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Norah McRae, Executive Director Co-operative Education Program and Career Services

Norah McRae, Executive Director Co-operative Education Program and Career Services. Co-operative education at UVic . What is co-operative education (Co-op)?. Overview of Co-operative Education at University of Victoria Work term criteria and learning assessment Questions and answers .

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Norah McRae, Executive Director Co-operative Education Program and Career Services

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  1. Norah McRae, Executive DirectorCo-operative Education Program and Career Services

  2. Co-operative education at UVic What is co-operative education (Co-op)? • Overview of Co-operative Education at University of Victoria • Work term criteria and learning assessment • Questions and answers

  3. Co-operative education at UVic What is co-operative education (Co-op)? • Co-op is an educational model that allows students to alternate their academic studies with paid, relevant work experience in their field of study

  4. Benefits: institutional benefits • Student recruitment and retention • Strong links to the community

  5. Benefits: student benefits • Educational advantage • Career advantage

  6. Benefits: employer benefits • Cost-effective recruitment • Link to developing technology, skills and practices • Help for special projects • Expanded community relations

  7. The history of UVic Co-op A history of excellence • The University of Victoria was one of the first Canadian universities to initiate a co-op program, launching our first program in 1975 • Today, we are organized into 13 different co-op offices and are among the largest co-op programs in Western Canada

  8. Undergraduate co-op programs • Co-op is available in nearly every undergraduate program at UVic • Some programs are mandatory for students in the corresponding academic programs, while others are optional

  9. Undergraduate co-op programs • UVic offers the following undergraduate co-op programs: • Biochemistry and Microbiology • Biology • Business (mandatory) • Chemistry • Computer Science/Mathematics • Earth and Ocean Sciences • Engineering (mandatory) • Health Information Science (mandatory) • Humanities, Fine Arts and Professional Writing • Law • Exercise Sciences, Physical and Health Education (mandatory for students in Recreation and Health Education) • Physics and Astronomy • Social Sciences

  10. Graduate co-op programs • Graduate co-op is available in most program areas • Our formal graduate co-op programs include: • Public Administration • Education (Coaching Studies) • Education • Business Administration (MBA) • Where no formal graduate co-op exists, students may arrange to participate in co-op by speaking with the appropriate co-op coordinator or faculty member

  11. Student placements • We place close to 2,700 students in work terms each year • Our students work for more than 1,100 employers in Canada and across the world • In 2008/09, our students completed 2667 placements • 128 of these work terms were international, with students working in 35 countries

  12. Student placements • Students work for employers in fields as far reaching as business administration, mechanical engineering and recreation and health education • Students work in a wide range of public and private sectors, including: • Business sector • Industrial sector • Government sector • Non-profit sector

  13. 2008/09 placements in England • 9 work terms were completed in England in 2008/09 (May 08 – Apr 09) • 2 of these work terms were through our exchange agreement with University of Surrey

  14. UVic/University of Surrey Exchange • Exchange program started in 1980 • Exchange placements to date (until Aug ’09): • UVic to U of Surrey: 23 • U of Surrey to UVic: 21

  15. Co-operative Education at the University of Victoria: • How does it work? • Learning assessment • Best practices

  16. Work term criteria • Work terms are paid and are usually between 13-16 weeks • Employer provides training and supervision • Student develops learning objectives at start of work term • Work term is monitored and evaluated by co-op programs • Student writes a report on work term experience at conclusion of work term (reflective learning) • Efforts are made to integrate workplace learning back into the classroom

  17. Work term evaluations • Student develops learning objectives at start of work term • Work term is monitored and evaluated by co-op programs • mid term evaluations • final evaluation at end of the work term

  18. Learning assessment: toward a competency based framework Ten Core Competencies • Personal Management • Research and Problem Solving • Communication • Managing Information • Project, Task & Organizational Skills • Teamwork • Commitment to Quality • Workplace Behavior • Social Responsibility • Continuous Learning

  19. Competency model CommunicationCompetency title Uses communication styles and methods effective for the situation and audience Definition statement Communicates in a tone and manner that demonstrates respect Behaviour that describes the competency

  20. Competency Based Evaluation Form

  21. Employer final evaluations

  22. Student final evaluations

  23. Integration of workplace learning: completing the learning cycle • Experiential learning officer • Online teaching resource site for instructors • Poster exhibition for senior students • Examples of integration initiatives by faculty: • post questions on Blackboard • invite students to blog • Integration of experiential learning factored into promotion and tenure assessment Faculty of Business

  24. Learning outcome categories from student work term reports

  25. Best practices in co-operative education • Strong connections to faculty to help bring workplace-based learning back into the classroom • Strong connection with academic disciplines • Good relationships with employers • Skilled co-op professionals • Co-op processes that reinforce learning

  26. Co-operative Education at the University of Victoria Questions?

  27. Best practices in co-op education • Strong connection with academic disciplines to reach out and engage students in relevant co-operative education • Strong connections to faculty to help bring workplace-based learning back into the classroom • Good relationships with managers at companies and other kinds of organizations, to maintain a strong and loyal employer base • Co-op professionals who are skilled in their program disciplines, to help link students to work that is closely related to their studies • Co-op processes that support student learning in the workplace (learning objectives, evaluations, work site visits, etc.) Thank you! Norah McRae, Executive Director Co-operative Education and Career Services nmcrae@uvic.ca

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