Enables more students to achieve their study goals
Project leader(s): Rhiannon Edwards Shazna Muzammil Vanessa Moore
The Accessibility Tool is currently being piloted on modules presenting in 22B and 22J with the goal of disseminating the final version across OU by 23J.
Project leader(s): Sharon Xuereb
It is well documented that Black and Minority Ethnic (B.A.M.E.) students are awarded lower grades at university than their White counterparts. In the UK, a first class and second upper class degree classifications are considered ‘good degrees’.
Project leader(s): Alexander Kolassa Lilian Simones
There are three objectives of this project (presented in order of priority):
Project leader(s): David Grummitt
The purpose of the project is to carry out an investigation into reasons for declining student numbers on Y031 J and B presentations. While there was some fluctuation across presentations in the first five years of the module, the overall trend since 2018J has been a marked decline in studen
Project leader(s): Charlotte Lattin-Rawstrone
The proposed study intends to investigate the application of aspects of the research and framework through an intervention that builds on this framework with a specific focus on the reciprocal process and enactment of outcomes of feedback components by using SMART goals in the feedback process.
Project leader(s): Jonquil Lowe
DB125 You and Your Money replaced DB123 from October 2018J.
Project leader(s): Wendy Humphreys Vicky Johnson
One of the findings of our completed project, The Quality of Tutor-Student Early contact in Post Level 1 Modules, was the extreme variation in both the interpretation and practice of tutors, in terms of early communication within a module.
Project leader(s): Sean Williams Naomi Barker
This project examines the use of networked technologies for group music practice, within the context of a small group of 3-7 players.
Project leader(s): William Brown
In the age of digital information and high levels of technology in academic life, critical thinking skills are not just considered as an element of academic literacy; they have been interpreted in terms of the ability to use Microsoft Office and reference managing software effectively when underg
Project leader(s): Sue Nieland Ian McGarry Amita Sen-Gupta
In the age of digital information and high levels of technology in academic life, critical thinking skills are not just considered as an element of academic literacy; they have been interpreted in terms of the ability to use Microsoft Office and reference managing software effectively when underg