moving outside the comfort zone : practical tips for interactive and inclusive seminars
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Environments which provide effective learning for all . Moving outside the comfort zone : practical tips for interactive and inclusive seminars. Janette Bradley & Caroline Wilson. Background . Business School Marketing modules 20-30 students per tutorial - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Moving outside the comfort zone : practical tips for interactive and inclusive seminarsJanette Bradley & Caroline Wilson
Environments which provide effective learning for all
Background o Business School Marketing modules
20-30 students per tutorialo Level 5 Marketing Planning tutorial
group o 30 students 17.00 -18.00 (500 in
cohort)
o Large international presence; multi-cultural backgrounds
o Diversity of ethnicity within British nationals
o Students tend to sit in friendship groups based around common ground and experiences, especially nationality
o Friendships can make learning easier through a natural support group, especially for international students who can use their own language.
o BUT Friendship groups do not
encourage diversity of learning or inclusivity
o It is very easy to let students stay with friendship groups
o Communication skills and group work is important for students’ future professional careers
o Important to give students opportunities to adapt their preferred ‘comfortable’ behaviour and learn new ways of interacting and co-operating with others.
Good Practice : Multicultural GroupsMulti-cultural group work contributes to the seven principles of
good practice in undergraduate education Chickering & Gamson, 1987
In particular: It encourages co-operation among students It encourages active learningDone well It respects diverse talents and ways of learning Encourages international discourse Breaks down cultural barriers Discourages the teacher from being drawn into only addressing
‘home’ students Builds interpersonal and communications skills amongst students
Good practice in inclusive teaching
3. Provides environments for effective learning for all Q3.1 I manage the learning environment to enable all students to participate fully, encouraging the sharing of examples from their own experiences.Q3.4 I structure my teaching activities to enable all students to share their values and beliefs within a culture of mutual respect and dignity for all.Q3.5 I use group activities to facilitate students’ understanding of how working with people of diverse backgrounds enriches their own learning.
Respect for others Our graduates will have respect for themselves and others and will be courteous, inclusive and able to work in a wide range of cultural settings.
Social responsibility Our graduates will understand how their actions can enhance the wellbeing of others and will be equipped to make a valuable contribution to society.
The Interaction for Learning Framework
Dimension 1
Planning interaction
Dimension 6
Fostering Communities of Learners
Dimension 3Supporting interaction
Dimension 2Creating
environments for interaction
Dimension 4Engaging with
subject knowledge
Dimension 5Developing
reflexive process
“ The classroom is the main location where students can find ‘common ground’, as it is where they share a subject and a learning environment.”
Sophie Arkoudis et al, 2010
My top tip “ Beginning each class with a short peer-learning activity ” (step 2)• “ Encouraging students to move beyond their regular social groups ” (all steps)
Arranging Multi-cultural groups for interaction
Tutor’s desk
Planning multi-cultural interaction is easier than it looks
o Students often enter a tutorial room which is set up in lines and arrange themselves in friendship groups of like people
X Sitting in lines does not encourage communication.X Sitting in friendship groups doesn’t encourage diversity or inclusivity.
Step 1: Ask the students to rearrange the tables
Tutor’s desk
Getting students to move the furniture involves them in their environment Round-tables encourages communicationo Students tend to stay in their friendship groups at this stage.
Step 2: Give the students a number
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Tutor’s desk
Step 3: Number the tables 1-5 and move students to those tables
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Students may still gravitate towards like cultures by sitting next to each other at this stage, but the tables are more multi-cultural.
Step 4: set first task in pairs e.g. checking understanding of previous seminars
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At a table level it’s easier to arrange multi-cultural pairs by eye Working in pairs breaks the ice, and no one person can get left outo It may not be easy in pairs to get every one of them to be multi-cultural.
Step 5: set next task in 3s and give people roles in the group
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Tutor’s desk
Once ice is broken in pairs, it’s easier to extend to groups of 3. By this stage it is likely that most groups will be multi-cultural and will have achieved this in an unthreatening way.
Top tips from the session Make sure the tasks are structured, this helps with
language problems and gives focus to the task This technique can work well when alternated with
weeks of allowing work in friendship groups Tutor should be constantly walking around the
groups to spot any individuals who may not be engaging and seek to observe causes
Engagement can be passive as well as active : e.g. paying attention to others, checking information from websites/StudyNet
Name tags work a treat when mixing up the group this much.
Some observations High levels of interactivity : the most
vibrant of classes taught Pace of learning increased : students more
productive outside their friendship groups Expectations raised - impact on attitude
and performance ? Very positive relationship between students
and tutor Quieter students became more involved Students began to relate to each other
differently and take notice of previously ‘overlooked’ individuals
Effective learning environment for all students
Average individual coursework result 55% Cohort average 49%
Useful basis for more wide-ranging study.
“ The structure of the tutorial is
good because we are allocated
to different groups each week,
and it allows us to mix in with
different people with different
backgrounds and ideas.”
“ I feel that the tutorial tasks allow
us to get involved and develop
our own ability in Marketing at a
good pace.”