UP Teaching and Learning Review 2020

Page 94

92

Teaching and Learning Review 2020

trials were used to simulate hearings, but these were also curtailed by the pandemic. As a result, Dr Grobler had to develop and implement innovative and effective online instructional and assessment strategies to ensure that students obtained the required key competencies. Using Powtoon (video-making software that allows educators to create engaging animated clips), a client consultation was simulated. The ‘client’ in the animated clip provided her narrative, after which students had to formulate five types of questions to obtain further information for purposes of drafting particulars of claims, enabling them to learn through a simulated environment. In turn, this activity provided the lecturer with a virtual platform to assess students’ listening, probing and fact-finding questioning skills and techniques to determine if they were grasping the crux of issues and disputes at hand. Further, Dr Grobler had to reimagine the use of mock trials as virtual, strategic, and active engagement learning-by-doing exercises. Although moot courts and hearings are held successfully online, it was not a feasible option in this module as many students experienced problems with Internet connectivity and electricity outages. To mitigate the situation, the lecturer provided students with a set of facts and pleadings and, based thereon, students had to compile a screenplay for a mock trial that included stage directions and court etiquette. Students had to apply basic litigation skills and demonstrate a thorough understanding of the basic trajectory of a trial and court etiquette.

Zoonotic diseases20

Students approached the assignment with much enthusiasm and creativity, with the final product showing the students’ ability to make the material come alive.

During the module, students received extensive feedback on their portfolio submissions, and then revised and consolidated their submissions for their examinations. The examination submissions showed immense improvement in the students’ understanding of the materials and issues raised by the module.

A Real-World Learning Experience in Environmental Law Dr Melanie Murcott in the Department of Public Law invited students to learn about Environmental Law (OMR 410) by looking at the world around them, under lockdown, and capturing photographs of the environmental

issues they could see in their immediate surroundings. The photographs formed part of the students’ assessment, as they had to be included in the four-part portfolio, along with students’ reactions to the provocative prescribed readings. The students’ photographs were incredibly creative and served as a platform for Dr Murcott and the students to get to know each other in a time of remote learning by making students feel less isolated from Dr Murcott and each other.

In OMR 410, Dr Murcott reimagined the classroom by giving students the opportunity to engage in strenuous debate and vibrant discussion in weekly online Zoom questionand-answer sessions, as well as on a clickUP discussion board. Students were rewarded for

20 https://www.cdc.gov/onehealth/images/zoonotic-diseases-spread-between-animals-and-people.jpg

their participation, as 20% of their semester mark was based on an assessment of their efforts to participate in discussion and debate in the Zoom sessions and the clickUP discussion board threads. Dr Murcott recognised in her teaching that COVID-19 is a zoonotic disease (involving the transfer of pathogens from non-human animals to humans), and that such diseases arise from, among other causes, the destruction of biodiversity and the mistreatment of animals in a way that exposes humans to pathogens from animals. Consequently, she introduced the study of aspects of the emerging field of animal law and engaged with the socio-ecological realities of zoonotic disease, as well as the need for the law to respond more effectively.20 This is another way in which Dr Murcott’s students were given the opportunity to engage with the current social context in a way that brought the module to life and illustrated to students the module’s importance and relevance in the real world.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Conclusion: Re-Imagining the University

4min
pages 125-128

‘When the flower blooms, the bees come uninvited’ (Ramakrishna

2min
page 124

The Learning Practitioner Primer Programme

2min
page 120

A Case Study of the Molecular and Cell Biology Module, MLB 133

3min
page 118

Remote Support during Online Assessment in the ‘War Room’ The Student Voice: Longitudinal Research into Student, Graduate

3min
page 112

and Employer Perceptions in Veterinary Sciences Education

3min
page 113

Years of Achievements in the Faculty of

1min
pages 102-103

In Celebration of Excellence

3min
page 107

Opening of the Onderstepoort Wildlife Clinic

2min
page 111

Take-Home Practical Classes and the Use of Video Demonstrations

3min
pages 98-99

UP Law Hosts Inaugural Staff Development and Career Planning Retreat

1min
page 95

Taking the Simulated Learning Environment Online

2min
page 93

Learning from Government Blunders in Response to COVID-19

4min
page 92

Classical Voice and Opera Studies

2min
page 85

Technology as an Antidote to COVID-19 Learning Fatigue

3min
page 91

A Real-World Learning Experience in Environmental Law

3min
page 94

Taking a ‘Mock’ Model United Nations Debate Online

3min
page 88

Intervention Service Delivery

8min
pages 82-83

On the Importance of Tea Breaks—Fostering an Online Community among Postgraduate Students Tele-Intervention Framework for Early Communication

2min
page 81

for Vulnerable Communities

2min
page 75

Handwashing Awareness in Mamelodi UP Initiative Helps Create Food Security

2min
page 74

Sanlam Encourages Physiotherapy Students to Make a Difference

1min
page 79

Mail & Guardian’s 200 Young South Africans List

2min
page 69

Career Mentorship Ensures that Graduates Are Ready for Work

2min
page 66

in the Escape Room

1min
page 71

Supporting First-year Studies by Distributing Workload

2min
page 62

Making Research Methodology Accessible to Undergraduates

2min
page 59

Assessment Management System

2min
page 57

Voices from Greece

1min
page 53

Voices from South Africa

2min
page 52

How Practising What You Preach Can Shift Student Success

3min
page 54

Presenting Operation Research to Solve Actual Problems

1min
page 60

Emotional Well-being Impacts on Student Performance

1min
page 61

‘Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining’: Art Students’ Resilience

4min
page 51

Sport Sciences Education in the Digital Age

3min
page 49

Beating Marking Challenges in the Online Environment

2min
page 46

Normal Assessments in an Abnormal World

3min
page 45

Brown Bag Lunches Stepped up to Online Teaching Excellence in Auditing:

4min
page 43

Teaching Development Promote Knowledge Production and Knowledge Sharing

2min
page 30

Ensure that Academics Are Recognised and Rewarded for the Work that they Do as University Teachers

7min
pages 33-36

The Department of Library Services (DLS

1min
page 29

Foreword by Vice-Chancellor and Principal Prof Tawana Kupe Re-imaginingTeaching and Learning Foreword by Vice Principal: Academic Prof Norman Duncan

1min
page 6

Tutoring

4min
page 27

Striving for Student Success in the Context of a Crisis

8min
pages 7-9

People

4min
page 20

Technology Infrastructure

1min
page 19

Leadership and Communication

1min
page 16

Challenges to Continuing with the Curriculum after the Lockdown

1min
pages 21-22

Advising

1min
page 26
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
UP Teaching and Learning Review 2020 by University of Pretoria - Issuu