New SASS Career Development Adviser – Steve Sutcliffe

Portrait photo of Steve Sutcliffe

 

 

 

 

 

I would like to introduce myself as the new Career Development Adviser for SASS. It is great to see so many of you are already embedding employability into the curriculum and I would like to offer my services to help expand on this and support you with activities such as:

  • Workshops with practical advice on CVs, cover letters and applications
  • Advice on finding job opportunities in different sectors
  • Exercises for understanding skills and expressing them to employers
  • Employer networking events
  • Assessment Centre and Interview Practice Workshops

If you require a careers guidance session for a particular discipline, or you would like me to arrange a workshop focusing on a particular employability skill, please contact me directly at s.r.sutcliffe@brighton.ac.uk. In Semester One, I will be working remotely and can provide pre-recorded content or join live teaching sessions via Microsoft Teams.

I will also be working with students on a 1-2-1 basis so please ask them to email careers@brighton.ac.uk if they want to set up a meeting or if they have queries regarding:

  • what they can do with their degree
  • which career options are available to them
  • what they can currently be doing to increase their employability
  • how to present their skills to employers

My working days are Mon–Wed, and I am in a different role at the University for the remainder of the week.

Please do get in touch to work with me, during what is going to be an unusual and challenging year for everyone. I look forward to hearing from you!

Ideas to maintain academic engagement hours whilst increasing employability

Lightbulb image drawn on a yellow post-it note pinned to a corkboard

Ahoy fellow SASS colleagues,

If employability wasn’t already of huge importance before COVID-19 struck, it certainly is now! As we read in the news these days, the future isn’t necessarily looking so bright, so it is vital that we provide our graduates, and graduates-to-be, with as much guidance and resources as possible. As always, the goal is not only to gain employment after their degree, but in a job role that is meaningful to them and their skillset.

A recent NUS survey found that 81% of respondents were concerned about the effect that the pandemic will have on their job prospects, with the Resolution Foundation report suggesting that students may be 13% less likely to be in employment three years after leaving education than they might have been without the coronavirus crisis.

In the wake of the current pandemic and subsequent move to remote teaching, you, like I, might be thinking about how you are going to continue to offer all the academic engagement hours promised in the module specification, without significantly increasing the time and effort it will take to convert everything into a suitable online format (see previous blog “Everything all in one place” for more info on academic engagement hours). For those of you who are thinking about reducing or replacing seminar content, I have put together some ideas for how to engage students in employability tasks that can either become independent learning activities (with the possibility to engage with staff in a Q&A), or seminar activities (with varying degrees of planning).

The following ideas are here to help and are only friendly suggestions. This list is non-exhaustive and if you have any further ideas to add, then please do get in touch. Also, if you have any thoughts or comments on the suggestions below, then please let me know. 🙂

 

  1. Job (re)searching

Who?

Students at any level of study.

What?

  • Encouragement to look up discipline-specific websites and resources relating to job searching;
  • Researching jobs related to the specific content and/or skills for that particular module;
  • This could also be applied for searching for further study if required for some career paths.

 

  1. Reflection

Who?

Students at any level of study.

What?

  • Reflecting on what interests them most about a given subject area and what are the real-world problems relating to that subject area (i.e., where could they apply their interest after leaving university);
  • Reflecting on what skills they are developing through the module (some guidance already provided in the module handbook) and how they might have already developed these skills in other modules (Level 5 & Level 6 only);
  • Could be combined with Suggestion 1.

 

  1. CV development or skills auditing/recording

Who?

Primarily Level 5, 6 and PGT students (but could work for Level 4 in Semester 2).

What?

  • Practice in developing a CV;
  • Practice in developing a record of the skills they have developed through the modules that they have completed so far;
  • Particular focus on skills, with module activities and assessments used as examples of how they have demonstrated those skills.

 

  1. Workshops on applying for further study

Who?

Level 6 students.

What?

  • Information on how to apply for further study and where to apply – advice and exercises on researching different courses/universities;
  • Practical sessions on writing personal statements;
  • Practical sessions on interview preparation and answering questions at interview.

 

  1. Sharing staff career stories

Who?

Students at any level of study but might be potentially most beneficial for Level 5, 6 and PGT students.

What?

  • Staff within each module team sharing their own career pathway to their current position and potential other avenues that they could have taken;
  • Sharing any careers advice that they might have given their younger self;
  • Facilitating a Q&A session with students for any additional question.

 

  1. Exploring further university services

Who?

Applicability will depend on the service (see in brackets)

What?

  • Interacting with the University Careers Service (any level) – staff could contact them to help coordinate a specific lecture/seminar activity, or students could be encouraged to get in touch with them for careers, CV and job application advice;
  • Encouraging students to research and/or get in touch with Active Student (Levels 5, 6 and PGT) – university service for helping students find volunteering opportunities;
  • Encouraging students to look up and find out more about BeePurple (L6 and PGT) – university service to support entrepreneurship.

 

If you wish to discuss implementing any of the above suggestions in your module with me further, then do get in contact. A new Careers Development Advisor is currently being put in place to support the Falmer Careers Services, so in the meantime, feel free to send me any requests for them to help facilitate a session on your module too.

 

Take care,

Hannah Cassidy 🙂

Your Careers & Employability Lead

 

Need help with the new technologies?

dog jumping on beach

Hello fellow SASSers!

I’m sure many of you wake each morning thinking “will today be a SASS Teaching and Learning blog day?”, and that lately every day has been a crushing disappointment. Not today though! The blog crashes back into your life bringing joy links to training opportunities.

The blog has previously highlighted the core technologies that should support and facilitate our teaching in the coming year, you can click here for full descriptions of all the new tech, but now they are no longer abstract – help is available…..

  • For “go at your own pace” guidance, and how to get started with Panopto, Blackboard Ally, or Teams, please follow this link: the new tech and how to use it
  • If you want further support, there are also workshops coming up for Ally and Panopto. Find out when, and how to access, here: Remote Teaching and New Tech Workshops. If you’re feeling like you’ve missed out on anything other sessions are available on demand, so take a look at the page to see what’s being offered.
  • As meeting accessibility requirements is going to be important this year there is also training available in creating accessible documents, which you can sign up for here: IT training including Accessibility
  • If you were unable to attend the either of the Online Learning Strategy Workshops in July/ August, the videos, slides and other resources from these are available in the Teams area which you can join using this code vxq2nlx
  • Before you start planning and preparing for the new academic year you may also find the CLT resource Digitally Enabled Learning Resources useful. I summarised each section in a previous blog post; there are plenty of useful things there.

I know this is yet another list of stuff to do, during a busy time, and it is far from ideal. The start of term looms like storm clouds and, sadly, there is nothing I can do in my Pedagogy and Practice pyjamas ( remember them?) to stop it. Nevertheless, support and guidance is available in new tech, and module re-design, as and when we need it.

If you can think of anything else that could help you with your teaching and learning provision, please let me know in the comments below or email me.

Take care all,

Charlie

 

 

 

What’s in the Digitally Enabled Learning Course from CLT?

Sparkling image with Digitally Enabled Learning Principles in Practice text on top

Hello, hello, hello!

I thought I’d just pop on to flag a few hot, top tips from the Digitally Enabled Learning Course and provide a brief summary of, and links to, the sections. While the first point is more vital for Module Coordinators, the rest really relate to general teaching for lecturers, and seminar tutors as online facilitators.

For ideas about alternative to exams or presentations it’s definitely worth looking at the Assessment and Feedback section. There is a whole document listing alternatives, and another document with worked through examples of how some alternatives would look in practice. There is also a really helpful Planning Checklist document – handy for anyone planning changes. There are useful points about the potential for academic dishonesty in open book exam formats and suggestions as to how to get round this issue.

Creating a Sense of Belonging provides guidance on how to help students feel included in the online teaching environment, the idea being that this will increase their motivation to engage. There is guidance here on simple, fun activities to do, early on in the semester, that aim to encourage a sense of belonging and provide scaffolding for more sophisticated or complex online work later on. One key idea is that sense of belonging isn’t just something to think about early on though, it’s something we have to bear in mind right the way through a module and there is guidance for this too.

Well organised learning provides guidance on how we can present online materials. There are loads of useful things in this section! Two top tips from this would be:

  • provide lectures in small chunks, direct students to do relevant activities in between – this might be a good use of activities that were previously done in a seminar environment
  • direct all module queries to a discussion board – this could reduce the correspondence load on individual tutors

This section provides some great ideas and useful tools; again a useful checklist document is provided to help with planning.

Planning and facilitating student interaction covers some ideas that are touched upon in other sections but in more detail. There is guidance here on using discussion boards, blogs, wikis, quizzes, and other activities, to encourage engagement. Importantly there is a section on accessibility too. Something I took away from the accessibility section was that I will have to avoid leaving uploading lectures to Student Central till the last minute and try to plan to upload them much earlier to allow time for Blackboard Ally to do its accessibility reporting, and to allow time for me to respond to the report.

Finally Teaching Presence  provides really helpful pointers on facilitating group work synchronously and asynchronously. I found this handy having previously had difficulty encouraging students to engage with discussion boards and group video chats on Teams.

As ever please feel free to instigate chats in the comments below. Additionally, in the About section of this blog, there is a form you can use if you would like to share any ideas or plans you have for your teaching in Semester 1.

Take care all,

Charlie

 

Everything all in one place

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scattered pins

Ey up, SASSers!

I thought it might be handy to try and put all the recently emailed documents and links relating to planning for semester 1 all in one place.

  • Here are the SASS core Learning and Teaching principles for planning – these lay out some guidance and provide actions for staff according to role:
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  • Here are the guidelines on how you can reimagine “contact hours” for a module:
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  • A direct link to the Digitally Enabled Learning Course from our CLT

https://studentcentral.brighton.ac.uk/webapps/blackboard/execute/modulepage/view?course_id=_115277_1&cmp_tab_id=_328325_1

 

 

I appreciate this is quite the list, and a lot to engage with, but hopefully now it has been corralled into one place.

Take care,

Charlie

 

 

New technology to support digitally enabled and remote learning

Hello, hello, hello!

This is the first ever entry on the SASS Teaching and Learning Blog.

What is the point of this? Fiona MacNeil and me, Charlie Lea, had an entirely spontaneous and completely natural chat about the new technology that all teaching staff will need to be aware of in advance of semester 1. Handily we had the foresight to record our chat, and Fiona created three short chunks for you to have with 3 cups of tea, or you could binge watch the whole lot with your family of an evening.

If you want more detail on these you can go straight to the Technologies folder in the Digitally Enable Learning course here https://studentcentral.brighton.ac.uk/webapps/blackboard/content/listContent.jsp?course_id=_115277_1&content_id=_3608071_1

If you have any questions please use the comments below…