Module overview
This module is part of a national Ambassador Scheme set up in 2002 to allow university students to spend time in the school classroom, learning and putting into practice transferable skills while helping pupils and earning academic credit towards their degree. http://www.uas.ac.uk/ The module is aimed at students who wish to increase their confidence and develop their employability, giving you something additional to talk about on your CV and at job or further study interviews. The module is also a useful option for students who are thinking of teaching as a career. Students who undertake the module will spend up to forty hours within a local school, working towards a special interest project. The University of Southampton has run the scheme successfully since 2002/03 and place over 200 students in classrooms each academic year.
Aims and Objectives
Learning Outcomes
Subject Specific Intellectual and Research Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- reflect upon the nature of teaching in a suitably informed, critical, and analytical fashion
- recognise how the methods and material of teaching must properly acknowledge the age and the range of abilities of a particular class or group of students;
- gain an insight into the diverse nature of attainment and achievement;
- identify the means by which appropriate teaching material, properly utilised, can generate student interest, engagement, and performance;
- comprehend, in broad terms, how children/young people acquire knowledge and understanding at a particular point in their school/college experience;
Subject Specific Practical Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- manage a small-scale project related to the prominence of Humanities subjects within the curriculum
- interact positively, individually and collectively, with children/young people; while retaining a suitable degree of distance, and fully respecting the teaching ethos of the school/college;
- generate documentation that records fully your specific and overall experience(s) across the period you are working within the school/college;
- be responsible and confident in your supporting role to teachers and classroom assistants;
- function within a classroom in an non-intrusive but productive manner;
- create basic lesson plans, and relevant teaching material(s);
Knowledge and Understanding
Having successfully completed this module, you will be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of:
- the unique role of Humanities subjects within the curriculum;
- the practical and pedagogic challenges encountered when asked to teach a group of students who are within a particular age range yet display a diversity of learning requirements;
- the skills and attributes required of a Humanities graduate embarking upon a formal programme of pedagogic training, and consequent entry into the teaching profession
- how, within a particular teaching environment (whether primary, secondary, or tertiary), teaching methods and approaches are ideally tailored to the specific needs of individual learners;
Transferable and Generic Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- provide reflective feedback in a genuinely systematic, evaluative, and diagnostic fashion
- display a greater readiness to initiate and improvise, responding calmly to an unexpected change of circumstance;
- recognise that effective teamwork relies upon a readiness to collaborate and compromise;
- match your improved capacity for communication with improved organisational skills;
- demonstrate greater confidence when presenting your ideas and opinions in public, and when conveying a clear, unequivocal notion of what you require;
Syllabus
This module requires you to undertake a placement, spending time outside of the University within a local school (primary or secondary) or college (tertiary) for ten half-days (3 – 4 hours each), supported by tutorials on campus and by a mentor (teacher) within the school. At the start of your placement you will observe teaching, gradually becoming more involved in the classroom as you get to know the school, teaching staff and pupils. As your placement progresses, you will work towards carrying out a special project with your pupils. The project will be an activity of your choice, in consultation with the teacher, for example organising a visit or overseeing presentation of a group project to the rest of the class.
While working in the school or college you are an ambassador and a role model, providing staff and pupils in your placement with an opportunity to interact on a regular basis with a University of Southampton undergraduate. You have a certain responsibility, working as you are with children/young children.
Standards and expectations are high and you are expected to match the demands of both your placement institution and the University. If you are applying to secure a postgraduate teaching qualification then this is invaluable experience, complementing any voluntary work you may undertake in primary or secondary schools.
Learning and Teaching
Teaching and learning methods
Teaching methods:
- induction sessions in weeks 0 and 1 introduce you to the UAS and thoroughly prepare you for your placement;
- group tutorials in weeks 4, 6, 8, and 10 address your needs in the context of your classroom experience;
- an individual feedback tutorial at a point within week 12 will give you an opportunity to discuss your assignments, and your teacher’s final report;
- Blackboard as an interactive support tool
Learning methods:
- tutorials ensuring that you feel adequately prepared in advance of your placement, and providing support and advice in the course of your time in school/college;
- classroom observation and teaching assistance (3 – 4 hours a week) at your placement school/college;
- teaching part or all of a class while on placement when deemed by you and your teacher that this is appropriate;
- an honest and genuinely reflective teaching journal, posted as a Blog on Blackboard;
- a special project designed and delivered to some or all of the pupils in your designated class.
Type | Hours |
---|---|
Placement | 40 |
Preparation for scheduled sessions | 20 |
Completion of assessment task | 30 |
Wider reading or practice | 24 |
Practical classes and workshops | 3 |
Follow-up work | 20 |
Lecture | 9 |
Tutorial | 4 |
Total study time | 150 |
Assessment
Assessment strategy
The three elements of the assessment are consistent with requirements for the UAS across the University of Southampton, and past experience has resulted in the current weightings. Assessment criteria for the presentation and the project report are available via Blackboard, and also conveyed to you in tutorials. The blogged teaching journal may feed into the project report.
Formative
This is how we’ll give you feedback as you are learning. It is not a formal test or exam.
Teaching journal
- Assessment Type: Formative
- Feedback:
- Final Assessment: No
- Group Work: No
Summative
This is how we’ll formally assess what you have learned in this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Teacher’s report | 15% |
Presentation | 25% |
Project report | 60% |
Referral
This is how we’ll assess you if you don’t meet the criteria to pass this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Project report | 60% |
Repeat Information
Repeat type: Internal