SSC: Embedding in practice
Tips for practice
Course design
Consider all the different aspects of course design and which of them you want to provide opportunities for students to co-design with you. For example, can you involve students in an ELDeR workshop or ask students on your Student-Staff Liaison Committee to feed in their views to the (re)design of a course or programme? If you are offering research projects and dissertations, would it be possible for students to co-create one of their own learning outcomes with their supervisor?
When you are trying to balance the knowledge students need to learn along with the skills they need and enabling them to develop their opinions and viewpoints in your discipline, how could you be involving students meaningfully in ways that model the decision-making and negotiation they will need in future careers? Think about how you can design-in choice for students within courses – choice of case studies to explore, choice of topics to research and then give a presentation on, choice of assessment. Choice is the start of a continuum towards students gaining more agency over their learning.
Learning activities
Heron (1992) argues that we make a choice at all levels of course design as to whether we take control, we negotiate with students or we delegate responsibility to students. The learning activities you use could be co-created with students, or they could be activities that enable co-creation. For example, students in the School of Medicine were involved in designing videos focused on the benefits of physical activity, to be used in a flipped classroom approach with other students: A student partnership project to enhance curriculum development in medical education.
Assessment
Co-creating assessment is becoming more common. There are many examples where staff and students are co-creating essay titles, students are designing multiple choice questions, students are choosing what method of assessment they will use, or students are co-assessing their work and that of their peers with staff. In one example from the University of Edinburgh, students are completing assessments that create resources for future students to use in their studies.
Introductory resources
An introduction to student and staff co-creation of the curriculum: A blog post by Dr Tanya Lubicz-Nawrocka, who explains what the term ‘co-creation of the curriculum’ means, and how it can be an effective student partnership approach. Note the 'Ladder of participation in curriculum design' (Bovill & Bulley, 2011) image to help conceptualise how students can increasingly participate in curriculum design.
A co-creation of learning and teaching typology: What kind of co-creation are you planning or doing? (8 pages): A practical resource intended to support students and staff to reflect on, and discuss, their planned and current practice and to be able to identify what particular kind of co-creation they are planning or doing.
Shaping the future curriculum with students: In this blog post, Dr Cathy Bovill summarises her keynote talk presented at the 2022 Learning and Teaching Conference. The post provides an overview of student-staff co-creation methods and the benefits of these.
An overview of the differences between active learning, co-creation and partnership: A useful slide summarising the key differences between active learning and co-creation and partnership. Active learning requires students to be engaged in their learning, but co-creation and partnership require in addition, shared decision-making and negotiation. Partnership also requires a level of equality between partners – contributions which are not the same, but which are necessary to the partnership.
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