Abstract

The critique of the 'sage on the stage' approach to university teaching is particularly relevant for applied fields such as business management where a 'guide on the side' approach can instead encourage more active participation from students. A module on People Management for second year degree students was modified to involve a greater proportion of student-centred, active learning activities relative to lectures and supported by the participatory mechanisms offered by Restorative Practice. This paper offers a reflection on how developing higher education (HE) pedagogy towards reducing reliance on lecturer defined content shifts both students and lecturers out of their comfort zone. The process of students moving towards greater responsibility seems to require points of abandonment in which a hiatus occurs between student expectation of tutor support and the realisation that self-responsibility is required. In the current context of greater measurement of student satisfaction in HE, this poses a challenge for individual academics as well as universities. Disruptive and transformational learning experiences require relational support if they are to be successful and academic staff deserve appropriate development opportunities to become more aware and familiar with the new discomfort of the HE classroom.

Highlights

  • Higher education has seen a shift away from the dominance of the lecture/tutorial and essay/exam style of teaching and assessment, the so-called ‘sage on the stage’ (King, 1993) towards active, cooperative or experiential learning (Cavanagh, 2011; Hermann, 2013)

  • Redesigning learning experiences to move towards student-centred learning is likely to involve a broad range of tasks such as group work, short writing tasks, discussions, role-plays, simulations and games which are aimed at decreasing the role and prominence of teacher-centred activity and increasing student participation

  • The reflections on this learning experience suggest that the difficulty for some students arises when peer-to-peer processes are not immediately successful and where peers fail to respond to student-led structure

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Summary

Introduction

Higher education has seen a shift away from the dominance of the lecture/tutorial and essay/exam style of teaching and assessment, the so-called ‘sage on the stage’ (King, 1993) towards active, cooperative or experiential learning (Cavanagh, 2011; Hermann, 2013). The inclusiveness of the approach has seen Restorative Practice develop strongly in school settings where teachers are encouraged to learn new ways of responding to students which actively engages them rather than punishing bad behaviour. It has hitherto been little recognised as a useful approach within higher education. The research questions were: How does the student group use restorative practices in their independent group assignment? What are student perceptions of the efficacy of the restorative practices adopted?

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