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An Integrated Model of EBL in Practice

Previous development work will be evaluated using appropriate custom-designed instruments. This will help identify defining principles and describe working relationships that give access to the current experiences of students. From this the project will activate and embed EBL in the teaching programme and devise approaches to formal assessment.
Project Team: David Pottage  Faculty: Medical and Human Sciences
Funding year: 2005
Keywords: design, medicine, psychiatry, postgraduate, individual, practice based, presentation, evaluation
Case Study as PDF Case Study (PDF, 69.4Kb)

Manchester Access Programme: EBL Masterclasses

This project aims to engage non-traditional FE students with the process of enquiry-based learning through a series of masterclasses. The masterclasses will focus on the theme of sustainability and will touch on various curriculum areas. The masterclasses will be facilitated by trained University of Manchester students and will take place in Spring 2006. Year 12 students participating in the masterclasses are involved in a wider series of activities aimed to support and encourage their application to The University of Manchester. Involvement with the Centre for Excellence in Enquiry-Based Learning at a pre-University level will benefit both the institution and the students by better preparing them for the alternative learning and teaching methods practiced at the University.
Project Team: Patricia Clift, Stephanie Lee
Funding year: 2005
Keywords: widening participation, further education, sustainability, pbl, presentation, facilitation, sixth form, inclusion, diversity
Watch Video about this project: Windows Media Player Windows Media Video; Rich Text Document Video Transcript
Case Study as PDF Case Study (PDF, 70.9Kb)

Development of an Enquiry-Based programme for exploring the scientific method

We will develop an enquiry-based programme that will provide first year students with the skills to critically evaluate the scientific method and scientific knowledge. The programme will be delivered in a series of tutorials, where students will elaborate hypotheses, collect data, and draw conclusions from (sometimes) conflicting evidence. Students will also research databases, give an oral presentation, and write an essay. The course will culminate with a seminar by a leading researcher from outside the University. The programme will help students develop a critical understanding of the facts, and the need for alternative hypotheses, enabling them to grapple more rapidly and effectively with units which require a greater degree of independent thought. We will focus on the question What is the origin of humans?, using different kinds of data (e.g. DNA sequence and morphological data).
Project Team: Paula X Kover, Matthew Cobb, Henry McGhie  Faculty: Life Sciences
Funding year: 2006
Keywords: scientific, method, critical thinking, evaluation, knowledge, data collection, hypothesis, research, dna, presentation, hypotheses

Introducing EBL to second year undergraduate module Organisations, Management and Technology

By applying a robust EBL method and assessment to 2nd year undergraduate Organisations, Management and Technology, students will learn to apply their knowledge of innovation studies to investigate specific issues. In addition to exercising the students' application of their knowledge, the EBL method and assessment will contribute to their wider intellectual and transferable skills. For example, self-organisation, team work, delegation, presentation skills.
Project Team: Dr Paul Dewick, Evita Paraskevopoulou  Faculty: Humanities
Funding year: 2007a
Keywords: MBS, organisations, management, technology, business, assessment, quantitative, qualitative, knowledge, data analysis, teamwork, presentation

Life Sciences go to the movies

This project aims to develop problem-based learning exercises based around popular movies to support level 1-3 tutorials in Life Sciences degree programmes. Students will work in tutorial groups to view carefully selected films, discuss their content (with tutor as facilitator). They will then conduct research and meet without their tutor to devise and produce group oral or poster presentations suitable for peer and/or non-scientist audiences, concerning the scientific and ethical content of the film. Examples of suitable films include Awakenings (Parkinson's disease and the ethics of human experimentation) and GATTACA (human genome project and eugenics). It is anticipated that the use of movies as a teaching medium will engage students due to its novelty and entertainment value, will stimulate discussion of a broader range of topics than might be elicited by a conventional text-based PBL scenario, and will act as a stepping stone to criticism of 'more serious' scientific writing.
Project Team: Dr Richard Prince  Faculty: Life Sciences
Funding year: 2008
Keywords: film, critical writing, ethics, presentation, pbl, scientific