14,196 research outputs found

    Why, what, and how? case study on law, risk, and decision making as necessary themes in built environment teaching

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    The paper considers (and defends) the necessity of including legal studies as a core part of built environment undergraduate and postgraduate curricula. The writer reflects upon his own experience as a lawyer working alongside and advising built environment professionals in complex land remediation and site safety management situations in the United Kingdom and explains how themes of liability, risk, and decision making can be integrated into a practical simulation in order to underpin more traditional lecture-based law teaching. Through reflection upon the writer's experiments with simulation-based teaching, the paper suggests some innovations that may better orientate law teaching to engage these themes and, thereby, enhance the relevance of law studies to the future needs of built environment professionals in practice.</p

    ESP, EMI and interculturality: How internationalised are university curricula in Catalonia?

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    This study analyses Internationalisation at Home (IaH) courses across a wide range of bachelor’s degrees, from humanities to hard sciences, in public universities in Catalonia, as an in-depth analysis of a South European context. IaH courses selected for analysis included courses (i) on international topics, (ii) taught in English and focusing on content (English-medium Instruction, EMI) and (iii) focusing on language, i.e. English for Specific Purposes (ESP). Results point to a high presence of international content courses, especially in humanities and social sciences, followed by EMI courses, although quantitatively scarce and mainly found in engineering. ESP courses are the least present despite their potential to prepare students for EMI. Reasons that may account for this IaH picture are presented. All in all, it seems that current policies leave language and intercultural competence in the hands of content lecturers, who may not have explicit language and intercultural learning outcomes in mind while it appears that the potential role of ESP as an internationalisation driver may be neglected. This paper thus argues for giving visibility to ESP courses and lecturers in their role for the promotion of curricular internationalisation.Postprint (published version

    ALT-C 2010 - Conference Introduction and Abstracts

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    Institutional innovation: synthesis of programme outcomes

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    Report of the work of the Projects funded by the JISC Institutional change/innovation Programme 2008-2010. Report produced by the Synthesis and Benefits Realisation Team linked to the Programme

    Akin House Curriculum Development and Living History Programming

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    This unit plan is comprised of a variety of inquiry-based lessons that explore the culture and way of life of the Native Americans who occupied New England. After studying the Akin house documents, materials, and narratives, I chose to focus my unit on the land and the people who came before the Akin family so that students will learn the long-view of our rich New England history

    Sustainability Issues in the Computing Curriculum

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    "Sustainability" or ("green-ness") has a significant role to play in the teaching of information systems in higher education. There is considerable variation possible in breadth and depth of content, and raises the question of appropriateness, suitability of material and targeting at an appropriate level. There also exists considerable potential for variation of emphasis in presentation according to students’ motivations. Institutions have adopted different approaches, some utilising specialised courses as components of wider programmes, or in their own right. Others have integrated the topic into undergraduate teaching, perhaps as a component of systems analysis and design courses, treating environmental impact as a design constraint within a solution. Computer science programmes may use their computer architecture-themed modules to introduce the relationship between hardware design and energy use or the ethics and professionalism strand may be developed through consideration of electronic waste or the legal issues around the need for compliance with legislation. This paper reports our study of these variations, and introduces some of the teaching materials we have developed as part of a recent HEA ICS project, along with an introduction to a community site to enable colleagues interested in this topic to share ideas and resources
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