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“The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone” A case study of changing teaching to improve outcomes, by John Murphy and Philip Cowan, School of Humanities, University of Hertfordshire
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“The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Mar 23, 2016

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“The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”. A case study of changing teaching to improve outcomes, by John Murphy and Philip Cowan, School of Humanities, University of Hertfordshire. Summary. A Problem module needed fixing Designing an “IKEA” delivery - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

“The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”A case study of changing teaching to improve outcomes, by John Murphy and Philip Cowan, School of Humanities, University of Hertfordshire

Page 2: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Summary• A Problem

module needed fixing

• Designing an “IKEA” delivery

• Risk management and “events”

• Subjective feedback

• Lessons learned

Page 3: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

The Problem Module

• Level 6 Journalism Module “Journalism Government and the People” was poorly received, students not really engaged.

• Attendance at lectures was low, no active discussion in seminars, quality of coursework was not great.

• External examiner questioning whether we should even continue

• Content hard to relate to perception of journalism

Page 4: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

The old approach• 1 hour lecture• 1 hour seminar• 2 essays• Curriculum based on NCTJ

“public Affairs” – dry and technical

• Very little engagement despite changes in approach from new staff

• Learning outcomes revolved around receiving a body of knowledge from lecturer

Page 5: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

The Wolf – is a sign that people can shop alone

The Bat – is a sign that people can find their own way around if there is proper signage

Source: IKEA TV advertisement “Tattoo Man”, 2000, Created By St Lukes, directed by Rocky Morton through Partizan Midi Minuit

The IKEA way

Page 6: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Maybe we should leave the students alone to find out the information – journalism is supposed to be about research

We show them the way and point them towards further resources

We offer help that is asked for, while keeping an eye out for those who are struggling

Set tasks to guide the journey

How do we apply this

Page 7: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Structure of the course• One initial lecture• Two tutorials, timed to be about 10 days before the

deadline for each essay, Groups of 6 for 30 minutes each focused on THEIR Essays

• Lectures turned into podcasts, roughly matching the subjects contained in PowerPoint's from previous year

• Six online group tasks(Seminars) students in group take it in turns to produce a leading brief on a topic, others join in the conversation online

• Total Contact Hours =2

Page 8: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Risks and events

• The student registration system that fed StudyNet was “upgraded”

• The module leader had a heart attack on the first day of term

• Even though attendance was only required on two occasions for 30 minutes each time it co-incided with ; driving tests, work, other appointments, “I don’t come in on that day” etc so some students had to be pressured into attending. [KIS]

• Still some students did not engage, but fewer than before

Page 9: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Sample of early feedback• I like being able to choose when I do it• I listened to all the lectures in one day• I’m really enjoying doing the research• I miss lectures, they forced me to focus on the subject

during that time, I am having trouble organizing myself• I think the old fashioned system suits me better, I don’t know

where I am here, its much harder work (this student got a first)• I like being able to go back and play the lectures again• I’m working harder on this than any other module, the more you

find out the more you want to know, it seems to go on forever• First drafts of essays was a key point, it was clear from this early

work that a step change in the quality of coursework was taking place (Phew!) later confirmed by External Examiner.

• “Quality of Learning”

Page 10: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

• People attending tutorial stayed for the next one, and the one after

• Those who never spoke in seminars asked questions in smaller groups and opened up

• The Quality of interaction with the tutor was much greater even if the actual contact time was less.

• Students found resources which was then shared with colleagues. either through StudyNet or through Tutor

• A lot of email traffic at odd hours (students like to work odd hours – do tutors?)

What else happened?

Page 11: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Analysis - strengths

• Multiple pathways through the material, can start with a book, PPT, podcast or virtual seminar – even talking to the tutor

• Assessment is closely integrated into learning• Develops self reliance, in fact there is no option but to

drive yourself through the module• Learning outcomes can include higher skills around

research, self management and personal confidence rather than just knowledge – Graduate Attributes in fact!

• Tolerant to technical failure and Module Leader mechanical faults because most course content is pre-prepared

Page 12: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

• Students used to spoon-fed approach flounder and complain

• Even good students can have genuine difficulties with a self-drive approach

• The “Signage” has to be good• Key resources, like principle texts

have to be available in LRC• Support has to be flexible, contact

hours the same number but applied differently

• Does not “save money”• Needs analysis of whether it is fully

inclusive• KIS Contact Hours?

Weaknesses

Page 13: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Opportunities• Changes the relationship

between staff and students to one of support rather than “listen to me”

• Convert “dead” teaching time to active learning time

• More enjoyable to be a tutor; students are eager for specific help with their assignments

• Can prepare students better for professional life

Page 14: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

• Someone will always try to argue for reduction in teaching contact hours

• Tempting to roll out to large cohorts without understanding the implications

• Is perceived by students as cost cutting even when it is not(KIS contact hours)

• Unlikely to suit Level 4 students• Very hard to match Attendance

requirement and vulnerable to fraud and “gaming”

Threats

Page 15: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

Ensure adequate resources are available. Signage is vital.

Put students into groups – democracy is over rated

All tasks, including virtual seminars, should contribute to final grade (Nicol 2009)

Attendance or any other requirement must be carefully thought through and defined at the beginning (engagement not attendance)

More contact sessions are needed at the beginning, there will always be people who just don’t get it, register late, or face some other difficulty. SET OUT WHAT WILL HAPPEN

Lessons learned

Page 16: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

• Professionalism, employability and enterprise• The University promotes professional integrity and provides opportunities to develop the

skills of communication, independent and team working, problem solving, creativity, digital literacy, numeracy and self-management. Our graduates will be confident, act with integrity, set themselves high standards and have skills that are essential to their future lives.

• Learning and research skills• The University fosters intellectual curiosity and provides opportunities to develop effective

learning and research abilities. Our graduates will be equipped to seek knowledge and to continue learning throughout their lives.

• Intellectual depth, breadth and adaptability• The University encourages engagement in curricular, co-curricular and extracurricular

activities that deepen and broaden knowledge and develop powers of analysis, application, synthesis, evaluation and criticality. Our graduates will be able to consider multiple perspectives as they apply intellectual rigour and innovative thinking to the practical and theoretical challenges they face.

• Respect for others• The University promotes self-awareness, empathy, cultural awareness and mutual respect.

Our graduates will have respect for themselves and others and will be courteous, inclusive and able to work in a wide range of cultural settings.

• Social responsibility• The University promotes the values of ethical behaviour, sustainability and personal

contribution. Our graduates will understand how their actions can enhance the wellbeing of others and will be equipped to make a valuable contribution to society.

Page 17: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

EXTERNAL EXAMINER• Year one – Critical remakes from the

External examiner• Year two – Improved External

Examiner feedback• Year three – Again improved External

Examiner Report

Page 18: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

STUDENT PERSPECTIVE• Issues of the conception of Journalism

– sports, fashion, music, NOT POLITICS• Survey fatigue – moratorium on

surveys so no specific or detailed feedback

• Low number of feedback from students on standard feedback – not statistically significant, but increased year 2 from 1 then fell back slightly

Page 19: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

ACADEMICALLY ADRIFT• Low engagement (work) leads to little

or no development of key skills• Low development leads to increased

unemployment – three times higher in the lowest quintile compared to the highest

• Goal is to increase engagement by ‘forcing’ students to work (read) rather than simply attend (lectures and seminars

Page 20: “The IKEA approach to learning, so leave the kids alone”

FUTURE PLANS• More detailed feedback• More closely defined tasks and

reading• More contact to capture struggling

students