Teaching inclusively - How can you harness student knowledge and experience? Professor Christine Hockings [email protected] Xiaogan University transnational partner staff development programme Jan /Feb 2012
Dec 18, 2015
Teaching inclusively - How can you harness student
knowledge and experience?
Professor Christine [email protected]
Xiaogan University transnational partner staff development programme Jan /Feb 2012
Learning outcomes
By the end of the session you will have:
1. Explored the meaning of ‘inclusive learning and teaching.’
2. Compared student diversity at Wolverhampton with diversity in your University.
3. Considered ways to harness & harvest students’ experience and knowledge.
4. Applied principles of inclusive & engaging learning and teaching to the planning of a teaching session
What does inclusive learning and teaching mean to you in your context?
Unit 2
Inclusive learning and teaching in higher education refers to the ways in which pedagogy, curricula and assessment are designed and delivered to engage students in learning that is meaningful, relevant and accessible to all.
It embraces a view of the individual and individual difference as the source of diversity that can enrich the lives and learning of others (Hockings, 2010)
Diversity of UK student populationIn what ways are your students diverse?
Social & ethnic
backgrounds
Differently abledLife, work & educational experiences
Entry
qualificationsPrior knowledge & ways of knowing
Approaches to
learning
How can we academically engage all students?
Strategies that harness students’ experience and knowledge? (See page 16 Human resources )
Articulating thinking publically?.(See page 17 Mathematics)
Sensitive to the cultural diversity of the group? (See page 22 Digital Media )
Learning to Teach Inclusively OER module
See Unit 2 of the OER module to learn more about engaging all students
To access unit 2 click on the link above or go to project website: http://www.wlv.ac.uk/LTImodule.
Planning an engaging session for all
Module: Session: Date
Student Group:
What do you know about your students? Group size, diversity, particular requirements, prior knowledge & experience, etc. By the end of the session you will have:
Learning Outcome 1….. Learning Outcome 2….. Learning Outcome 3….
Time Topic Tutor activity Student activity Resources
Post session evaluation
Session Planning Template
TaskUse a session plan for one of the sessions you’ve taught or observed in UK
EXPLAIN the topic(s), the students, the aims and learning outcomes of the session. Describe the resources, materials, equipment, the room layout etc.
ANALYSE what YOU do in this session. What do the STUDENTS do? How balanced is this? How do you know students have learned what you want them to learn?
EVALUATE your plans. How inclusive are they? Reflect on how your assumptions and beliefs about the students, teaching and about your subject influence this plan?
ANNOTATE your session plan to reflect the changes that you might make in light of focusing more on your students & on the principles of inclusive and engaging L&T
Share your annotated Session Plan with the group.
45mins
Check list of inclusive L&T principlesCreate safe, inclusive spaces
Get to know students as individualsEstablish ground rules for collaborative learning
Use strategies that harness students’ experience and knowledgeStart with what students know, then apply theory (biographical turn) Connect with students’ lives, backgrounds and future aspirationsFacilitate uncertainty, confusion & differenceEncourage public articulation of thinking & collaborative problem solving
Teach reflexively and with sensitivity to individual & cultural differences
Mindful of own beliefs and identity and their impact on student learningCoordinate interaction, mixing different student (with a purpose)Anticipate students’ requirements and interestsRespond flexibly to emerging needs and interests of student
Some related papers
Hockings, C., Brett, P. & Terentjev, M. (forthcoming) Making a difference: inclusive learning and teaching in HE through open educational resources (OERs). Special issue of Distance Education: Fostering social inclusion through open educational resources (OER)
Hockings, C (2011) Hearing voices, creating spaces: the craft of the ‘artisan’ teacher’ in a mass higher education system. Critical Studies in Higher Education 52 (2) 191-205
Hockings, C. (2010). Inclusive learning and teaching in higher education: a synthesis of research. York HEA.
Hockings, C., Cooke, S., & Bowl, M. (2010). Learning and teaching in two universities within the context of increasing student diversity: complexity, contradictions and challenges. In M. David (Ed.), Improving learning by widening participation. London: Routledge.
Links to resourcesOER module Learning to Teach Inclusively www.wlv.ac.uk/LTImodule
OER Learning to Teaching Inclusively Project website www.wlv.ac.uk/teachinclusively