowledge
Knowledge of the academy
APEL process
14What do HCSW perceive that they learn from the FP
Aim To establish what those students who have
previous care experience (to NVQ 3 level)
perceive that they learnt during the foundation
year in relation to other more traditional
students.
15Cost Efficiency
Individual Pay less less time on
programme less maintenance costs Enter
labour marker faster
Very few (no) studies of cost savings to the
individual
Assumption of no learning gain through
repetition disputed by Scott 2007. ( NET 2007)
16Time taken to complete
- Flint 2004 indicates that students that are given
credit take longer to complete their degrees
(although GPAs are higher). - Surveys in US and Canada (CCTT, 2002 Pearson,
2001) AP(E)L students more likely to complete.
17Societal savings?
- Scott 2005 Nursing students that received 22
remission via APEL brought savings/gains of aprox
8,000 studens shared between SHA and University.
SHA analogous to society. - Individual also enter the workforce sooner
18But
- Scott 2007 and submitted
- Second year nursing students with lots of
clinical experience prior to entry perceived they
learnt just as much across the curriculum as
those without such experience serious challenge
to the efficiency argument.
19The Approach
- Retrospective, comparative study, using
triangulation - Compare students with and without HCSW
experience, who had entered the branch ( 3
months) -
- Use more than one site ended up with just
one other - Responses to questionnaire
- Responses to telephone interview
- FP results
20Sample
- Convienience sample (in every way)
- Questionnaires delivered at lectures
- Asked to complete with tear-offStructured
and open questions - Two sites both London based
- City and one other
- At start of year one before entered branch
21Sample Sizes
- In total 114 questionnaires analysed.
- 50 at City, 64 at University X (about 80 more).
22Student type
- GCSE and A levels
- GCSEs
- Access
- NVQ3
- BTEC
- Each can be with or without prior experience as
a HCSW - Also Entrance requirements plus other
qualifications
23What do HCSW perceive that they learn from the FP
Aim To establish what those students who have
previous care experience (to NVQ 3 level)
perceive that they learnt during the foundation
year in relation to other more traditional
students.
24The Approach
- Retrospective, comparative study, using
triangulation - Compare students with and without HCSW
experience, who had entered the branch ( 3
months) -
- Use more than one site ended up with just
one other - Responses to questionnaire
25Sample
- Convienience sample (in every way)
- Questionnaires delivered at lectures
- Asked to complete with tear-offStructured
and open questions - Two sites both London based
- City and one other
- At start of year one before entered branch
26Sample Sizes
- In total 114 questionnaires analysed.
- 50 at City, 64 at University X (about 80 more).
27Student type
- GCSE and A levels
- GCSEs
- Access
- NVQ3
- BTEC
- Each can be with or without prior experience as
a HCSW - Also Entrance requirements plus other
qualifications
28(No Transcript)