Student Academic Representative (StARs) Scheme
Training 2014-15
Please sign the register and take a seat
What today’s session will cover
StARs scheme at London Met
Welcome & Ice-breaker Quality Assurance Role of a StAR? Advice and support Make yourself known Feedback Identifying & dealing with issues Course Committee meetings Campaigning and taking action Communication hints and tips Evaluation Form
Ice-breaker!
Form a circle in alphabetical order of the town or city you were born in
Introduce yourself to the group and state name, course and town/city
State why you decided to become a StAR?
StARs: Getting Started
University expects faculties to have StARs for each year of each course
StARs to attend Course Committee meetings and liaise with Course Leaders and other academics throughout the year
4-7 Faculty StARs per faculty elected to the Student Council
StARs are there to represent students on academic based issues effecting the course, studio or faculty
Quality Assurance Agency The QAA is a quality ‘Watchdog’ which ensures that courses
delivered in UK Universities were of an appropriate standard and that a good quality education was being offered
The Quality Enhancement Unit at London Met is there to keep the Universities Quality Framework and work to make sure the high quality of teaching
The Quality Enhancement Unit are VERY keen to work with StARs from all faculties of London Met. StARs provide some of the most useful feedback
Catherine Connor, Head of Quality Enhancement Unit [email protected]
Habib Rahman, Deputy Head of QEU, [email protected]
StARs: Advice and support StARs handbook
Students’ Union website:http://www.londonmetsu.org.uk/studentacademicreps/
SU Officers & staff
NUS Connect Course Rep website:http://www.nusconnect.org.uk/campaigns/highereducation/student-
engagement/courserephub/
QAA/NUS Quality Matters website http://qualitymatters.nus.org.uk/
London Met Metranet (for faculty and University information)https://intranet.londonmet.ac.uk/
StARs: Officer & staff contacts
SU Sabbatical Officer with Education Portfolio Nicole Mitchell: [email protected]
Students’ Union faculty attached Sabbatical officers: FSSH: Nicole Mitchell: [email protected] CASS: Amanda Mariellier: [email protected] FBL: Marco Brunone: [email protected] FLSC: Obie Opara: [email protected]
Students’ Union staff: Eddie Rowley, Student Voice Coordinator (Engagement & Campaigns)
Faculty StAR staff contact points: FBL - Andrew Halford [email protected] CASS - Cecile Tschirhart [email protected] FLSC - Peter Chalk [email protected] FSSH - Martin Murray [email protected] (interim)
1. What is the role of a StAR?
Understand the role of a StAR
Group Activity 1
Role of a StAR
‘To represent students views and opinions on all matters relating to teaching and learning in an effort to continuously improve the student learning experience in partnership with the institution and Students’ Union.’
Identify issues on the ground Raise issues and concerns with Faculty Notify course mates of developments and opportunities Provide feedback (positive and negative) to faculty Build strong working-relationship with Course Leader &
Module Leader etc Be consulted by faculty on relevant issues and
contribute to development and strategy of faculty.
Making yourself known
How can you make yourself known as a StAR?
Making yourself known Introduce yourself to your class mates and make regular announcements in
class ‘lecture shout-outs’ Collect the names and emails of the student on your course and email them Ask your Course Leader to forward on correspondence to the course Work with the Sabbatical officers and Faculty StARs Join StARs Facebook group (ask you sabbatical officer – see slide 7) Carry out a survey or questionnaire to find out what students think Ask in your Faculty if you can use a notice board or part of a notice board to
publicise yourself Communicate information your receive from the Students’ Union, University,
National Union of Students (NUS) and other external student focused organisations
Make friends and work in partnership with other StARs in your faculty Communicate with the StARs doing the same course as you but in different
years, work together!
FeedbackWhat areas could you feedback on? Teaching on the course Style and delivery skills of academics Assessments (exams and coursework) Academic feedback from lecturers Academic support Lab, Gym & other specialist facilities Learning resources (such as the Library, Weblearn) Organisation and management of your course / University
experience Restructuring of department/university Time-tabling General University Services University estate, IT and other services
2. Identifying Issues
See:
Group Activity 2 instruction sheet
Scenario Cards
Flowchart (next slide)
Group Activity 2
Solving issues
See flowchart on next slide see this link:
http://www.londonmetsu.org.uk/pageassets/union/reps/StARs-Handbook-2014-15.pdf
Ways to tackle issues
Judge if the issue is one for a StAR or not to deal withDiscuss with other StARs, Faculty StARs, Sabbatical OfficersSee if other students feel it is an issue?Is the issue widely felt, deeply felt and winnable?Informal chat with relevant staff member (informal resolution of issue is usually preferableAsk for a formal meeting if requiredRaise at course committee meetingsRaise with staff StARs contacts (see slide number 7)Ask Faculty StARs to raise them Raise at Faculty Academic Board and UGPG CommitteeEmail or write a letter, ask others to put their name to it. If no satisfactory response consider starting a campaign
Course Committee Structure Ask your Course Leader when your Course Committee meeting is and put it in
your diary
Course Committees usually meet x1 a semester
2 or 3 StARs usually attend
Course Leader is the chair
Consider teaching and administrative issues surrounding the course
Should consider student issues and concerns
Library and others external to the dept may be present
Quality coordinator may attend
Minutes are included in Course Logs and should be reviewed by Faculty managers
Course Committee PreparationWhat should you do before a course committee meeting?
Before the Course Committee meeting:
Meet Course Leader beforehand so they can let you know what to expect
Read the agenda, be aware what is and is not on it.
Make sure you have identified the issues you wish to raised and have feedback from your class mates to back it up
If you have an complicated issue to raise or and have research/evidence to produce e.g. survey, emails from course mates send them to the Course Leader before the committee meeting so they have a chance to digest the issue.
Liaise with other StARs who may attend (ask you Course Leader to put you in touch or look on the SU website)
Speak to your Faculty Sabbatical Officer, ask them to come along with you
Makes sure you know where the meeting is and be on time. Being late will not help your cause!
Course Committee PreparationWhat should you do during a course committee meeting?
During the Course Committee meeting:
Listen Raise hand to speak Raise you issues clearly and concisely Present any evidence you have Don’t be confrontational, work in partnership Take notes, ask for clarification if you are not sure what is being
said Remembers to note down action points If you don’t understand a term used, ask! At the end of the meeting clarify the decisions taken and when they
are to be actioned (this prevents drift) Confirm the date of the next meeting. Request a follow-up meeting
to deal with a specific issues if required. Make sure the Secretary has your email
Course Committees
What should you do after a Course Committee meeting?
After the Course Committee meeting:
If other StARs present have a debrief straight away Write up you notes and action points right away Feedback to your course mates and the Students’ Union ASAP If you are not happy with the conduct of the meeting then speak to
another academic in your faculty and express your concern Provide any constructive criticism you have of the committee to the
Faculty
Campaigning & taking action
Sometimes you may have a widely felt, deeply felt and winnable issue which you can’t make any real progress on. In this situation you may decide to launch a campaign and take some action.
In this situation you should discuss with the Students’ Union officers. They, along with Students’ Union staff can assist you in launching the campaign.
Campaigning & taking actionContact and work with the Students’ Union, who have the resources to run an effective campaign.
Running campaigns and taking action is a whole topic in its own right, but here are a few hints:
Use SMART targets! Identify who the decision-makers are you are hoping to influence Gather data. Learn the reasoning for the decision, always remain open-minded. Ask Student Reps on board of Governors, Academic Board etc to formally raise the issue Read and critique the rationale for the decision you are campaigning against. Can you
successfully challenge the (business) case Organise meetings Email & letter writing campaign Use social networking: facebook, twitter etc Work with allies: Other StARs, academics, NUS, Students, other Students’ Unions, Local MPs,
Staff Unions (UNISON, UCU - is there common ground?) Press and Media Stunt, Lobbies, protests, boycotts
Any questions?
Contact details:[email protected]