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Showing posts with label academic engagement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label academic engagement. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Using peer assisted learning to improve academic engagement and progression of first year online law students [Distance-Educator.com, 2021]

Title:
Using peer assisted learning to improve academic engagement and progression of first year online law students

Published:
Distance-Educator.com, 21 February 2021
 
From the article:
The University of Southern Queensland’s online study environment continues to grow with over 16,000 students studying online. Pre-Covid-19, online enrolments typically represent around 67% of all students studying at USQ. This article usefully analyses quantitative data in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the pilot of an online peer-assisted learning program for first-year Law students. The article asks whether a customised online Meet-Up program can objectively enhance student engagement and academic performance in a first-year law course. Results from the pilot were positive and are a productive contribution to the literature on online peer-assisted learning.

Monday, June 7, 2021

Higher education in an era of complexity: "The tributaries project" as a higher education heterotopia [Scholarly Article - South African Journal of Higher Education, May 2021]

Title:
Higher education in an era of complexity: "The tributaries project" as a higher education heterotopia
 
Authors:
AM Hurst & B du Plooy
Both from: Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth, South Africa
 
Published:
South African Journal of Higher Education, Volume 35, Number 2 (13 May 2021)

Abstract:
Widespread calls to develop modes of teaching and learning in higher education for a paradigm of complexity recognize higher education’s double task; namely, to graduate students not only with technical/theoretical expertise, but also the capacity for responsible citizenship. In this article we offer retrospective, philosophical reflections on a South African university engagement project, “The Tributaries Project” (2019). These reflections aim to show that such academic engagement projects, formed as “higher education heterotopia” (a concept co-opted from a 1967 lecture by Michel Foucault) are favourable sites for the second aspect of higher education’s task; that is, to foster responsible citizenship among university staff, students and graduates in an era of complexity. Further, Edgar Morin’s “seven complex lessons” detail the essential elements of this task, and by extension heterotopic spaces, such as those configured by The Tributaries Project offer ideal conditions for the implementation of Morin’s insights. In Part One, we reflect on key theoretical assumptions underlying “The Tributaries Project”, via the lens of the concept “heterotopia”. Part Two is organised by Edgar Morin’s “seven complex lessons”, with brief indications of how these lessons were implemented via the project’s diverse activities. We hope that sharing insights gained from theorizing, creating and implementing this project may inspire similar projects.