UP Teaching and Learning Review 2020

Page 120

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Teaching and Learning Review 2020

practical solutions. Following the successful series of mini-cases published in 2020, GIBS has again contracted with Emerald Publishing to deliver a series of shorter case studies (mini-cases) focusing on recovery. The greatest challenge facing business schools is to teach relevant and appropriate content. While the development of new theory takes time, the school is able to produce shorter cases that can be taught in the short-to-medium term. The school provides material to the broader academic community that is both timely and of good quality.

Developed in-house, specifically for a GIBS context, the Learning Practitioner Primer Programme (LPPP) targeted programme managers and coordinators across the Social Education, Academic Education and Corporate Education divisions. Delivered using a blended learning approach, the course aimed to enhance delegates’ working knowledge of learning and learning-solution design in order to influence customer relations positively.

The Learning Practitioner Primer Programme COVID-19 presented an opportunity to pause and reflect, with GIBS devoting energies to further building capabilities needed in staff and faculty alike. The move towards digital and blended learning methods, in combination Gordon Institute of Business Science auditorium with an increasingly competitive business education marketplace, LPPP kicked off with 31 delegates in July 2020 necessitated an upgrade in programme and concluded with 24 delegates in November management and coordination skills to ensure 2020. An overall completion rate of 77% was that GIBS frontline staff continued to service our achieved (one delegate left; one delegate customers excellently with a greater depth of withdrew and five delegates deferred), coupled understanding of contemporary and blended with an 88% competency rate. On average, learning methods.

participation rates were 82% per learning cycle. Self-study, asynchronous (learning in the student’s own time) sessions provided delegates with a degree of flexibility, with a view towards minimising challenges associated with insufficient time to study owing to workload pressures. Learning cycles were further supported by synchronous (learning together at the same time) sessions to help delegates make sense of the new knowledge and skills. Delegates were also assigned mentors to further embed and support the process. An experiential learning model underpinned the programme’s design, with each session of learning requiring delegates to move through and complete activities associated with Kolb’s learning cycle: namely, doing/having an experience; reviewing/reflecting on the experience; concluding/learning from the experience, and planning/trying out what one has learned. Activities per cycle included set-up, thought leaders, share and discuss, and feedback and close sessions. Formative and summative assessments were conducted using quizzes, journals and group and individual assignments. Follow-up modules are planned for design, based upon delegate and mentor feedback, coupled with the new strategic direction of GIBS and divisional needs and capabilities that underpin its implementation.


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Conclusion: Re-Imagining the University

4min
pages 125-128

‘When the flower blooms, the bees come uninvited’ (Ramakrishna

2min
page 124

The Learning Practitioner Primer Programme

2min
page 120

A Case Study of the Molecular and Cell Biology Module, MLB 133

3min
page 118

Remote Support during Online Assessment in the ‘War Room’ The Student Voice: Longitudinal Research into Student, Graduate

3min
page 112

and Employer Perceptions in Veterinary Sciences Education

3min
page 113

Years of Achievements in the Faculty of

1min
pages 102-103

In Celebration of Excellence

3min
page 107

Opening of the Onderstepoort Wildlife Clinic

2min
page 111

Take-Home Practical Classes and the Use of Video Demonstrations

3min
pages 98-99

UP Law Hosts Inaugural Staff Development and Career Planning Retreat

1min
page 95

Taking the Simulated Learning Environment Online

2min
page 93

Learning from Government Blunders in Response to COVID-19

4min
page 92

Classical Voice and Opera Studies

2min
page 85

Technology as an Antidote to COVID-19 Learning Fatigue

3min
page 91

A Real-World Learning Experience in Environmental Law

3min
page 94

Taking a ‘Mock’ Model United Nations Debate Online

3min
page 88

Intervention Service Delivery

8min
pages 82-83

On the Importance of Tea Breaks—Fostering an Online Community among Postgraduate Students Tele-Intervention Framework for Early Communication

2min
page 81

for Vulnerable Communities

2min
page 75

Handwashing Awareness in Mamelodi UP Initiative Helps Create Food Security

2min
page 74

Sanlam Encourages Physiotherapy Students to Make a Difference

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page 79

Mail & Guardian’s 200 Young South Africans List

2min
page 69

Career Mentorship Ensures that Graduates Are Ready for Work

2min
page 66

in the Escape Room

1min
page 71

Supporting First-year Studies by Distributing Workload

2min
page 62

Making Research Methodology Accessible to Undergraduates

2min
page 59

Assessment Management System

2min
page 57

Voices from Greece

1min
page 53

Voices from South Africa

2min
page 52

How Practising What You Preach Can Shift Student Success

3min
page 54

Presenting Operation Research to Solve Actual Problems

1min
page 60

Emotional Well-being Impacts on Student Performance

1min
page 61

‘Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining’: Art Students’ Resilience

4min
page 51

Sport Sciences Education in the Digital Age

3min
page 49

Beating Marking Challenges in the Online Environment

2min
page 46

Normal Assessments in an Abnormal World

3min
page 45

Brown Bag Lunches Stepped up to Online Teaching Excellence in Auditing:

4min
page 43

Teaching Development Promote Knowledge Production and Knowledge Sharing

2min
page 30

Ensure that Academics Are Recognised and Rewarded for the Work that they Do as University Teachers

7min
pages 33-36

The Department of Library Services (DLS

1min
page 29

Foreword by Vice-Chancellor and Principal Prof Tawana Kupe Re-imaginingTeaching and Learning Foreword by Vice Principal: Academic Prof Norman Duncan

1min
page 6

Tutoring

4min
page 27

Striving for Student Success in the Context of a Crisis

8min
pages 7-9

People

4min
page 20

Technology Infrastructure

0
page 19

Leadership and Communication

1min
page 16

Challenges to Continuing with the Curriculum after the Lockdown

1min
pages 21-22

Advising

1min
page 26
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