Personal Tutoring – online workshop
This workshop is suitable for those new to personal tutoring and those wishing to refresh their skills.
This workshop is suitable for those new to personal tutoring and those wishing to refresh their skills.
Find out about the outcomes and findings from our December 2021 hackathon on exploring transformational student experiences. The hackathon provided a unique opportunity to explore the experiences of students since coming to University, looking at their perceptions of their subject, their original reasons for coming to University and what – if anything – has changed.
This online seminar will seek to situate efforts to decolonise Bristol university within an analysis of the wider socio-historical, political, and discursive context. The seminar will run from 1 – 2:30pm (last 30 mins is for discussion).
Hear the key messages from BILT’s research with staff and students, and learn about the latest provision in teaching spaces. This will be followed by a hybrid surgery where you can ask questions and share issues about hybrid teaching. Members of the Digital Education Office and IT Services will be available to offer advice.
This workshop is suitable for those who are already working on applications for PFHEA, and for those who may be interested in PFHEA the future. If you are unsure as to whether this workshop is relevant to you.
In this online workshop Collaborative Award for Teaching Excellence (CATE) nominees the Digital Health Project Team will present a recently implemented new model of group-based project. The session will outline staff and student feedback and explore how the model could be applied across other postgraduate programmes.
In this conversational online session we’ll share findings from Maxine’s doctoral research by answering your questions on teachers’ beliefs in action in feedback.
This online workshop will explore research and showcase examples of how effective peer-feedback has been successfully embedded across different areas of the University.
Are you interested in collaborative reading and rethinking of feedback for learning? If so, join us online for this synchronous reading circle with a twist.
This conference invites students and staff to engage in conversations about how blended learning impacts access to teaching and learning.
This online workshop will showcase examples of how the flipped classroom has been successfully embedded at the University, it will also include practical guidance from the Digital Education Office for those looking to embed flipping in their own teaching.
BILT on Develop for: Digital Design – Individual self study course, Research Supervisor Development – online resources, Scheduled events and workshops
This online workshop will showcase examples of successful teaching and assessing of large groups and will include contributions from a range of staff at the University.
This workshop is open to new, experienced and aspiring research supervisors and will provide an opportunity to explore key themes in research supervision at Bristol. As a workshop participant you will: Explore what good supervisors need to know at Bristol, Identify your personal approach appropriate to your context, Reflect upon examples of best practice in research supervision.
Our second annual Student Research Festival will showcase the brilliant work of our UG and PGT students across the University.
This workshop will introduce a practical theoretical framework (Halliday, 1994) that enables deeper understanding of what is going on in our students’ writing assignments (such as reports, essays, case studies, etc.). The introduction of the framework will be followed by its application to students’ writing, as well as our feedback practices.
In this online workshop Dr Rebecca Pike and Dr Rose Murray from the School of Biological Sciences will explore how improvements in assessment literacy (for both staff and students) were realised through a series of co-creation initiatives involving student partners.
This reading circle invites colleagues across the University to discuss those (and other) questions around assessment for inclusion.
To support inclusion, this reading circle takes the ‘slow’ approach by spreading it over four days. Each day will begin with a prompt to guide your reading/discussion activities for the day. All you need to do is access MS Teams and commit to approx. 20 to 45 minutes daily for this, at any time of the day, over the four days.
The aim of this online seminar is to set out our initial understanding of decolonisation as praxis. We will return to reconsider this understanding in the conclusion. The seminar will run from 1 – 2:30pm (last 30 mins is for discussion).
This workshop is open to new, experienced and aspiring research supervisors and will provide an opportunity to explore key themes in research supervision at Bristol.