Cold Cotes Farm

” I can only see from where I’m standing the cause and effect on the people around me”. This quote from “Just my thoughts”, by Ed Loft reminded me of my Wandering Minds exercise in which I’m trying to capture some of the impact my NTF is having on the people I meet. It’s providing me with some fascinating insights into what people take away from our encounters, often totally unrelated to the main subject of the meeting. I’d be delighted to hear from you if you’ve read anything on this blog which you’ve found interesting, as this will add to my pool of information.
Anyway, back to Ed, who as well as being the author of the above mentioned little poetry book, is also the owner of the Cold Cotes B&B (and events centre) near Harrogate in Yorkshire. Having just spent a very comfortable night there, I can thoroughly recommend it! We were greeted with a tray of tea and home made cakes and things just improved from there!


Cold Cotes Garden

http://www.coldcotes.com/

Sir Learnalot

Sir Learnalot is the title of a small project I’m involved in, together with Ruth Stubbings (Loughborough), Debbi Boden (Imperial), Chris Powis (Northampton) and Marcus Woolley (Luton). We have some funding to repurpose the original Edulib materials into a digital resource. Edulib was an excellent initiative which ran several years ago, aiming to improve teaching skills for library staff. The outcome of Sir Learnalot will be a digital resource which can be used either independently or alongside face to face workshops. Like Lollipop (which is about IL skills for library staff) it will be freely available and customisable for individual library learning situations.

Clematis

NTF Symposium

The NTF Symposium this week was an opportunity to meet and network with other National Teaching Fellows from around the UK. It was great to catch up with old acquaintances but I also met lots of new people and have great hopes of working with some of them in future in areas such as IL as a threshold concept in nursing and IL and transition. Arti Kumar from the University of Bedfordshire is writing a book about employability and tells me there is a chapter which addresses how IL can add value to employability. One to watch out for!

Christine Bruce at Durham Cathedral

Support for international students

Yesterday I went to a meeting of a small Sconul Working Group of which I’m a member. We have been doing some work towards a report on support for international students in libraries. Up to now, we’ve elicited 50 responses from UK libraries to our survey and also done our own survey of library websites, with some fascinating results. We’ve got some great examples of good practice and innovative ideas and I’m hopeful that the report will be a really useful practical guide for UK libraries. If there’s anyone reading this who is involved with international students support we’d love to hear from you, so please get in touch with me.

Wombat walk, Australia Zoo, Brisbane

Learning Futures Forum

I’ve just returned from the first meeting of a new group here at Newcastle. The Learning Futures Forum is an opportunity for staff who teach to meet and discuss topics of mutual interest in a fairly informal way. People attend as individuals, not as “representatives” of their discipline and the majority of people seemed keen to network and engage in some “blue skies” thinking about T&L. I was interested in one comment that perhaps learning outcomes actually restrict learning by disempowering the students and discouraging them from taking their own learning experience beyond the boundaries of the planned teaching activity.

!Xanthorrhoea”, grass tree or more commonly called “Blackboy” tree, WA

Information Literacy: making a difference


Here is an “official” photo of the contributors to our “IL:making a difference” day last week.
From left to right: Sophie Brettell (QuILT, Newcastle University), me, Tom Graham (Newcastle University Librarian), Christine Bruce (Associate Professor, QUT), Ella Ritchie (PVC T&L Newcastle University), Sally Brown (PVC Assessment T&L, Leeds Met University)

You can find more details of the event in an earlier post.

Games for teaching Information Literacy Skills

Marian Rixham from our Medical Library alerted me to this article in Library Policy and Practice 2007. It has some interesting active learning ideas (very relevant after the active learning presentation I went to at LILAC too). The authors suggest that “one possible solution to dull and ineffective didactic training is to incorporate educational games with predetermined learning objectives into the curriculum” and give examples of word searches, riddles and games relating to teaching chemistry students

Rottnest Island, WA

http://libr.unl.edu:2000/LPP/f-smith.htm

More study leave

This is my last week at work before my next period of study leave for my NTF. Over the next few months I shall be analysing the data I have gathered so far, as well as continuing to visit local schools. I also have a variety of conference commitments to prepare for – from Aberdeen to Lesvos (Greece) and a lot of reading to catch up on!

Kookaburra in WA

Information Literacy: making a difference?

Yesterday we held our IL event at Newcastle. It was launched by Prof Ella Ritchie, the PVC for Teaching and Learning, who stressed the importance of IL in the curriculum. Christine Bruce then ran a workshop in which participants worked with her six frames for IL education theory to identify their preferred frames. Although not an easy thing to do, it certainly generated a lot of discussion and made people think about what they do differently.
After lunch, Sophie Brettell from QuILT explained what we are doing with our IL Toolkit and Liz Stockdale described how she has a “golden thread” of IL running through the Environmental Science curriculum. The day culminated in an inspiring talk on assessment given by Sally Brown, PVC for Assessment, Learning and Teaching at Leeds Metropolitan University.
Feedback on the day has been excellent, for which I am much relieved!
We will be adding copies of the presentations and other documentation to the website as soon as we can.


Here is a pic of some daffodils until I can get an official shot of the speakers from the photographer

http://www.ncl.ac.uk/quil…it/infolit.html

Christine Bruce

It has been very exciting to have Christine Bruce visit . We spent the weekend sightseeing (Durham Cathedral, Northumberland Coast) and discussing my project and the research I’m doing. Christine gave me some valuable advice on tightening up my interviews and even said that she thinks what I’m doing is “exciting”, which was great news!


Moira and Christine at Dunstanburgh Castle