糖心Vlog

From YouTube to e-books: novel ways to reach students

James Pickering, named 2014鈥檚 most innovative teacher at the 糖心Vlog Awards, discusses making content accessible. Plus the latest higher education appointments

Published on
December 11, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: YouTube

The morning after James Pickering collected his 糖心Vlog Award for the , he had to board an early train from London to return to Leeds and run an exam. Unassumingly, he calls this inconvenience a 鈥減ity鈥, although he did rue having had a slightly 鈥渢hick head鈥.

Cutting short your moment in the sun to go back and do the very thing that has earned you success seems fitting: for Dr Pickering, university is all about the students.

鈥淚f it wasn鈥檛 for the students, universities wouldn鈥檛 exist 鈥 they would just be research centres,鈥 said the lecturer in anatomy at the University of Leeds. 鈥淲e have an obligation to teach the students and do research to the best of our abilities. I鈥檓 passionately interested in helping the students to fulfil their potential.鈥

Because students arrive at Leeds with different learning skills, he said, 鈥淚 try to cater for that by making the core content [accessible] in as many different ways as possible.鈥

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Lectures are still vital to 鈥渋nspire and stimulate鈥 students, but as that 鈥渢eaching tool is lost鈥 as soon as the session ends, Dr Pickering replicates the material in podcasts, screencasts and other packages using YouTube, e-books and iTunes U.

By doing so, students from all over the world can also benefit from the material. Additionally, he said, research he has undertaken shows that such resources are of particular help to weaker students.

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鈥淚 put all the resources from a module into one e-book, and it鈥檚 had a really good impact on student assessment. It seems that, with the e-book specifically, the poorly performing students in previous assessments tend to perform better if they engage with these kinds of resources.鈥

To Dr Pickering, plaudits recognising his teaching serve to emphasise that he must work continually to improve the standard. While there were obvious advantages to putting resources online, he knows that the web is sometimes viewed as a 鈥渄umping ground鈥 for material. But he believes in teaching innovation and in the internet鈥檚 value as a learning tool, and this was behind his selection to lead a university Mooc.

鈥淚鈥檝e taken material from our teaching and made it available to the world on the FutureLearn platform, [enabling me] to engage with people that you don鈥檛 get with YouTube. [It gave] students everywhere the opportunity of discussion.鈥

The Mooc also allowed him to present the latest research by integrating clinicians on the subject.

鈥淚 think [teaching and research] work really well [together]. You have trailblazers of research and really good teachers鈥o help deliver research-led teaching,鈥 he said of the reasoning behind the Mooc.

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On more general tips for better teaching, Dr Pickering said that looking 鈥渃losely and carefully鈥 at method was fundamental. 鈥淭hink how the best and most appropriate way to deliver it is,鈥 he advised. 鈥淒on鈥檛 just rely on tried-and-tested methods. Try new things. If it goes wrong, it goes wrong; but tell people [if that is what happens]. But if it鈥檚 a success, then tell people it is.鈥

john.elmes@tesglobal.com

Appointments

Keele University has announced the appointment of Jonathan Wastling, a Keele alumnus, as dean of natural sciences and pro vice-chancellor.

Simon Chaplin has been named director of culture and society at the Wellcome Trust. He was previously head of the Wellcome Library.

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Geoff Pringle, who was previously director of campus services at the University of Exeter, has been made chief operating officer at the university.

Abertay University has appointed its first professor of mental health nursing. Geoff Dickens joins from the University of Northampton, where he was professor of psychiatric nursing.

Brendon Noble has been named executive dean of research, postgraduate and innovation at the University of St聽Mark and St John, while Liz Smith has been made executive dean of student experience.

Claire Surr is to take up a professorship within the Institute for Health and Wellbeing at Leeds Beckett University. She will join from the University of Bradford in February.

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