色盒直播

Logo

It鈥檚 time for the media to work with universities, not against us

The next school year is going to be challenging enough as it is without the skewed and absolutist coverage we鈥檝e seen in the media lately, says Harriet Dunbar-Morris

Harriet Dunbar-Morris's avatar
The University of Portsmouth
7 Jul 2021
copy
0
bookmark plus
  • Top of page
  • Main text
  • More on this topic
Newspaper front covers. The media should work with universities to ease the burden of an already-difficult new academic year

You may also like

Tech tools to help enhance online and blended learning
Selecting digital tools that support your pedagogy and teaching strategies

Popular resources

Students want to know how we鈥檙e going to teach them in the new academic year. They expect us to be clear and transparent about it. But is that even possible, especially against the backdrop of hostile media coverage of the upheaval at universities?

In meetings with senior leadership, students鈥 unions exhort us to tell our student bodies more than we told them this time last year. Meanwhile,  that we must tell our applicants plainly what they can expect. And we must do it right now.

But since no one has a crystal ball, we don鈥檛 know what teaching in September can be like, let alone what it will be like.

If the past year has taught us anything, it鈥檚 that and a . Can we plan for full classrooms? Will students be vaccinated? Once? Twice? Will international students be able to travel? Will they have to quarantine? Will staff and students feel safe on campus?

Of course, we want to tell our students what to expect. We鈥檙e making all the plans and taking all the decisions we can, but it鈥檚 happening in a vacuum of information. Well, not quite a vacuum. In fact, we鈥檙e doing everything we can in a stark media spotlight. Everything is made more difficult by the way much of the media is many , such as those over lectures, in .

The decision to use a blended approach next year, for example, has often with suggesting that universities are offering no lectures and keeping courses online. This is little more than clickbait and completely disruptive. Far from doing away with lectures, most universities are looking into how we deliver them to better meet the needs of students in a changed world.

Students have long on . Feedback on the blended approach gave a thumbs up from many students on recorded lectures provided as short chunks and combined with other interactive, staff-mediated sessions. We found this internally at Portsmouth, as has .

Would the media have us ignore students鈥 feedback? Does the media even know that not all teaching at university is done via lectures? It doesn鈥檛 seem so. And, perhaps more importantly, do university applicants and their families know this? If they don鈥檛, some of the reporting in recent times certainly isn鈥檛 going to help them find out.

If we鈥檙e to make a success of next year鈥檚 student experience 鈥 which is already going to be challenging enough for everyone involved 鈭 we need the media鈥檚 help to explain it to prospective students and their influencers. Too much of the media is hindering us by focusing on traditional elements of university education that were already being voted on by students鈥 feet (not turning up) or pens (satisfaction surveys) before the pandemic even hit.

I say that universities and the media need to work together to better explain what it is to be a student at university in the 2020s 鈥 and that extends to the narrative around paying a 拢9,250 fee as well. Yes, most students pay a hefty fee, so there is undoubtedly a value-for-money discussion to be had. But that鈥檚 why we frequently ask for students鈥 views and opinions on their experience. We try to cater for their needs, but the reality is we have to evolve, too.

As with schools, universities have finally begun to grasp the digital era. We鈥檙e preparing students for careers that will likely see them collaborate with colleagues across the globe. Today鈥檚 workplace has little room for sitting back and listening for an hour to gather a handful of key points. The workplace, and the lecture, has been flipped on its head. It is fast paced and focused, and by moving to a blended approach we鈥檙e modelling that for our students.

If we what self-directed and independent learning was to applicants and students before the pandemic, it has become even more important now. According to the comments we鈥檝e seen in student feedback, this has become somewhat confused with the shift to blended learning.

So let鈥檚 see no more out-of-date and stereotypical talk of and in the media. Our staff and students are well past that. Let鈥檚 move the reporting on to blended provision (both face-to-face and online) and how students can engage with it to enable their learning. Most importantly, let鈥檚 see helpful headlines designed to support students in a changed world.

Harriet Dunbar-Morris is dean of learning and teaching and a reader in higher education at the University of Portsmouth.

Loading...

You may also like

sticky sign up

Register for free

and unlock a host of features on the 色盒直播 site