A connected curriculum for higher education

Date: Thursday, 20 July 2017 12:30 pm - 2:00 pm
Location: Room 826, UCL Institute of Education
Speaker(s):
  • Dilly Fung, University College London

Overview

This seminar will draw on a newly published monograph (Fung 2017), which argues that the customary separation of teaching and learning (or education) from research is both unhelpful and unnecessary.

Drawing on the field of philosophical hermeneutics (Gadamer 2004, Fairfield 2012) and illustrating her argument with vignettes of practice from around the world, Professor Fung will propose that there are many reasons for looking again at connecting students on taught programmes at all levels of study with research, and that there are many creative ways of doing this successfully.

A Connected Curriculum framework for thinking about and enhancing practice illustrates a core principle ? that of engaging students actively with research and enquiry ? and six related dimensions of practice, each of which speaks to a different kind of connectivity.

These dimensions foreground the importance of connecting students with researchers and with one another; designing programmes of study that empower students to develop a holistic sense of their developing understandings and identity; connecting across disciplinary boundaries to look at global challenges; connecting academic with workplace and lifelong learning; and, crucially, connecting students with real world audiences and partners as they communicate the findings of their enquiry in ways that are meaningful to them and meaningful to society.

Drawing on UCL as a case study university where the Connected Curriculum framework has been introduced, Professor Fung will argue that re-framing the relationship between research and education in this way benefits students, lecturers, researchers and even research; it also has the potential to empower universities and the communities which host them to develop even stronger relationships, addressing together ?the global common good? (UNESCO 2015).

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