This case study presents an ambitious student-staff partnership project at University College London (UCL) to publish a collaborative book on higher education pedagogy. Over two-and-a-half years, a total of 86 students and staff contributed to the project, which sought to provide educators with a new type of scholarly material under the unifying theme of connecting research and teaching. Multiple layers of student-staff partnership were interwoven throughout the project; this case study contextualizes these layers against three dimensions: institutional, organizational, and community identity. Central to the project was our distinctive approach to engaging with Graduate Teaching Assistants (GTAs) and their crucial role in bringing the three...
Against a backdrop of rising interest in students becoming partners in learning and teaching in high...
Pedagogies of partnership: What works? seeks to identify whether the student learning experience is ...
This thoughtpiece shares some personal reflections on a distinctively different approach to student-...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Teaching in High...
Within the UK Higher Education setting there is an emphasis on student satisfaction and experience s...
The international interest in students as partners reflects the desire to involve students as active...
AbstractThis staff-student collaborative project involved six small project teams each composed of s...
Welcome to this Special Issue of the Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice (JUTLP). T...
Forging closer links between university research and teaching has become an important way to enhance...
Student success has never been out of the minds of staff in Higher Education institutions. Their ind...
With the democratisation of education changes in student bodies at Higher Education institutions hav...
McCulloch (2009) has argued for a reconceptualisation of the student role, where contested discourse...
Student-staff partnerships in higher education re-frame the ways that students and staff work togeth...
This paper explores and reflects on the outcomes of the application of two different pedagogic model...
“Students as Partners” (SaP) in higher education re-envisions students and staff as active collabora...
Against a backdrop of rising interest in students becoming partners in learning and teaching in high...
Pedagogies of partnership: What works? seeks to identify whether the student learning experience is ...
This thoughtpiece shares some personal reflections on a distinctively different approach to student-...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Teaching in High...
Within the UK Higher Education setting there is an emphasis on student satisfaction and experience s...
The international interest in students as partners reflects the desire to involve students as active...
AbstractThis staff-student collaborative project involved six small project teams each composed of s...
Welcome to this Special Issue of the Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice (JUTLP). T...
Forging closer links between university research and teaching has become an important way to enhance...
Student success has never been out of the minds of staff in Higher Education institutions. Their ind...
With the democratisation of education changes in student bodies at Higher Education institutions hav...
McCulloch (2009) has argued for a reconceptualisation of the student role, where contested discourse...
Student-staff partnerships in higher education re-frame the ways that students and staff work togeth...
This paper explores and reflects on the outcomes of the application of two different pedagogic model...
“Students as Partners” (SaP) in higher education re-envisions students and staff as active collabora...
Against a backdrop of rising interest in students becoming partners in learning and teaching in high...
Pedagogies of partnership: What works? seeks to identify whether the student learning experience is ...
This thoughtpiece shares some personal reflections on a distinctively different approach to student-...