Doc Media Centre newsroom on Higher Education

On 20 November, the Doc Media Centre hosted a newsroom on the future of Higher Education after COVID-19.

Our first guest was Dr. Dawne Irving-Bell (Edge Hill University), founder of the National Teaching Repository. We spoke about Dawne’s inspiration for the NTR, how universities have been transformed by the pandemic, and the future of open educational resources. We also plugged the forthcoming inaugural edition of the Journal of Social Media for Learning, which Dawne will be launching next month.

Interview with John Coster and Dr. Dawne Irving-Bell, 18 November 2020

Our next guest was Professor Richard Hall (De Montfort University), who reflected on how universities have responded to COVID-19, the impact of neoliberal managerialism on the mental health and wellbeing of staff, the hidden cost of academic labour, and the future of Higher Education post-pandemic. We also discussed Richard’s forthcoming book The Hopeless University (to be published in 2021 by Mayfly Press). The full conversation can be viewed here

In conversation with John Coster and Prof. Richard Hall, 20 November 2020

Many thanks to Dawne and Richard for speaking to us. These were two very inspirational ‘in conversations’ that gave John and I a lot of food for thought. We look forward to having you both back at the DMC soon 🙂

Curator of National Teaching Repository

Screenshot 2020-08-01 at 09.36.45

I am delighted to announce that the National Teaching Forum launches this week. Funded by Advance HE, the NTR is an open-access online database where educators can share resources, ideas, and examples of best practice in teaching.

Supported by my Sheffield colleagues Xin Zhao and Paul Fenn, I will be the curator of the ICTs and intercultural learning section. We are looking for presentations, research papers, infographics, data visualisations and any other examples of how educators use ICTs to improve classroom engagement and educational outcomes of international students.

Information on how to submit your work to the NTR can be found here

Many thanks to the fantastic Dawne Irving-Bell for bringing this all together and for the opportunity to participate in what should be an excellent repository of resources for all educators.

 

 

WSIS 2019 panel ‘ICTs in the university environment’ (Part 2)

 

Two weeks ago Suay Ozkula and I led a delegation of eight students from the Global Leadership Initiative in the Social Sciences  at the University of Sheffield to the 2019 World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Geneva, Switzerland. The team developed and ran the ‘ICTs in the university environment’ session during the event.

The slides for the presentation can be found here and a link to a video recording of the session can be viewed on the WSIS site.

In this second blog about the event, I will go through some of the key points from each presentation.

The fifth speaker during the event was Myra Mufti (MSc. International Social Change & Policy), who examined how ICTs could help make university admissions processes more efficient in Pakistan (from 24.40 on the webcast).

The Online College Admissions System (OCAS) introduced in the Punjab province has handled in excess of 317,000 applications in the past few years (a huge rise since 2016). The cost of these applications has been greatly reduced, with a time saving also evident due to the fact that visits are no longer required. Myra reflected on how OCAS could help bridge geographical, gender-based and financial divides within Pakistan.

The penultimate presentation from Romany Kisbee-Batho (Graduate Diploma in Law) focussed on her social media activism against immigration detention centres in counties such as Lincolnshire (beginning at 31.40 on webcast).

Romany showed several examples of the media coverage achieved by the Student Action for Refugees Society (STAR) at the University of Sheffield. Refugees detained in these centres are forbidden from using mobile phones, so a key focus of this student activism is to give them a voice through the use of social media to highlight their plight. STAR works with other NGOs/groups (e.g. Freed Voices) to empower people to speak out about how refugees are being treated within these institutions. However, this campaign is about evoking agency amongst refugees rather than just speaking for them. Their involvement in the anti-immigration detention movement is fundamental for ensuring its success. 

The final speaker was Rebecca Heminway (MA Digital Media & Society), who spoke about the role of ICTs in improving mental health amongst students at the University of Sheffield (beginning at 38.33 on the webcast).

Drawing on her work as a Mental Health Officer, Rebecca spoke about the rise in self-reported mental health problems by students in the UK over the past decade. At the same time, digital devices (e.g. smart phones, iPads, laptops) are ubiquitous amongst HE students, thus providing opportunities for the provision of additional support to those who need it. However, there are a number of barriers that must be overcome in order for this potential to be realised. These include the lack of data sharing between and within HEIs, and the absence of architectural approaches towards implementing interventions for student mental health within the sector.

The session was ably chaired by Hana Okasha, who facilitated a very interesting discussion about the future role of ICTs within Higher Education after the presentations had finished.

 

Well done to the team for all their hard work and delivering such an excellent session at WSIS 2019!

WSIS 2019 panel ‘ICTs in the university environment’ (Part 1)

Two weeks ago Suay Ozkula and I led a delegation of eight students from the Global Leadership Initiative in the Social Sciences  at the University of Sheffield to the 2019 World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Geneva, Switzerland. The team developed and ran the ‘ICTs in the university environment’ session during the event.

The slides for the presentation can be found here and a link to a video recording of the session can be viewed on the WSIS site.

In this first of two blogs about the event, I will go through some of the key points from each presentation.

Our first speaker was Mike Pinney (M.Sc. Applied GIS, Urban Studies & Planning) who delivered a fascinating talk on his GIS project in the Gleadless area of Sheffield (starting at 00.43 in the webcast).

Mike showed us some great visualisations of his case study and argued that academics should develop assignments for their courses that had tangible impacts upon local communities. For example, students could use crime data to identify safe spaces, or remote sensing to help farmers analyse soil fertility within these areas.  He made a compelling case for more creative modes of assessment in Higher Education that went beyond essays and exams. In the Q&A he called for WSIS to focus more on the threat posted by climate change in future Summits.

The second speaker was Tor Baskett (MA Digital Media & Society), who discussed the educational divide between Global North and South (starting at 06:17 in the webcast). She presented a critique of the term digital divide and talked about how digital skills (or lack thereof) could have a significant impact on the career trajectory of citizens in the developing world.

Crucially, this divide is not just one between Global North and South. Tor highlighted recent reports suggesting that as many as one third of UK students were deficient in digital skills as evidence that it was ‘holding back’ people in developed countries too. She finished her presentation by calling for schools to invest more resources in equipping students to excel in the Information Society. One example given was the use of Artificial Intelligence within Romanian schools to increase digital literacy amongst pupils.

Danny Kirby was our third panelist, who spoke about his student project on how networked publics on Twitter responded to UK Prime Minster Teresa May’s Brexit plan (beginning at 12.17 in the webcast). He reflected on the limitations of using digital methods such as Sentiment Analysis to explore complex political phenomena on social media.

In his study of hashtags such as #brexitshambles, Danny found several limitations to using these methods, such as their inability to detect sarcasm.  He also found extensive evidence of bot activity in his research on how Brexit was being discursively framed on Twitter. He concluded by arguing in favour of greater ‘democratisation of social media research’ and warned that a new digital divide was emerging between those universities able to pay for social media data and those could not.

Our fourth speaker was Evelyn Baskaradas (MSc Data Science), who began by giving a personal account of her experiences using Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs) at the University of Sheffield, both as an undergraduate and postgraduate student (beginning at 18.38 on the webcast).

While analytics from VLEs could help improve learning and teaching in Higher Education Institutions (eg. identifying students who might need specific help), students viewed this use of their personal data as a violation of their privacy. Within Evelyn’s cohort, there has been much discussion about the ethical challenges posed by these ‘data driven’ approaches towards e-supported learning, as well as their potential benefits for staff and students within these institutions. She recommended that there should be greater scrutiny of how these analytics were used to inform Higher Education policy and practice.

The other three presentations will be summarised in WSIS 2019 panel ‘ICTs in the university environment’ (Part 2).