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Graduate Attributes in Syllabus design for EAP. Retrofitting graduate attributes to an existing syllabus. Outline. Discussion of your own syllabus Access EAP: Frameworks – aims and themes Retrofitting Graduate Attributes to syllabus Constructive alignment in a syllabus
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Graduate Attributes in Syllabus design for EAP Retrofitting graduate attributes to an existing syllabus
Outline • Discussion of your own syllabus • Access EAP: Frameworks – aims and themes • Retrofitting Graduate Attributes to syllabus • Constructive alignment in a syllabus • Pre-sessional syllabus at Heriot-Watt • Over to you for discussion and comment
Discussion • With a partner describe a syllabus you have designed or one you have used for teaching. • How did the designer decide what components to include? • How does the syllabus achieve the principles of development, recycling and transferability? • How did the designer make the academic community a tangible presence in the classroom?
Access EAP: Frameworks • Based on real university life, situations and tasks. • Unit themes explore aspects of what lecturers expect students to do at university. • Example students are case studies illustrating the typical student experience. • Aims to help students to achieve a high level of academic performance.
Achieving principles in syllabus design Development – increasing cognitive demands of functions – description, explanation, argument – and genres – emails, guidelines, research articles Recycling – reusing concepts and key language introduced earlier, e.g. explaining problems requires cause/effect to analyse the problem & comparison/contrast to evaluate solutions Transferability – student case studies show typical students engaging with academic situations, tasks and challenges.
Graduate attributes • 'the skills, knowledge and abilities of university graduates, beyond disciplinary content knowledge, which are applicable to a range of contexts and are acquired as a result of completing any undergraduate degree'. Barrie (2006: 217)
Graduate Attributes Critical reflection Awareness of how knowledge is advanced A spirit of enquiry A global and ethical understanding Effective communication Autonomy Team working
Retrofitting GAs A three-stage protocol for developing GAs • Identify • Analyse • Align
Retrofitting Graduate Attributes • Confirmed our intuitions about bringing the academic community into the classroom • Helped us to broaden and deepen our understanding of scholarship • Made us contextualise more explicitly • Enabled us to talk about the syllabus with students in terms that are shared with their subject lecturers and the wider institution
GAs on a pre-sessional: Heriot-Watt • Pre-sessional syllabus driven by assessments • Authentic academic tasks contextualized within students’ disciplines • Students responsible for subject-specific content • Access EAP: Frameworks platform for developing language and academic competence
GAs on a pre-sessional: Heriot-Watt • Graduate Attributes are high level aims • Adapted Common European framework of Reference for Languages proficiency descriptors for level B2 as learning outcomes • Added learning outcomes derived from GAs • Team development activity with colleagues so all had ownership of the syllabus design http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/cadre1_en.asp 10.5.17
How real and useful are GAs? • Contribute to the commodification and marketization of higher education? • Provide challenging content that meets students’ needs for future academic study. • Pin down the more nebulous aspects of critical thinking and student autonomy. • Help teachers in justifying lesson content to students and colleagues. • Enable teachers to frame their talk using concepts the institution understands.
Over to you • In the syllabus you described earlier can you identify Graduate Attributes? • Do you label these explicitly? • How are students made aware they are developing academic competence? • Choose one or two of the Graduate Attributes and think about how you would retrofit your syllabus to present it explicitly to students.