290 likes | 376 Views
Updating our Learning, Teaching and Student Experience Strategy (LTSES). Suzanne Cholerton Learning and Teaching Conference 2012 6 July 2012. Aims of the Session. To reflect on where we are and what has been achieved To provide some context on the current HE environment
E N D
Updating our Learning, Teaching and Student Experience Strategy (LTSES) Suzanne Cholerton Learning and Teaching Conference 2012 6 July 2012
Aims of the Session • To reflect on where we are and what has been achieved • To provide some context on the current HE environment • To provide an opportunity for you to input into where we want the next Learning, Teaching and Student Experience Strategy (LTSES) to take us • To have an enjoyable time working with unfamiliar/less familiar colleagues • And finally - a little brain teaser! Sildenafil
So what is a strategy? What is our strategy? "Strategy is the direction and scope of an organisation over the long-term: which achieves advantage for the organisation through its configuration of resources within a challenging environment, to meet the needs of markets and to fulfil stakeholder expectations". (Johnson and Scholes, 2006) Newcastle University’s Mission Statement To be world-class research intensive university To deliver teaching and facilitate learning of the highest quality To play a leading role in the economic, social and cultural development of the North East of England
The current Learning, Teaching and Student Experience Strategy • Published in 2006; revised in 2009/10 • To deliver research-informed teaching and facilitate learning of the highest standard • To deliver a fully rounded, enjoyable and formative student experience • Much has happened since then but our fundamental approach to LTSE remains the same • Refresh rather than major overhaul • We are in a good place………
Learning, Teaching and the Student Experience Likely to be 10th in BUCS 2012 2010 DLHE - 94.3% employed; 77.7% in graduate level jobs Overall satisfaction score for ISB 2011 is 91.4% Ranked 12th in Sunday Times University Guide in 2012 >14,000 ‘ncl+’ opportunities in 2011/12 89% for overall satisfaction in NSS 2011 Exceed HEFCE benchmark for retention (94.6% 2011) 18,000+ visitors at July Visit Days PTES 2012 91% satisfaction with course
Over to you……. How have you contributed to that ‘good place’? What have you achieved? What are you most proud of? What has your School/programme done well?
Butwhat are the challenges and to what are we already committed?
Context – the changing basis of funding • Increased UG fees – decreased HEFCE funding • Higher UG fees - higher expectations • Higher fee dependent on meeting WP targets • Knock-on effects of increasing UG fees (and debt accumulation) for PG • Development of Doctoral Training Centres or equivalent • Early CSR likely – forcing the cost down/increasing VFM
Context – More competition (and collaboration?) • De-regulation of UG recruitment • New providers • Increasing competition from international institutions • Emphasis on collaboration • with business (Wilson Report) • Other HEIs - DTCs, N8, RO etc • Stronger relationships with schools • Imperative to increase social mobility • ‘A’ level reform • UTCs/ HEI sponsored academies
Context – Information for stakeholders • Increased focus on information for and about students • KIS (‘comparetheprogramme.com’) • Student Charter • HEAR • A PGT NSS? And then a KIS? • HEFCE’s ‘The Wider Information Set’ • UK Professional Standards Framework - publication of staff teaching qualifications?
Internal context • Societal Challenge Themes • Internationalisation strategy • International campus’ • Challenges of diversity • Digital Campus • Information systems • Digital literacy • Social media, APPs, on-line learning, teaching, assessing etc • Open access
How have we used the Teaching, Learning and the Student Experience Strategy? Faculty LTSES • LT&SES PGT ‘Offer’ • Vision 2021 • UG ‘offer’
Vision 2021 • Recently updated and continues to commit us to: • Education for life • Student-centred approach • Value diversity • Research-informed experience • Support for employability • A fully rounded, enjoyable and formative student experience
Undergraduate ‘Offer’ and Student Charter • UG offer • an outline of a set of opportunities that will form a core of each Newcastle student’s experience whatever their discipline • all our students can expect provision that meets or exceeds a clearly defined threshold • Student Charter • Articulates the ‘academic’ offer but also goes beyond to include personal conduct, health, safety and wellbeing, etc • Applicable to all students • Format: “We undertake.../You undertake...”
4. Minimum contact time • 12. High quality information • 8. Active membership of University community
What’s next? • Food for thought • Recognise external context but don’t let it stifle your thinking • Consider internal context – how can we harness the initiatives? • Consider what we’ve already committed to • What • Education for life • Student-centred approach • Value diversity • Research-informed experience • Support for employability • A fully rounded, enjoyable and formative student experience
The Learning, Teaching and Student Experience Strategy ‘Itis concerned with how a business competes successfully in a particular market. It concerns strategic decisions about choice of products, meeting needs of stakeholders, gaining advantage over competitors, exploiting or creating new opportunities etc.’
Patterns, Profiles and Demographics: UK, EU and International non-EU
Patterns, Profiles and Demographics: Split between faculties
Patterns, Profiles and Demographics: UG, PGT and PGR
Patterns, Profiles and Demographics: Full-time or part-time students
Part-time (actual) numbers by Faculty and level HASS SAgE Medical Sciences
Patterns, Profiles and Demographics: Age profile
Portfolio Most of our (UK-based) undergraduate portfolio is traditional full-time Bachelor’s or integrated Master’s provision, delivered in 2 semesters per year over 3, 4 or 5 years We have little involvement in part-time, out-of-hours or distance learning delivery We have ventured only tentatively into the Foundation Programme/Degree market We do not validate other organisations’ degrees (e.g. local FE colleges) We do not generally offer accelerated degrees We have recently rejected the notion of two year intensive degrees Our PGT provision is more diverse than UG
Portfolio continued • 230 Undergraduate Degree Programmes (3, 4 or 5 Years) • 220 Postgraduate Taught and Professional Development Programmes (1 Year or 2 Years) • Postgraduate Research Programmes (including traditional doctorates, 1+3 Research Masters plus PhD, professional doctorates e.g. DBA, Clinical Psychology