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How videos can spread better practices
Academics around the world have experimented with technology as the Covid -driven need to teach remotely accelerates the shift to digitally supported education. Part of the challenge has been to match their approaches to individual teaching styles and to the needs of students in their disciplines.
Some experiments worked brilliantly first time, while others failed or required a series of refinements. The trick is to share swiftly and efficiently what's worked. How do we do that? In scientific research, carefully controlled experiments are conducted and the results are peer-reviewed before being published.
But tips and tricks are shared informally at conferences. It's time to share teaching tips more broadly. So how do we do this? A UNSW professor, Peter Heslin, together with colleagues in our Scientia Education Academy, has created a simple strategy for quickly sharing useful tips via two-minute videos – Teaching News You Can Use (TNYCU). To build up a repository of videos, he held an Exemplary Teaching Practice competition. It attracted well over 100 entries across six categories, such as inspiring students, building student communities, and leveraging student diversity.
A panel evaluated the entries in terms of their usefulness, breadth of applicability, and clarity. The panel selected winners and two runners-up in each category. The winners were shown at the end of the week-long UNSW Education Festival. All finalists and submissions that received an honourable mention will soon feature in an online TNYCU repository.
Many of the tips are simple. Some spread existing knowledge – novelty and originality were not criteria! We need to identify and spread useful tips, not just add new ideas when many of us are already overwhelmed by all the options. As Heslin said, "There's little new under the sun. We just need fresh ways to see, frame and productively deploy the relevant options before us.
" What were some of the best tips? The tips I liked best were so simple. One video showed us how we can build connections by positioning ourselves in front of the slides. Why? "No one was ever inspired by a slide. People inspire other people." It's obvious I guess, but this nugget inspired me to reconsider how I might adapt my own online slide presentation format so that, at least at times, I won't be hiding in the corner! Another academic explained how and why she gave recorded audio feedback to students on their work rather than written comments.
Again, that may not be new, but it was new to me – I've never done it. Recently, though, I've heard from students that this feedback makes them feel individually seen, heard and valued in a world of educational massification. Then there was a video about how to set up a system whereby students discover how much they can learn from each other. This helps build a learning community.
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