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Title: Inquiring in the


1
Inquiring in the real world Linking
consultancy and teaching
  • Carolyn Roberts
  • Centre for Active Learning
  • University of Gloucestershire, UK
  • International Society for Scholarship of Teaching
    and Learning Conference, Edmonton, Canada,
    October 2008

2
Curriculum design and the research-teaching nexus
Research-tutored
Research-based
Research-oriented
Research-led
Griffiths or Healey
3
Responding to the Challenge
To watch the video clip click this link
4
Example Working for the police
  • I have been asked by the Metropolitan Police
    (Serious Crime Group) to investigate the likely
    movement of water through the Grand Union Canal
    at Camden Lock, London, in the period leading up
    to 11am on Sunday 8th October 2000, when a male
    body was discovered in the waterAt the time I
    undertook my investigation it was unclear how
    long the body had been in the water..

5
Understanding the task Instructions
  • I refer to our telephone conversation yesterday
    lunchtime and forward the local map of the Camden
    Lock area.The position of the body is indicated
    by an asterisk.
  • The body was found in the water at about 11am on
    Sunday 8th October 2000 approximately 2 feet from
    the canal bank and was effectively in an upright
    position with the crown of the head just
    protruding through the water surface. It is
    believed the depth of the water at this point is
    about 6 foot. It is unclear at this stage as to
    how long the body had been in the water and
    enquiries are still being made surrounding that
    aspect of the case.
  • I believe this was all the information you
    sought and I look forward to meeting you on
    Friday 15th December 2000

6
Assembling the evidence
7
Preparing the case
Preparing the case
8
Drawing conclusions
9
Drawing conclusions
  • A more likely scenario is an earlier release
    time, the body travelling upstream beyond the
    recovery site and back downstream, lodging direct
    on the muddy river bed shortly before 01.50
    B.S.T. I would estimate the likely time of
    release from Tarworks Road as 30-40 minutes
    before the recorded high water at Three Mile
    House, the body following an upstream track
    similar to that followed on 7th September 2002.
    The total travel time including the downstream
    element for these experimental conditions would
    be approximately three hours. The release time
    from Tarworks Road would hence be between
    approximately 22.40 and 22.50 B.S.T. on 27th
    April 2002.

10
Presenting the case
11
Research can be
  • Finding out something and making it public
  • The means of generating, testing and validating
    knowledge
  • A systematic process of investigation, the
    general purpose of which is to contribute to the
    body of knowledge that shapes and guides academic
    and/or practice disciplines
  • About advancing knowledge and understanding
  • (Brew, 2001)

12
Consultancy versus Research
  • What are the main differences between
    consultancy, knowledge transfer or
    knowledge exchange and more conventionally-defin
    ed research?

13
Consultancy versus Research
  • For environmental/geographical projects,
    typically
  • Clients want clear and unambiguous answers,
    sometimes to their ill-defined questions, and
    often with a preconception of the outcome
  • Projects tend to be smaller in scale than
    research programmes (but not always)
  • Projects will need to start quickly, and be
    completed to a relatively short, fixed deadline
  • Value for money will be crucial
  • The investigator may experience aggressive
    questioning or hostility from various
    stakeholders
  • Credentials are important

14
Intended Learning Outcomes
  • EL362 Managing Water
  • Knowledge and Understanding
  • ...familiar with the main organisational
    responsibilities
  • Understand that water must be managed in an
    integrated way
  • Skills
  • ...able to distinguish fact from opinion, and
    present an effective case for particular styles
    of water resource management
  • ...have developed a personal positionif
    necessary, challenging prevailing paradigms
  • ...able to work effectively within a small group

15
What do students do?
  • Traditional lecture plus student-presented
    seminar format, on water management issues
  • Additional group tasks with varying timescales
    (30 minutes to 2 hours) often within class
    contact time, based on consultancy case studies.
    Material available afterwards for extended study
  • Students present results, increasingly formally
    through the module
  • Later seminars are presented as role plays and
    assessed

16
Understanding the task
  • Instructions can
  • Be given at short notice and require a rapid
    response
  • Be unclear
  • Require a very rapid grasp of the hydrological
    and political context and the key issues
  • Require decisions to be taken in the light of
    uncertainty
  • Necessitate working within limited resources

17
Assembling the evidence
  • Witness Statements
  • as I got approximately 1/3 of the way across
    the main river, I noticed what I first took to be
    a log floating in the river upstream of my
    positionAs I watched, I saw some air bubbles
    come up around it, which aroused my curiosity
  • I am a full time member of the Thames Valley
    Police Underwater Search Team.There is a lot of
    debris on the bottom of both banks for a distance
    of 8 metres from the bank, ie scaffolding poles,
    car parts, old fridges, shopping trolleys etc
  • I am the resident lock keeper at Boveney
    LockOn Wednesday 19th September 2001 I set the
    gates to 10 feet crest, which is where the water
    was passing over the top of the gates. Eight of
    the gates were set at one foot below the surface,
    andThe gates remained in this position until
    Saturday 29th September 2001....

18
Evidence of different types
19
Report for Thames Valley Police concerning
potential movement of a body recovered from the
Thames at Windsor on 29th September 2001
  • As a consequence of the low discharge
    conditions, water velocities in the Thames in the
    week running up to 28th September 2001 will be
    relatively low, and water depths similarly small.
    By comparison, during the time of my inspection
    on 1st November, the discharge at Windsor was
    approximately three times as much., at
    approximately 65 m3s-1. It has therefore been
    necessary to calculate water depths through the
    reach indirectly
  • there is no detectable gradient in the reach at
    these low flows, although downstream flow is
    nevertheless occurring. Water depths at Romney
    Head were about 0.23m above Romney Standard Head
    Water Level throughout the period of interest
  • In my opinion, the body of Mr XXX is unlikely to
    have passed over Boveney Lock at any time in the
    week preceding 28th September 2001.I believe it
    entered the Thames somewhere between this lock
    and the Windsor Road bridge .as soon as it was
    released it would have continued to float
    downstream at a rate of about 0.1 to 0.2 ms-1
    The reason for the eventual release of the body
    from the trap may well relate to a small increase
    in the discharge, which is noted on 28th
    September 2001

20
Private client litigation Flooding at Yew Tree
House, Verwood
Understanding the task
21
Yew Tree House, Verwood
Assembling the evidence
22
  • The Developers Case
  • It is your clients contention that our site is
    causing this flooding, but no one has said howit
    is indeed ironic that on most developments we are
    criticised by the Environment Agency for doing
    exactly the opposite.it is therefore, arguable
    that if our development were not there, the
    flooding could be greater
  • evidenced by the demonstrable increase in
    rainfall levels over the last few years and the
    inevitable resultant increase in the level of
    water tables
  • Your letter again takes the stance that it has
    been proven that our works have caused Mr
    Philogenes problem and this is clearly not the
    caseYour experts report only came up with two
    ways in which we could physically have been the
    causeyou have reverted to picking out of the
    report that the flooding is consistent with
    etc. As previously pointed out in
    correspondencethis means a possible cause, not
    probable.We still feel that until someone can
    tell us exactly what we did that caused Mr
    Philogenes problem, we cannot accept liability

23
Presenting the case in law
  • it is rarely possible to determine the causes
    of flooding definitivelyIn this instance I can
    see no other possible cause than the development
    works, for the onset of such high frequency flood
    events. All other possible causes have been
    eliminated as unfeasible.Clearly it is not
    possible to go back and track water entering the
    property after a flood event.
  • My report offered two linked possibilities,
    namely increased localised input upstream...from
    houses, roads and drives, and reduced groundwater
    flow downstream either from blockage by
    foundations or piling, or compaction of the
    subsoil. The truth may well be some combination
    of the two. The timing of the onset of the
    problem is certainly consistent with the onset
    and progress of the development.

24
The consultants sequence
  • Understanding the task
  • Responding to the challenge
  • Assembling the evidence
  • Preparing the case
  • Drawing conclusions
  • Presenting the case
  • Satisfying the client

25
Public Inquiry Straight Mile Hazardous Waste site
Understanding the task and assembling the
evidence
26
Straight Mile Hazardous Waste Site
Preparing the case
27
Presenting the case Clear and unambiguous
answers?
  • the implications for flows of clear water in
    the receiving streams are described. These are
    minimal..and will improve the quality of the
    receiving waters in Anston Brook
  • The system as describedwill adequately cover
    extreme events without the need for additional
    storage facilities
  • ..there will be no significant risk to the water
    environment as a result of this development
  • A number of policy statements from the National
    Rivers Authority are reviewed, and it is
    concluded that the development at Straight Mile
    will not breach any of them

28
Private client Two Lakes Fishery, Hampshire
29
Two Lakes Fishery Water quantity and quality
issues
Understanding the task I have been instructed to
examine the hydrological settingin order better
to understand the influences on low lake levels
that are experienced in summer months. In
particular I have been asked to comment upon the
likely impact of pumping from a catchpit and the
use of a water recycling scheme in an adjacent
property
30
Assembling the evidence
31
Two Lakes Fishery, Hampshire Presenting a case
  • In my opinion, the operation of on the
    flanks of the valley has had a significant effect
    on the water available to Two Lakes Fishery in
    two ways since the mid-1990s. Firstly, and most
    significantly, the summer pumping of water from
    an on-stream catchpit since 1995 appears strongly
    linked to the experience of lake levels in the
    Fishery. The volumes of water involved, and the
    timing of their abstraction, are consistent with
    enhancement of seepage through the beds of the
    lakes, particularly in those lower lakes closer
    to the catchpit
  • Secondly, the introduction of the surface water
    harvesting and recycling system at s has
    affected the rates of recharge into the
    groundwater locally

32
Gulf Oil Quantity, quality and impact
33
Gulf Oil Assembling the evidence
34
Gulf Oil evidence
  • Site investigation, including borehole
    installation, monitoring and testing
  • Monitoring (quantity, quality), statistical and
    laboratory analysis
  • Historic map and aerial photograph analysis
  • Assembling data from other agencies
  • Ground and surface water modelling

35
Gulf Oil
  • Preparing and presenting a case

36
Gulf Oil Drawing conclusions
37
Gulf Oils UK operation was purchased by Shell in
1997/8, and the hydrological findings were
subject to publication restrictions
38
Satisfying the client?
  • On 14th October 2003 Filomeno Antonio LOPEZ was
    found guilty by a majority of 10 to 1 of an
    indictment of Murder and was sentenced to Life
    Imprisonment.Thank you for your assistance
  • Norfolk Constabulary, Criminal Justice Unit

39
Learning is the process whereby knowledge is
created through the transformation of experience
(Kolb, 1984)
  • Is experience transformed?
  • Is it thought demanding (Blythe et al, 1998
    Elton, 2005)?
  • Are learning and consultancy synergistic?
  • Is it the scholarship of application? (Boyer)
  • Is it deep learning?
  • Does it build research capacity?
  • Is it active learning?

40
What do students say?
  • I have finally found an area I want to work in
    (PG)
  • I really like the structures of the classes and
    the different styles used make classes more
    interactive and funnier (UG)
  • Skills were increased through the module due to
    direction and encouragement. Confidence greatly
    increased (PG)
  • Group discussion and debate, opportunity to talk
    excellent (PG)
  • Exciting, interesting, informative but also
    frustrating because of the problem of
    sustainability (PG)
  • The lectures let the people participate (UG)
  • I achieved a more confident approach to
    communicating the facts and critical evaluations
    through both presentations and written
    assessments (UG)
  • An excellent way of being directly involved in a
    professional-like circumstance, but also
    stimulated open discussion (UG)

41
Unprompted reflections on reality and
ownership
  • The chance to look at real situations where we
    could apply our knowledge and try to suggest
    solutions to problems its a good problem
    solving activity
  • Being able to see how our knowledge can be
    applied to real situations
  • By using real situations it has shown me how I
    will be able to apply the knowledge that Im
    building up
  • The application of our knowledge of water
    resources to work place situations was a really
    excellent part of the module, something that I
    hadnt previously been shown, and has been really
    helpful
  • The tutors enthusiasm made the course more
    interesting, by learning from their experiences
    of applying their knowledge
  • Looking at case studies and the lecturers own
    experiences really made the module interesting. I
    developed a good knowledge of the different
    aspects of water resources and how they are
    applied in real situations

42
Unprompted reflections on arguments
  • There was an opportunity within the class to
    develop skills in presenting an argument
  • Argument construction was very helpful
  • I have learnt now to take part in structured
    discussions within class and it has improved my
    ability to conduct a presentation
  • I have learnt to listen to other people more when
    discussing issues, and take into consideration
    their opinions
  • ..helped to hone presentation skills
  • Seminars aided in arguing over something I didnt
    necessarily agree with
  • ..the lecturer insisting on the importance of
    statistics to support evidence. If there is no
    statistics to support evidence then fact cannot
    be separated from opinion (sic)
  • Judge bloke session (sic) was very useful

43
Advantages of consultancy
  • Powerfully engages students interests in both
    theory and application
  • Confidence in own abilities, self efficacy
  • Assists them to develop skill in making rapid
    judgements in the light of uncertainty
  • Highlights the fact that information is
    contextualised and partial
  • Enables them to understand that application will
    involve compromises
  • Assists in development of negotiation and
    communication skills, verbally and in writing
  • Conveys importance of precise language
  • Promotes reflection?

44
Potential Disadvantages
  • IBL simulation, not reality?
  • Suggests that there may be right answers?
  • Implies that only a superficial understanding of
    the context and the scientific theory is
    necessary?
  • Not a cutting edge inquiry?
  • Implies that economic considerations will
    overwhelm other arguments?
  • Suggests that legal remedies to solving disputes
    are inevitable?
  • Raises some data protection and confidentiality
    issues

45
Curriculum design and the research-teaching nexus
Research-tutored
Research-based
Research-oriented
Research-led
46
The new world?
  • The main business of higher education is to
    teach students and to create new knowledge
    through research. However, if this knowledge and
    learning is to be useful it has to be applied to
    the areas of life where it can make a
    difference.
  • Knowledge transfer has been at the core of
    university activity since their establishment
    from disseminating new research findings around
    the world to getting graduates with skills into
    occupations where they can use them. There is
    increasing recognition that this aspect of higher
    education is enormously important and
    universities are being encouraged to do even
    more..
  • Universities Scotland, 2006
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