Title: Encouraging Student Engagement
1Encouraging Student Engagement
AttainmentQueens University of Belfast17/18th
September
2A Southern Hemisphere Perspective on Student
Engagement
- Lorraine Stefani
- Director, Centre for Academic Development,
University of Auckland, New Zealand
3Student Engagement An Overview
- The concept of engagement what does it mean?
- Why has the term engagement entered into the
lexicon of learning and teaching? - How is engagement being measured?
- The scholarship of student engagement
- The strategic approach to enhancing student
engagement.
4Define Student Engagement
5Student Engagement What does it mean?
- Engagement refers to the time energy and
resources students devote to activities designed
to enhance their learning at University
6Student Engagement further defined
- The well adjusted and engaged student is one who
assesses and re-assesses their thinking as
transitions and opportunities to engage in
different ways continue through and beyond the
first year of university (Krause, 2006)
7A Curriculum for Engagement
- A curriculum for engagement calls for a
teaching that is likely to engage, to connect, to
lift, to enthuse, even to inspire. A Curriculum
for engagement calls for a pedagogy for
engagement - (Barnett and Coates, 2005)
8- Why is the concept of student engagement a hot
topic in Higher Education?
9Student Engagement as a Hot Topic
- Changing student demographics (Net Gen, Gen Y)
- Global marketing of education
- Government imperatives on retention and
attainment - Another push for radical curriculum change?
10What is being measured?
- Student views on
- Orientation and induction (institutional/faculty/d
epartment) - Paid work/relationship to (dis)engagement
- Motivation to study
- Engagement with academic staff/peers/learning
environment - Perceptions of/satisfaction with teaching
- Academic advice
- ICT/online resources
- Assessment
11Measuring Student Engagement
- How can we realistically measure whether or not
our students are engaged? - Do student surveys provide meaningful data?
- Who owns the survey questions?
- Are surveys the only approach to measurement?
12Dimensions of student engagement
13Connectedness and Student Engagement
- Connecting with peer groups
- Connecting with the research and the researchers
of their discipline (a scholarly community) - Connecting with the institution
- Understanding student support services
- Learning the language and conventions of the
disciplinary field of study - Learning how to do the learning in a particular
subject area
14The Complexity of Student Engagement
- Contextual factors beyond the University
(educational, linguistic, socio-cultural
background and experience). - Paid work and other life commitments
- A one-size fits all conception of engagement
- The nature and mission of the institution
- Students perceptions of the relevance of their
studies re personal career aspirations and goals
for the future.
15Academic Orientation (Induction)
- 2004 study 50 of respondents believed that
orientation programmes provided a good
introduction to the University. - 40 of students felt that those programmes helped
to develop a sense of belonging in the University
community - 25 of respondents did not think orientation
programmes helped them to feel a sense of
belonging.
16Adjusting to Study
17Are we keeping up to date with technology in
teaching?
- Most universities are unprepared for the changes
society requires they are not versatile or very
adaptable - Most universities have still not perceived that
the arrival of new information technologies
totally changes the role of the institution and
the educational process and those that cannot
adapt to the changes due to institutional inertia
will see their function turn obsolete, their
financial bases destroyed, their technologies
substituted and their role in scientific and
intellectual research reduced. - Guardian Weekly, July 27, 2007
18Strategic Approach
- A holistic approach within the institution.
- Institutional change from structure to culture,
from top down decision making to the creation of
faculty wide commitment from hierarchy to
development of leadership, from delivering
products to coaching for change processes. - Development of a shared vision on curriculum
standards, pedagogy and the skills necessary for
change.
19The Strategic Approach ctd.
- Academic initiatives designed to integrate ICT
into the undergraduate and postgraduate
curriculum with the aim of providing new learning
experiences. - Development of a culture of collaboration using
the full potential of technology. - Better use of time in and out of the classroom,
improved communication and enhanced interaction
with course materials.
20Towards a scholarship of student engagement
- Discussion and explanation of the personal and
institutional processes involved in study and
assessment - Greater acceptance of a wide range of different
motives and types of engagement - Much more explicit discussion of key assumptions
and principles of the nature of university level
study and the culture of the disciplines - Reconsideration of how language can alienate
learners, students have to be able to apprehend
the implicit structure of the discourse - Educating students about more complex aspects of
process through which disciplinary aims may be
realised. (learning how to do the learning in a
disciplinary subject area
21A research Agenda on Student Engagement
- Enhancing our understanding of the relationship
between levels of student engagement and
outcomes. - Identifying the characteristics of significant
learning experiences. - Examining the validity and reliability of survey
questions relating to student engagement - How might we transform the current academic
culture to develop disciplinary based
professional educators without compromising the
level of importance of disciplinary based
research?
22Radical Change
- The shift from a deficit model of the individual
towards an attempt to understand social attitudes
and practices as the cause of such perceived
deficits. - A shift from . . What is wrong with this student?
To what are the features of the curriculum or the
processes of interaction around the curriculum
which are preventing some students from being
able to access this subject?
23Practical Steps to Enhance Levels of Engagement
- Clear statements regarding staff and student
responsibilities - A first year student web-site
- Create a Student Experience Unit
- Celebrate teaching recognition, support,
awards. - Research and document teaching and learning
practice from a first year experience
perspective. - Provide annual awards for quality first year
teaching. - Review the academic agenda and promote academic
development
24Academic Development
- How easy is it to engage academic staff in
real, meaningful, sustainable change (culture)? - Change is a journey not a blueprint.
- Good practice is rarely simply transferable.
- Academic developers themselves need to reflect on
current assumptions about appropriate pedagogies
for 21st C students!
25In the Final Analysis
- The more students learn, the more value they find
in their learning, the more likely they are to
stay and graduate. This is particularly true for
more able and motivated students who seek out
learning and are in turn more likely to respond
to perceived shortcomings in the quality of
learning they experience on campus. Lest we
forget, the purpose of higher education is not
merely that students are retained but that they
are educated. In the final analysis student
learning drives student retention (Tinto, 2002).