Chort seminar 27th Jan Learning outcomes, sharing a teaching artefact.

This session was challenging. I found the room was noisy during the activity making it hard to focus on the tasks. This is something that uncontrollable to a certain level and is the nature of group work. I find the social aspects of group activities difficult, specifically putting my ideas forward and ensuring my “voice” is heard. All considerations for applied teaching practice on the foundation.

For the first learning activity, as a group working in a 3 I don’t think we successfully met the objectives set by the tutors. However that does not mean there was no learning accomplished. I think there is a resistance in me to be open considering I have been trained to find solutions to problems or identify answers quickly. The nature of the group I was in and the dynamic of the class seemed to feel like a ship that is out of control in stormy weather.

As such I have returned to the prompts set by the tutors as revision exercise.

Responding to the questions set during taught session from Friday.

The learning artefacts I brought to the session:

Monumental part 2 brief 

Part 2 scheme of work. 

Monumental project briefing session presentation.

For the sake of simplicity I will use the brief only.

What is it for (aims)?

To give context to the project, give an outline to what the students are expected to do, potential research sources to explore, and definitions to vocabulary some students may be unfamiliar with.

How is it used?

The brief is given to students digitally, during the first session we use the brief to point out key information pertinent to the project.

What is assessed? 

Sketchbook development work that should include idea visualisations, model making and testing, site visits, outcome photographed in context decided by student.

How is it assessed? 

The project is assessed with additional projects from part 2 of the course by 5 learning outcomes and a grading matrix from refer to pass excellent.

Considering the preparatory reading I don’t know what the limitations, successes, or opportunities are for this artefact. I found the reading difficult to grasp and I think the foundation course has given briefs like the above a good scaffold to ensure learning outcomes are met. 

Design workshop 2. 

This part of the session was chaos with little direction (this does not mean it was not successful or enjoyable). Eventually we came to a decision of sorts and made a response to the task. This decision was a result of just jumping in to making the poster despite my attempts to give it some structure. The poster we made explored the idea of “A place to play” with figures in a learning environment. although I think outcome didn’t quite meet the intentions of the task, for me it really was a “fuck it, lets see what happens” moment.

Teaching formats and strategies 

This task was helpful initially. However, the groups were mixed up part way through changing the dynamic. I felt I no longer had a voice and could not interject without it causing me stress. 

Assesment criteria 

The task of writing our own grading descriptions was very hard. I had to retreat from the group and write them individually. I found the middle ground of Good and Very good particularly difficult if not impossible to write a descriptor for. I felt that you’re restricted to numerical expectations or weak ambiguous language in these grading areas. 

Reflective writing as performance 

Reflective writing on the foundation course is one way to measure a students learning. In part one and occasionally part 2 of the course we write questions that guide the students to effectively plot aims of the session, challenges they faced while making the work and possible future ideas and methods of working they might explore in the future. After reading the article “the reflection game: enacting the penitent self” I’m left considering how much I’m performing for this blog and the effectiveness of reflective writing for the foundation students. 

Reflective writing for myself and many of the foundations students is a displeasurable task. I convince myself that writing is essential in formulating ideas coherently and this maybe true for those who are talented at writing. When leaving education I did not continue to write reflection nor do I use it in my current illustration practice. But I do think and I talk to someone I trust. 

After reading the article, I think that reflective writing is a tick box exercise. But I cannot judge if that is accurate for the students. What, if anything do they “get” from the activity? Reflective writing appears to be completed for the sake of a criteria that uses flaccid language to assess learning competence. What can I change with my approach to the necessity of reflective writing? Skim over reflection during tutorials, get the students to explain what they think they learned?

Reflection 13/01/22 Introduction session 

The length of the session was quite tough and after presenting I felt psychically drained. The backgrounds, aims and intentions of the participants of the group was really overwhelming. Trying to absorb the variety of different ideas my peers were talking about in the presentations was hard to fully digest. 

During the session the “walls” of the teaching environment or the online teaching space was very apparent. Technical problems, hearing mics left on and the buzz of computer fans described the space. 

The self organisation of the breakout group, the order of play is fascinating. Is it our personality that dictates who puts themselves forward to present first? 

How can your personal emotional state or feeling effect your teaching? It seems obvious that this is inevitable. What was the role of setting the task of random breakout groups in pairs to introduce ourselves with a question “how I might feel”? Was this to encourage empathy? Did it meet the expected aims?

The person I was paired with in the beginning of the group asked how old I was. This made me reflect that it is some peoples aims to purely be teachers. It also made me consider does teaching design have a financial sustainable future for me? Will I eventually be priced out of London? Does that mean my job, my skills I have developed, the knowledge I have, and my albeit limited experience not have value or use in this city? However, does this ultimately help or support the class room activities I need to design? Is it really practical to use time to ask these questions?

Notes on second part of session:

Additional questions as a result of the online session – How to teach empathy?

Use of language critical in promoting empathy.

Telling stories, what stories do you tell?

Starting teaching sessions with who is in the space, the value and knowledge we all have.

This part of the session resulted in me considering did the question “how to teach empathy?” became to focused on the individual or the self. How would the question be suitable in a class.

Other questions brought up during session:

What is the politics of teaching? National and local?

How do you manage distractions in a learning environment?

How do you measure learning?  

How do you use a lack of knowledge to allow freedom of experimentation?

What is pedagogy – how educators can benefit from it?

Potential future sources for further reading:

Roman Krznaric – book on empathy

Design thinking has a problem.. and a way forward – paper

Museum of empathy – https://www.empathymuseum.com