71,471 research outputs found
Making use of icould: learning from practice
icould, is an online careers resource which provides individualâs with access to the work and life experiences of hundreds of people in the form of online careers films. The films are supplemented with labour market information and other resources. This approach seeks to provide both a self-directed resource for career explorers and a resource that can be used by career and education professionals to enhance their practice. In addition, icould provides a range of information, games, interactive activities and other resources that can also be used either directly by a career explorer or as underpinning resources for professionals working in the field. icould is a technically innovative product which utilises multi-media content, interactivity and social media in new ways to provide career support. icould has become popular with career professionals and other educators and is frequently used as part of the delivery of career support. icould has produced a very useful suite of resources for teachers to facilitate its use in practice. However, up until now there has been no investigation of the ways that icould is actually being used in practice. Consequently in this project we sought to draw this practice together and to present it in a way that might stimulate, inform and inspire future practice. To do this a diverse group of practitioners were recruited to form a community of practice (COP). This report provides new ideas and insights into the way which the icould website is used by practitioners
Evaluation of Careers Yorkshire and the Humber: inspiration activity and good practice guide.
The evaluation captures the work of Careers Yorkshire and the Humber in their response to the government's 'inspiration agenda' which aims to support schools, colleges and prisons to inspire career aspiration in young people. Careers Yorkshire and the Humber is a regional provider of the National Careers Service.Careers Yorkshire and the Humbe
Vernon Briggs: Real-World Labor Economist
[Excerpt] Vernon Briggs stepped into a wastebasket and launched my career as a labor economist. In the spring of 1969, I was sleepwalking through the undergraduate economics program at the University of Texas and sitting in Dr. Briggsâs labor economics class. He was vigorously making a point when his misstep off the small classroom stage produced a roar of laughter but did not break his train of thought. He woke me up; I thought, âMan, I want to be as passionate about my lifeâs work as this guy
Why Your Academic Library Needs a Popular Reading Collection Now More Than Ever
Do popular reading materials belong in college and university libraries? Although some librarians think not, others believe there are compelling reasons for including them. The trend towards user-focused libraries, the importance of attracting patrons to libraries in the age of the Internet, and, most importantly, the need to promote literacy at a time when it has reached its lowest levels are all reasons why academic librarians are reconsidering their ideas about popular reading materials. Librarians who decide to implement a leisure reading collection should consider a number of key issues
Ask ThemâTheyâll Tell You! Eliciting Student Perspectives to Improve Services
Most people avoid doing qualitative research because they think it is not scientifically rigorous and requires time and lots of money. In fact, there is a lot one can do with little overhead that reaps immediate benefits for improving services and gaining unexpected valuable insights. This study uses a web redesign and assessment project to showcase some simple ways to get useful information from students.
Library web pages provide the main access point to many of the libraryâs services and resources, which also continue to change and accrue. Does the web site really serve students\u27 research needs today? Where do you focus energy on needed improvements? How do you integrate new services? What resources do you need to do it? In this essay, discover how to use quick and inexpensive methods to grab student feedback in order to help revise and assess web pages and other services. Learn how to identify common issues for focused improvements. Gain insight on research deficiencies perhaps better addressed through teaching and other services. The researcher presents findings on several methods used to gain students\u27 perspectives before a major web page redesign and after âimprovementsâ some months later
IMPACT: The Journal of the Center for Interdisciplinary Teaching and Learning. Volume 8, Issue 2, Summer 2019
Many of us look for ways to help students forge concrete connections between their academic studies and the real
world. Universities encourage professors to develop community-based learning, allowing students to contribute to the
community beyond their campus in a way that enhances their academic studies and enables them to create these
connections.
Scholars have theorized the many benefits of community-based learning, but professors have many questions about
how to implement community-based learning in practice. What does a successful community-based learning
assignment look like? What are the different ways to assess studentsâ learning experiences in community-based
learning assignments? How can one build effective partnerships with community organizations?
In these pages, you will find practical advice, theoretical framework, and firsthand accounts of community-engaged
teaching across disciplines. Learn from professors who have designed assignments allowing students to complete
community projects with refugees, prisoners, veterans, elementary school children, science museums, nursing homes,
public libraries, and ESL populations. Students in an Anthropology course, for instance, conduct oral history interviews
with refugees, and provide written transcriptions of the interviews that the refugees can then use as a learning tool in
ESL classes. In a Science Methods class, students collaborate with an aquarium to produce meaningful exhibits that
educate the public. First-year writing students work with veterans to create autobiographical films and write papers
related to the project
Improving outcomes in outsourced product development: a joint consultant-client perspective
Although firms increasingly outsource front end product development activities to production suppliers or design consultants, this practice has received little scholarly attention. The few existing academic studies report high failure rates but generally present only the client firmsâ view of the causes. Our first results from in-depth interviews of both clients and consultants give a richer picture of enablers of success and causes of failure. We confirm some previous findings(internal divisions within the client, âpoor communicationâ between parties),identify new ones (inadequate client capabilities, failure to transfer design intent), and combine them into a comprehensive model of outsourced product development that includes negotiating project scope, continuously managing expectations, and carefully re-integrating the design output into the clientâs operations. Finally, we classify several types of client dependency (need for new ideas, extra capacity, or specific technical expertise) and highlight the particular hazards associated with each
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