Below, hear how Dr Shanks responds to some questions about her interesting, innovative teaching practice.
- What did you do?
- Why did you do it?
- How did you develop the idea?
- What were the challenges?
- What were the benefits to you?
- What was the impact on student learning?
- How did your students evaluate the experience?
- What did your students say?
- What hints/tips do you have for others in the future?
- Further information
I merged two 15 credit courses, 'Professional Development 3' and 'Action Inquiry' into a 30 credit course 'Professional Learning and Inquiry'. The previous courses were both assessed through a 3000 word essay while the new course is assessed through 4000 words written in a series of 8 blog posts of 500 words each in the Blog tool in MyAberdeen. Topics and assessment criteria for the blog posts were provided to the students. They could all see each other's posts and leave comments for each other, thus providing peer feedback. I provided a comment to the first version of each one of the blog posts as it was added until the week before the hand-in date. These comments were a form of formative feedback. Documents, weblinks and photographs could be inserted into the blogs within a post or as an appendix. The same academic writing standards were expected with references provided in the correct format. Students could edit or upload new versions of their blogposts up until the hand-in deadline. I marked each blog post separately using the CGS scale and then calculated the overall grade as an average of these marks.