70 likes | 184 Views
Developing peer assessment in doctoral research methods training. Hilary Burgess hb144@le.ac.uk Phil Wood pbw2@le.ac.uk Joan Smith jms32@le.ac.uk Maria Scalise mc123@le.ac.uk University of Leicester School of Education. Overview of presentation. Rationale for the project
E N D
Developing peer assessment in doctoral research methods training Hilary Burgess hb144@le.ac.uk Phil Wood pbw2@le.ac.uk Joan Smith jms32@le.ac.ukMaria Scalisemc123@le.ac.uk University of Leicester School of Education
Overview of presentation • Rationale for the project • Aims and principles of the project • The project plan • Phase 1 activities/materials demonstration
Rationale for the project • Lack of evaluation of teaching strategies in the teaching of research methods impedes progress in developing successful teaching pedagogy (Vandiver& Walsh 2010) • Need to develop a ‘pedagogical culture’ in research methods (Wagner et al 2011) • Possible to capture changes in mental structures via concept mapping over time
Key aims and principles • To foster in students a sense of belonging in a research community • To encourage researcher reflexivity • To develop peer reviewing skills and the ability to give, receive and act upon constructive critical feedback • To enable students to hone presentation skills in a variety of modes
The project plan • Phase 1: Development of teaching activities to promote engagement • Phase 2: Development of online, peer-reviewed journal for students • Phase 3: Dissemination to other disciplines in Social Sciences
Phase 1 activities on VLE • https://blackboard.le.ac.uk/
References Vandiver, D. M. and Walsh, J. A. (2010) Assessing autonomous learning in research methods courses: Implementing the student-driven research project in Active Learning in Higher Education 11 (1) pp. 31-42. Wagner, C., Garner, M. and Kawulich, B. (2010) The state of the art of teaching research methods in the social sciences: towards a pedagogical culture in Studies in Higher Education, 36 (1) pp. 75-88.