Assessment
Project leader(s): Astrid Voigt
This pilot is related to the production of a new module on Greek and Roman myth which places a dual emphasis on developing students’ skills for independent academic research and communicating to non-specialist audiences.
Project leader(s): Angeliki Lymberopoulou
The ‘Work of the Week’ activity is based on a selection of a single work per week from the module materials of the second level art history module Exploring Art and Visual Culture (A226).
Project leader(s): Sue Nieland Paige Cuffe
This project will explore the development of postgraduate students’ understanding and practice of academic integrity, that is of good academic conduct, focusing particularly on the module Principles of Social and Psychological Inquiry.
Project leader(s): Zoe Doye Ieman Hassan Joanna Robson Judith Wilson-Hughes
We have been trialling tutor-led module-wide ‘you can do it’ catch-up sessions on three modules within SSGS (DD102 – 20J and 21B, DD206 – 20J and DD308 – 20J). DD206 and DD308 ran these sessions initially, with DD102, co
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): 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): Richard Marsden
Independent learning is usually envisaged as something that students do alone. But on ‘A329, The Making of Welsh History’, an online distance-learning dissertation module at the Open University, the situation is quite the reverse.