LDHEN logo

Association for Learning Development in Higher Education

 

Home

Aims

Steering Group

Membership

Events

Working Documents

Links

LDHEN Discussion Forum

 

 

4th LDHEN Symposium: Bournemouth University
"How do students engage with learning?"
12 April 2007

Bournemouth University Logo

Keynote AddressParallel Sessions

Keynote Address - Professor Ronald Barnett

Willing to Learn: being a student in an age of uncertainty

What keeps students going? Most do keep going and complete their studies. How do we account for this phenomenon, surely a largely unremarked and yet extraordinary human phenomenon? – That individuals should give themselves up to a challenging project of human learning lasting several years. We cannot account for it by way of stories simply about the acquisition of knowledge or skills. We need a different vocabulary, and a different description of this situation.

The complexity of the situation is compounded by the fact that, characteristically the student is plunged into a state of uncertainty. Not only are their studies bounded by uncertainty (there are examinations to be attempted, with uncertain outcomes!) but students are faced with complex problems for which there are seldom, if at all, ‘right’ answers. They also often have a sense of connections, albeit hazily formed, between their studies and a wider world, itself a source of further uncertainty. This realization, of the openness, and indeed infinitude, of their learning and their words and actions, often produces anxiety in students.

Students, therefore, are not just knowing or practical subjects. They are human beings, each with his or her own being. We may account for their persistence on their course through their having, in each case, a will to learn. But then, two questions arise:

  1. What is the relationship between the will and the intellect? (For Schopenhauer, ‘the will is the substance of man, the intellect the accident’: was he right?)
  2. Is the will general or specific?

We can only answer these questions in any serious way by resorting to a vocabulary of ‘being’, ‘becoming’ and ‘will’. En route, other terms such as ‘spirit ‘ and ‘authenticity’ may come into view. And with the answers to our two questions – which turn out to be linked with a single set of answers – may come a new conception of teaching itself.

^ top of page

Parallel Sessions

Becka Currant, University of Bradford
'Switching them On or Turning Them Off? Engaging with non-users.'
Download

Abstract
 

 

Tom Burns, Debbie Holley and Sandra Sinfield, London Metropolitan University
"It's a wonder they engage with learning at all!" An exploration of the HE student as silenced stakeholder in the UK Government e-learning strategy
Download

Abstract
 

 

Anne-Kathrin Reck, University of Central England
'Throwing a lifeline - intervention strategies for students at risk'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Penny Burden, Marc Griffith and Sarah Campbell, University of Surrey
'
In at the Deep End: Transformation of space'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Jonathan Staal, University of Abertay
'Using discussion in classes'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Lindy Syson, University of Northumbria
'From Assessment to Development: Report of a project to support first year Nursing Diploma students'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Karen O'Rourke, University of Manchester
'Engaging Students in the CETL Initiative'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Peter Hartley, Adam Birch, Vikki Illingworth (University of Bradford), Kate Smith (Brunel University), Julia Braham, Carol Elston (University of Leeds)
'Designing learning resources that students choose to use - A collaborative, evaluative approach'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Pauline Ridley (University of Brighton), Judy Cohen (University of Kent), Caroline Cash (University College Falmouth)
'Picture this: Using visual research methodology to explore how students engage with visual learning and assessment'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Judith Harding, University of the Arts, London
"Hunger is the best sauce": Encouraging engagement through curiosity, metaphor and serious play
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Alfredo Gaiton, University of  Bedfordshire
"When I learnt that this module involved group work, I felt rather apprehensive": An analysis for students' reflections of group work
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Deidre Burke, University of Wolverhampton
'How Students use Tutor feedback'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Peter Wilson, University of Hull
Demonstration of an innovative software tool to help develop skill and confidence in Academic Writing in English
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Pat Hill and Jane Mullen, University of Huddersfield
Writing Skills - An integrated approach
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Alison Green, Bournemouth University
Peer Assisted Learning & The Educative: how informal learning processes empower first year students to engage with formal curricula
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Ian Worden and Phil Verril, University of Chichester
'i-teaching-eLearning': Engaging students through technology enhanced learning
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Judy Cohen and Des Laffey,University of Kent
'Carrot or stick? Student engagement with Turnitin: Implementing Turnitin formatively in Business Courses'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Julian Ingle, London Metropolitan University
English Language and Literacy: Supporting Student Diversity
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Louise Frith, University of Kent
'How Does e-Portfolio Software Support Students' Engagement with Learning?'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Tracy Johnson, University of Bristol
'How do international students engage with learning about study skills in British Higher Education?'
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

Kirsten Hardie and students, Arts Institute at Bournemouth
On Trial: teaching without talking
Download

Abstract
 

 View presentation

^ top of page
 

   

 

Home | Contact us | Site map

Page last updated 19 July 2007