hea membership building your portfolio. cpd route ukpsf has identified four types of recognition...
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CPD Route
• UKPSF has identified four types of recognition depending on the roles and experience that an academic has and each has its own descriptor:
• Descriptor 1: An Associate Fellow• Descriptor 2: A Fellow• Descriptor 3: A Senior Fellow• Descriptor 4: A Principal Fellow
PGCAP or CPD route
Direct application
(See Handout for full breakdown)
What is expected from staff…
Undertake a review – present your evidence indicating how you meet the requirements for the role you are aiming for. This involves:
1. Construct a portfolio of examples to show in the review to illustrate how your role and duties meet the requirements in each of the three dimensions: (Areas of activity, Key knowledge, Professional values)
2. Produce a narrative to talk through the examples and how your role meets the UKPSF– can be a series of prompts for you, not polished.
• Crucially, staff are only examined on the review itself. The portfolio and narrative are not assessed.
Developing ‘the story’
• You are essentially constructing a story that demonstrates how you meet the criteria
• It needs to cover the five activity areas
• These represent the roles we do as academic and support staff.
• The simplest way to imagine this story is a series of five pages.
• Each page uses one or two examples to show how you tackle the particular activity area.
Activity Area 5
Engage in cpd in subjects/
disciplines & their pedagogy
Activity Area 1
Design and Plan Learning Activities
Activity Area 2
Teach and/or support learning
Activity Area 4
Develop effective learning
environments & approaches to
student support & guidance
Activity Area 3
Assess and give feedback to
learners
My ‘Story’
Advice from the reviewers 1) Meet with your CF especially when you have a near ‘final draft’ to make
sure there is nothing obvious missing2) Make sure that you have sufficient evidence to draw on3) If going for D3 make sure the leadership of others is a key feature and you
use the word ‘I’4) Expect reviewers to seek clarification at some points…i.e. don’t plan a
timed presentation which does not allow for ‘interruptions’.5) Make sure any linked docs will open…e.g. practise somewhere other than
on your own desktop.6) Scholarship is a key feature…if the work of one or more key authors in
teaching and learning in HE is not something you make reference to when describing your approach to your work, you will most likely be prompted to do so: lots of useful resources on DEAP which is already grouped under the Activity areas.
Types of evidence
• What might be useful evidence?
• Remember this is for you to demonstrate your role in creating or applying teaching / design / feedback/effective learning environments/cpd.
• How can we obtain evidence?
Engaging established staff with UKPSF SD3A presentation from the Higher Education Academy Annual Conference, 22-23 June
2010.https://www.heacademy.ac.uk/node/3300
Activity Area 2: Teach and Support Learning.
• List the roles/activities/projects you are involved in that relate to teaching and supporting learning.
• Choose an example that allows you to demonstrate how you meet this activity area.
• In this case, Activity Area 2 is specifically about:
1. Your awareness of different approaches to and methods of teaching and supporting learning
2. Your ability to choose the most appropriate approach to achieve the module/course aims.
This is an example of one approach to this activity area.
Example: Developing & Assessing Reflective Practice
Pedagogic /academic context
Application
e.g. Designed a new assessment
Evidence and outcome
• Module assessment brief• Module brief • (teaching schedule)• Student work examples
Demonstrates the way in which cpd, and research have been drawn on to inform your practice
Offer a little more detail – could be on notes rather than a slide.
Evidence can include anything to help demonstrate the approach taken and the way it worked out in practice. These need to be hyperlinked documents.
For your Example
Pedagogic /academic context
Application
Evidence and outcome
What is the context?
Offer a little more detail – could be on notes rather than a slide.
Evidence can include anything to help demonstrate the approach taken and the way it worked out in practice. These need to be hyperlinked documents.
The HEA has lots of Resources which may help with thePedagogic /academic context
for example:
Reflective practice: some notes on the development of the notion of professional reflection
https://www.heacademy.ac.uk/sites/default/files/3573.pdfSupporting Portfolio Developmenthttps://www.heacademy.ac.uk/node/4524Blackboard Discussion Boards - Adding Value to Work-Based Learninghttps://www.heacademy.ac.uk/node/2906Engagement through partnership: students as partners in learning and teaching in higher
educationhttps://www.heacademy.ac.uk/engagement-through-partnership-students-partners-learning-and-teaching-higher-educationOnline teachinghttps://www.heacademy.ac.uk/resources/detail/internationalisation/ISL_Online_TeachingInternationalising the curriculumhttp://www.brookes.ac.uk/services/cci/resourcekit.htmlFeed-forward: Supporting Transferable Skills with Formative Feedbackhttps://www.heacademy.ac.uk/sites/default/files/Feed_Forward.pdf
Develop effective learning environments & approaches to student support & guidance
What theory or research underpins your approach?Why is this appropriate for your particular group of students?How do you know it is effective?How does your approach demonstrate respect for individual learners and/or diverse
learning communities?
Some suggestions:Flipped classroomsAudio feedbackDiscussion groupsOnline materialsMentoringPeer feedbackFeed forwardExperiential learning
Engage in cpd in subjects/ disciplines & their pedagogy
How do you keep your knowledge and expertise up to date?What activities do you engage in as part of your professional development?How does feedback from students and others inform your development and practice?How do you evaluate your own teaching practice in relation to pedagogic theory and research?Is your teaching influenced by professional body standards?
Some suggestions:coursesconferencesprofessional interactionsnetworkingconsulting expertsworking with otherslearning by teachingfeedbackmentoringpersonal researchdiscussion groupscommunities of practicemembership of professional bodiesjournalsexternal examiner dutiesconference or journal paper reviews
For Senior Fellow Demonstrating DVII Successful co-ordination, support, supervision,
management and/or mentoring of others in relation to teaching and learning.
• Usually to demonstrate this examples need to be drawn from the following academic roles:
– Course leadership, – Academic lead/Group Head – Programme/scheme leader – Module leader of complex modules (lots of staff /students to
manage)
• Need to emphasise the ‘I’ in the examples.
• Need to show that this has been sustained over a period of time (at least one to two academic sessions).
Examples might include:
• Managing one or more courses
• Supporting course leaders in ug/pg refocus
• Managing staff eg Staff deployment /PDR to enhance teaching and learning
• Supporting and mentoring staff
• School level strategic roles (related to teaching and learning)
Change to the ‘learner’ for D3Normally, D3 submissions will include evidence drawn from work you have done/are
doing direct with students, and work with colleagues/other HE professionals which impacts on student learning.
However,in some cases the whole submission may be built around academic leadership work
where this is demonstrably directly linked to the student learning experience. In such cases, you will need to evidence, across all Dimensions of the Framework (Activity Areas, Core Knowledge & Professional Values), how your work impacts upon colleagues, upon their work withstudents, and upon the student experience.
Examples of the kind of learning and teaching leadership work you might include would be heading up project teams/working groups, development and implementation of faculty/school-wide work in response to student feedback, influencing learning and teaching policy/practice at a faculty, institutional, or national level. In terms of mapping this to the UKPSF D3 descriptor, those influenced through your work may be considered to be your “learners”.
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