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Auxin?
The Centre for Teaching and Learning (CTL) started the Auxins to accomplish their task of supporting SU academics in their teaching responsibilities.? To read more about the Auxins,
click here.
The Auxins therefore has as its aim to create the following growth opportunities for SU academics:
- Windows for innovative teaching and assessment practices on campus
- Opportunities for academics to examine and deepen their knowledge about topics of own interest in the arena of teaching and learning at SU
- A Scholarship of teaching and learning route on the growth route of becoming reflective lecturers.
Further support and resources for SU lecturers' innovative teaching and learning are explored in Auxins?, in alignment with the strategic SU vision for networked and collaborative learning; and our Tea?ching and Learning Policy? providing for resources to support holistic student learning, such as libraries, and learning technologies, and how they form an integral part of the learning offerings in all modules and programmes.
?For resources of previous Auxins,
click here.??
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Die oorsprong van die naam “Auxin” is Grieks (auxano) en beteken om “te groei”.
Die Sentrum vir Onderrig en Leer (SOL) het die Auxins begin in die uitvoering van hulle taak om US-akademici met hulle onderrigverantwoordelikhede by te staan. Om meer oor die Auxins te lees, kliek hier?.
Die doelwit van die Auxins is om vir US-akademici die volgende groeigeleenthede te skep:
- Toonvensters vir? innoverende onderrig- en assesseringspraktyke op kampus
- Geleenthede vir akademici om hulle kennis oor onderwerpe in die arena van onderrig en leer aan die US, waarin hulle self belangstel, te ondersoek en te verdiep.
- 'n Padkaart vir akademieskap vir onderrig en leer as deel van die algehele groeiproses vir dosente om reflektiewe dosente te word.
Igama elithi “i-Okzini" lisuka kwigama lesiGrike elithi “auxano" nelithetha ukuthi “ukukhula".
IZiko lokuFundisa nokuFunda (IFF) laqala i-Okzini ukuze lifezekise umsebenzi walo wokuxhasa abahlohli nabafundi base-SU kumaxanduva abo okufundisa. Ukuze ufunde kabanzi ngee-Okzini, cofa apha.
I-Okzini ke ngoko inezi zinto njengenjongo yayo yokudala la mathuba alandelayo ukulungiselela abahlohli nabafundi base-SU:
- I-Windows ukulungiselela imisebenzi yokufundisa nokuhlola ekhampasini
- Amathuba abahlohli nabafundi okuba bahlole ze benze nzulu nangakumbi ulwazi lwabo malunga nemixholo abanomdla kuyo kwimeko yokufundisa nokufunda e-SU
- ISkolashiphu sendlela yokufundisa nokufunda malunga nendlela yokukhula ekubeni ngabahlohli abasebenza ngokubonakalisa.
Ukuze ufumane imithombo yoncedo yee-Okzii zangaphambili, cofa apha?.
2023 Auxins??
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Topic: “…but what is my mark…?”: developing pre-service teachers’ critical reflection practices
In their four-year journey of studying to become a teacher, pre-service teachers engage in a range of assessment processes and tasks across their modules of study to determine their progress in meeting module or programme outcomes. School-based practicum forms an integral part of that process with the intended purpose of developing pre-service teachers' understanding of assessment
as learning and assessment
for learning. To what extent are self-reflection practices encouraged so that pre-service teachers are able to develop their self-criticality? It will be argued that “although self-reflection is inward-focused, it is a habit practiced and developed interpersonally within meaningful relationships guided by intentional questions and a quest toward purposeful ends" (Costa & Garmston, 2016; Wetzel et al., 2017). With a focus on the school-based practicum, the presenter will share the impact of a reflective, and guided development conversation tool piloted with pre-service teachers and their school-based mentors. In doing so, emphasis will be placed on the role which this tool has and can play in the adaptive expertise (Hunskaar & Gudmundsdottir, 2023) of both pre-service teachers and their mentor teachers. Furthermore, the dialogue will be centered on the role and impact of guided development conversations as sustainable assessment to help pre-service teachers in their life-learning journeys of
becoming a teacher.
Topic: Tools for understanding teaching
Have you ever delivered a fantastic learning experience, and still your students gape at you blankly? You are not alone. It happens to the best of lecturers. How can one make sense of why students are not making sense? In this Auxin, Dr Hanelie Adendorff will discuss legitimation code theory (LCT) as an analytical framework which gives academics entry into the discourse of scholarly teaching, learning and assessment.
Topic: Modelling students’ minds – what cognitive science can teach us about teaching
“My students have finally grasped the concept!" What exactly has happened in the minds of your students? The first part of this talk will explore different cognitive models of “understanding" and how these align with different approaches to teaching, learning and assessment. In particular, I will examine the notions of “concept" and “context", “answer making" and “sensemaking", as well as the notion of “embodiment". The second part of the talk will consider the cognitive science of affective issues such as fear and uncertainty and how these might manifest in a classroom environment. For example, when asking a question of a single student in a large class, one might threaten their sense of status amongst their peers, leading to a fear response and depleted cognitive capacity to attend to the question. Given these two broad cognitive frameworks of “understanding" and “emotion", I hope to facilitate a discussion regarding how these models might relate to colleagues' experiences of best teaching practices.?
Topic: AI? x Auxin: AI-enabled learning
As AI continues to transform our world, higher education (HE) faces the challenge of redefining its purpose and equipping students with the skills necessary for an AI-enabled future. In this second AI? x Auxin session, we explore the possibilities of incorporating AI into our learning practices.
Drawing on the perspectives of scholars such as Aoun (2017) and McKenna (2023), we consider which essential literacies and skills students need to acquire to be “robot-proof” and in service to society. With Dai, Lui & Lim’s (2023) description of ChatGPT as an ‘enabler’ in the HE environment, we propose it as a tool that can facilitate students’ self regulated learning and enhance the learning process. We follow an open yet cautious approach to the incorporation of AI in our learning context, emphasising the need to critically engage with and evaluate AI-enabled tools.
Dr Albert Strever from the Department of AgriEconomics will demonstrate how he utilises ChatGPT for learning in his undergraduate modules. The webinar will conclude with a Q&A session, please come prepared with your questions.
Topic: Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education: ChatGPT and its implications for teaching, learning and assessment
We have witnessed significant advancements in AI tools over the past few weeks, including notable innovations from industry staples such as Google and Microsoft, with new AI functions soon to be incorporated into the Google Suite and Microsoft workspace. These new developments will have a profound impact on how we work, learn and live, raising important questions about the implications for HE teaching, learning, and assessment.
In this session, we will delve deeper into the impact of AI on education. Our discussion will include:
- A brief exploration of the history of AI and its current state of development
- An examination of AI technologies that are currently in use, and how they have transformed the way we live, work, and interact with one another
- A specific focus on ChatGPT, including a demonstration of its current capabilities and how we can leverage it in the SU TLA context.?
Topic: Criticality and social justice
For many years now, student performance data published by the CHE in the form of the VitalStats series of cohort analyses have shown the same persistent pattern: regardless of the subjects they are studying, the qualifications for which they are enrolled and the university at which they are registered, black South Africans fare less well than their white peers in our universities. ‘Common sense’ claims that it is the quality of schooling that causes this simply do not make sense for a host of reasons. Rather, reasons to account for the learning experiences of black students in our universities have to be found, inter alia, in the ‘mismatch’ between forms of knowledge, and the practices which emerge from them, privileged inside and outside the university. The presentation makes a case for every academic teacher to think differently about the work they do if graduates are to be able to make a contribution to the social and economic development of our country.
Topic: The #dosomething campaign; how Conservation Ecology is fertile ground for a pedagogy of hope.
Urgent issues such as climate change, biodiversity loss and land degradation rightfully and necessarily foreground the curriculum in Conservation Ecology, earning it the title of a “crisis” discipline. Inadvertently, students are consistently and frequently confronted with negative news about the state of our environment. Furthermore, facts about the problems do little to inspire hope that the very degrees they are pursuing will make any appreciable difference to global challenges in the Anthropocene. The #dosomething campaign disrupts the notion that “there is nothing we can do”. Students are tasked with addressing a pressing conservation issue they are passionate about, in their own personal capacity. Semester lecture themes and assessments are integrated with individual campaigns selected at the start of the semester through a series of learning activities. Iterative execution over five years has resulted in a teaching and learning process that has had three unexpected gains: a) students are able to connect global change at large time-scales to their own lived experiences, essentially enabling them to see themselves in the system; b) students get to know one another’s lived experiences, crossing social (racial and economic) barriers to see the perspectives of classmates they don’t otherwise socialize with, and c) while self-monitoring change over time, students learn that their individual actions can bring about change, and creative responses.
2022 Auxins??
Topic: A Gay Agenda: Troubling Compulsory Heterosexuality in a South African 万博体育官网 Classroom
The
SU Teaching & Learning Policy notes the social dimension of learning and points out that social context is more complex and nuanced, and potentially has a more profound effect on teaching and learning, than any individual characteristics of students or academics. Prof Dennis's application of sociological theory and analysis illustrates how power, knowledge, and emotion feature in teaching and learning.
Topic: Educational Interpreting as part of ‘pedagogically sound’ teaching and learning practices in a
multilingual university lecture
What does the new SU Language Policy mean for your teaching?
It provides for educational interpreting to support you in implementing its three core priorities: multilingualism, access and pedagogically sound teaching and learning. The policy expressly recognizes that language practices are linked to how disciplines create knowledge, and that is different for each academic discipline. Within these varying contexts, lecturers must engage a multilingual mindset and work out 'what works' to optimally relate to students' language identities, and to get them to engage in the learning.
Carmen will share research on 'what works' to help lecturers and interpreters plan together to deliberately interpret the various discursive practices in their classrooms.
Topic: Portfolios as a pedagogical choice for
assessment as learning: insights from a teacher education programme
Much has been written about the theoretical bases of portfolios as an assessment tool. However, not much is known about the knowledge, attitudes and learnings resulting from the use of portfolios and reflection among pre-service teachers. This assessment strategyby which students learn,is also referred to as assessment as learning. We contribute to this knowledge gap by illustrating how a module in a teacher education programme used portfolios as a tool for assessment as learning and knowledge integration. In this presentation we draw on pre-service foundation phase teachers’ reflections about the value of portfolios as an assessment tool for learning to answer the following question:do portfolios promote learning through students’ engagement in reflection?
In doing so, we aim to illustrate how we used portfolios that incorporated reflection as a tool to enhance the student’s process of thinking about learning. This deliberate choice for teaching and learning afforded us an opportunity to encourage students to think about their learning as opposed to just working for marks. We worked towards a mere disruption from the traditional view of a portfolio as a collection of artefacts to a learning portfolio where the process of learning was drawn on. Portfolios with an explicit focus on learning could bring about changes for students as they become more aware of their own learning. The construction of the learning portfolio is therefore an effective form of professional development.
In the presentation, we will unpack the theoretical foundations related to portfolios and assessment and illustrate how this may be a link to sustainable assessment. We conclude that portfolios are indeed a useful pedagogical choice for assessment as learning. ?
Topic: Developing theories for narratives in teaching and learning, based on an example of Black women's academic experiences
Saying “welcome” is not enough. Being and belonging in academia is essential and exhausting for anyone in academia, even more so for those who are and feel marginalised. Higher Education Institutions should do so much more than only welcoming qualified staff, especially Black women, to academia. The “sluggish pace of change and transformation” and experiences of microaggressions in institutions is rooted in patriarchy and colonialism. The global phenomenon is that the marginalised in academia experience exhaustion not only due to workload but all the other battles they are fighting in academia. No institution would want to be guilty. There should thus be concerted efforts by institutional management to address these issues to ensure that the culture of the institution is transformed so that no-one feels marginalised or as outsiders. The change could be addressed by recognition of privilege.
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Topic: Creating information smart students – librarians and their hidden role in the teaching agenda at Stellenbosch 万博体育官网
Being able to navigate the world of information is a necessity at university level for students and staff alike – understanding how to do research, the resources that are available and being able to evaluate the resources in your own context is a skill that many need to master to be able to make it through their university degree. It is sometimes assumed that this skill is learnt as a by-product of assignments and results, but it should be highlighted that the university has a (hidden) treasure trove of expertise to teach these crucial skills: librarians. Librarians are involved at the request of lecturers to help improve students’ ability to find, understand and evaluate information, amongst other information literacy skills. These skills can equip students to excel in their studies from first year, if the faculty involve librarians. We would like to showcase how librarians have been involved in teaching within the university, and share some of the successes and skills that perhaps are not widely known to inspire more faculty to collaborate successfully with their librarians. We would also like to share these so that faculty realise they do not need to be experts in this field, and that they have support in teaching skills such as referencing, reading academic information, evaluating information and more. Through such partnerships, not only do the faculty and the library benefit from it, but the students feel more equipped to be able to navigate. To quote from the majority of students after their first session with a librarian: “Why wasn’t I taught this in first year?”
isiXhosa:
Ukukwazi ukuzula-zula kwihlabathi lolwazi kuyimfuneko kwinqanaba leyunivesithi kubafundi nabasebenzi ngokufanayo– ukuqonda indlela yokwenza uphando, izibonelelo ezifumanekayo nokukwazi ukuvavanya izibonelelo kumxholo wakho sisakhono ekufuneka abaninzi basazi ukuze bakwazi ukuphumelela kwisidanga saseyunivesithi. Maxa wambi kucingelwa ukuba obu buchule bufundwa njengemveliso evela kumsebenzi omiselweyo kunye neziphumo, kodwa kufuneka igxininiswe into yokuba iyunivesithi inobuncwane (obufihliweyo) bobuchule bokufundisa ezi zakhono zibalulekileyo: oonocwadi. Funda kaba?nzi apha...?
Click here to join the meeting at 12.45 on MSTeams.
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Topic: Flipping the Script in Teaching and Learning
The SU Teaching & Learning Policy states that holistic development of students involves integrating the curriculum and co-curriculum. The co-curriculum fulfils a role in graduate attributes acquisition, linking graduate attributes to a competency framework for implementation through in and out-of-class learning experiences for non-degree purposes. Wide varieties of co-curricular activities are available for students’ holistic development. At SU, co-curricular learning is competency-based, to allow for the development and assessment of capabilities which articulate with the world of work, with society and social justice, and with disciplinary knowledges. This presentation covers the Co-curriculum Office’s journey from 2018 to present in developing a robust and well researched Competency Framework to further strengthen student capabilities in implementing in-and out-of-class learning experiences to facilitate the acquisition of the graduate attribute as defined by Stellenbosch 万博体育官网. The Co-curriculum Office received FINLO funding in 2020 towards exploring the development of competency assessment tools for use in the co-curriculum as well as the curriculum. Research (e.g. Dreyfus, Miller, Ten Cate, Van der Vleuten, McClelland, Prifti); a series of competency design workshops together with practical work has been over time to develop competency-based assessment skills and tools. This project is a South African first within an academic environment, that will achieve the full integration of curriculum & co-curriculum experiential learning with behavioural assessment rubrics in learning design.
isiXhosa:
Umgaqo-nkqubo wokuFunda nokuFundisa weYunivesithi yase-Stellenbosch (SU) uthi, uphuhliso olupheleleyo lwabafundi lubandakanya ukudibanisa ikharityhulam kunye nekharityhulam eyimfihlo. Ikharityhulam eyimfihlo izalisekisa indima ekufumaneni iimpawu zesidanga, esinxulumanisa iimpawu zesidanga kwisakhelo sobuchule sokuphunyezwa angaphakathi nangaphandle kwamava okufunda eklasini, ngeenjongo ezingezizo zesidanga. Iindidi ngeendidi zemisebenzi yekharityhulam eyimfihlo ziyafumaneka ukulungiselela uphuhliso olupheleleyo lwabafundi. Funda kaba?nzi apha...???
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Topic: 万博体育官网 Social Responsibility: The role of teachers
In recent years, the social dimension of higher education has emerged as a central concern at several institutions. The role of the university has developed beyond the production and dissemination of knowledge. Today, higher education institutions are increasingly expected to serve as an engine for social transformation and growth, meeting the individual and social needs of a world increasingly aware of its diversity (Pérez, 2009, p. 8). This change has resulted in, among others, the concept of university social responsibility (USR) – that the university, as an institution, has to contribute to the development and improvement of the community and constantly rethink its position and function in society. This is achieved by offering educational services based on the principles of ethics, social commitment and the promotion of sound values, ultimately being accountable to society. Given that the entire body of teaching staff, including university professors, are part of the engine of change, they must be aware of their role. This presentation aims to raise awareness among university teaching staff about their role as agents of social change. It discusses key aspects of USR in terms of integrating diversity both within and outside the university, and applying this to the curricula of all fields of study.
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isiXhosa:
UViviane unesidanga sedigri yeemastazi kwizifundo zoSetyenziso loLwimi lwesiNgesi noNxibelelwano lwakuMazwe ngaMazwe kwaye ufundela isidanga sobuGqirha (PhD) kwiZifundo zoKhubazeko neMfundo ePhakamileyo e-Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Eyona nto iphambili lugxile kuyo uphando lwakhe luquko lwabantu abaphila nokhubazeko ekuhlaleni, nendima yoluntu lulonke ekuqinisekiseni olo quko lunjalo. Ube ngumhlohli kwiYunivesithi yase-ESIC iminyaka eliqela kwaye uyinxalenye yeqela lophando olumalunga noquko lwabantu abaphila nokhubazeko kwiindawo zempangelo. Funda kaba?nzi apha...???
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2021 Auxins?
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Topic: Scholarship, scholarly teaching and SoTL: implications for the ‘professoriate’.
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Topic: Balancing SoTL & disciplinary research.??
Topic: Towards humanising online postgraduate supervision: Reflecting on student experiences in lockdown?
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Topic: Developing a knowledge skills module for first years.??
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Topic: Students' Developing Conceptions of Knowledge: Insights from a longitudinal study in Chemistry
Topic: The whole is greater than the sum of its parts – exploration of the 4C-ID model for curriculum design
??2020 Auxins?
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Topic: Higher education in community – collaborative higher education, an ethic and pedagogy of care and Ubuntu.
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Topic: Emergency migration to online teaching in the 万博体育官网 pandemic: Impact on the mental health and wellness of lecturers and other university staff.??
Topic: Teaching and learning in the Theory-Practice Nexus?
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Topic: Implementing multilingualism in South African universities: dilemmas and innovations?
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Bookings
- Auxins take place once a month during lunch time (12:45 – 13:45).
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Venue: MSTeams, online.
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- You don't have to book or RSVP to attend.? Just click on the MSTeams links to join us.
- Enquiries:
- Want to be sure not to miss an Auxin? Ask us to send you an invitation:
- jeanlee@sun.ac.za
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021 808 3717