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School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux [email protected]

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Page 1: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of ScienceFACULTY OF ARTS

EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE

CURRICULUM

Mel Prideaux

[email protected]

Page 2: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

Context

• School decision to offer timetabled (but not programmed) opportunities for employability and academic skills development

• BUT, subject specific issues as well:• ‘Preach it or teach it…’ but now ‘religion experts’ are in demand

• So articulating ‘programme level learning’ is more important

• Compulsory Final Year Project

• A contested subject area

Page 3: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

THEO2300 Studying Religion in Context

All level 2 studying PER or TRS as single or joint honours student at the University of Leeds

• Compulsory, 20 credit, ‘pass to progress’

• Students actively engaged in planning, developing and reviewing the module

Key objective: Increase the coherence of, and performance in TRS BA programmes through provision of a skills orientated curriculum content which includes:

• Developing graduate employability through reflecting on key subject –specific and general skills

Four components to assessment:

• 2000 word report on Method and Theory in the Study of Religions (30%)

• Weekly reflective log (30%)

• Skills audit (10%)

• Annotated Bibliography (30%) 

Page 4: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

Taught Content

Semester one:

Three mini lecture series, plus one module orientation and one module review

Eleven seminars:

Traditional discussion to accompany mini lecture series

Thematic ‘cross-programme’ discussions

Semester two:

Mix of either weekly lecture or seminar covering skills (including literature search and review and employability) and content (discussion of issues in method and theory).

Page 5: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

Introducing a Level 2 Skills Audit

• Key objectives:• increase confidence in programme level skills and knowledge

• raise awareness of transferable skills in module content

• Format in first year:• A skills audit tool to identify strengths and weaknesses:

• Academic skills

• Employability skills

• Introduced and first completed in seminar in semester one

• Discussed, completed and signed off by personal tutor in semester 2

• Submitted for assessment end of semester 2

Page 6: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

The ‘Marmite Effect’

The module in general and the skills audit particularly:

Page 7: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

The ‘Interactive Bit’

Discuss the example page from the original skills audit

• Why might some students have disliked it?

• Why might some students have liked it?

Page 8: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

The ‘Silent Killers’

• Module, and ‘knowledge’, focus of students entering level two

• Personal tutors don’t always (often?) have experience outside University

• Change is scary

• Compulsion is scary

• There’s a capricious God of assessment

Page 9: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

New Improved Marmite?

• Removed personal tutors as a compulsory part of the audit process

• Integrated academic and employability skills and therefore reduced length

• Streamlined other features of the module to reduce assessment burden BUT this has meant losing some pedagogically valuable elements…

Page 10: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

The questions still to be answered…

• How do we know if our interventions have been successful?

• How can we make the subject-specific skills audit work effectively alongside LfL?

• How can we ensure JH curriculum coherence?

Page 11: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

Key Learns…

1. Acknowledge the ‘silent killers’

2. Student and colleague ‘buy in’

3. The students and colleagues who inform development have often already ‘bought in’ – how to engage those who are reluctant?

4. A coherent programme does not have to rely on an established corpus of knowledge

5. Articulating skills can be as challenging as articulating knowledge, concepts or theories

Page 12: School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science FACULTY OF ARTS EMBEDDING EMPLOYABILITY AND ACADEMIC SKILLS IN THE CURRICULUM Mel Prideaux m.j.prideaux@leeds.ac.uk

Further information

• Search for ‘Studying in Context’ on Casebook, includes module and teaching handbooks

• Materials available on the Careers website are useful for thinking about transferable skills: http://careerweb.leeds.ac.uk/info/4/make_yourself_employable/200/skills_in_context

• ‘Pedagogy for Employability’, an HEA working group report, is available through the library catalogue and raises some useful and interesting questions

• The Leeds Employability Strategy is an important background document: http://www.lts.leeds.ac.uk/Employability/EmployabilityStrategy.php?PAGE=136

• Also, Student Education fellowship Reports, particularly Hallett: http://www.sddu.leeds.ac.uk/sddu-200910rhallet.html

• Treherne and Rowson’s report on Student Research and Employability in the Arts is also a useful read: www.sddu.leeds.ac.uk/uploaded/StudentsResearchAndEmployabilityInArts.docx - 106k - 2012-10-15