This chapter represents an afternoon spent in conversation about partnership relationships at the University of Westminster. We aimed to collectively think through what makes partnership relationships transformative and what conditions are necessary to foster transformative learning. We also considered what success and failure might mean in co-creators projects and if these are useful ways of thinking about partnership. We employed this conversational methodology to foreground local experiential knowledge. The chapter is also illustrated with drawings from the session which capture the conversation and emerging thinking in a different form from traditional academic texts
Much of the student-staff partnership literature calls for increased collaboration and power sharing...
Unfamiliarity and uncertainty can be disorienting, but when provided space to collectively navigate ...
Forming partnerships beyond academia can be an effective method for universities to offer students u...
This framework is an invitation to students and staff to reflect on their relationships, roles, assu...
Since the 1990s hundreds of institutions of higher education have engaged in processes to develop co...
Since the 1990s, hundreds of institutions of higher education have developed community-university pa...
This chapter presents voices and experiences of the author contributors of this book to foreground t...
The past academic year, the University of Lincoln has been undertaking HEA funded research into the ...
This workshop will offer participants an overview of select methodologies and conceptual frameworks ...
Pedagogies of partnership: What works? seeks to identify whether the student learning experience is ...
We all know what makes a good partnership, don’t we? Well, do we? Partnership and collaborative work...
In this reflective essay we explore the process of ‘walking the walk’ of partnership by reflecting o...
Much of the student-staff partnership literature calls for increased collaboration and power sharing...
The rhetoric of teaching in higher education is now placing more emphasis than ever on the student v...
The rhetoric of teaching in higher education is now placing more emphasis than ever on the student v...
Much of the student-staff partnership literature calls for increased collaboration and power sharing...
Unfamiliarity and uncertainty can be disorienting, but when provided space to collectively navigate ...
Forming partnerships beyond academia can be an effective method for universities to offer students u...
This framework is an invitation to students and staff to reflect on their relationships, roles, assu...
Since the 1990s hundreds of institutions of higher education have engaged in processes to develop co...
Since the 1990s, hundreds of institutions of higher education have developed community-university pa...
This chapter presents voices and experiences of the author contributors of this book to foreground t...
The past academic year, the University of Lincoln has been undertaking HEA funded research into the ...
This workshop will offer participants an overview of select methodologies and conceptual frameworks ...
Pedagogies of partnership: What works? seeks to identify whether the student learning experience is ...
We all know what makes a good partnership, don’t we? Well, do we? Partnership and collaborative work...
In this reflective essay we explore the process of ‘walking the walk’ of partnership by reflecting o...
Much of the student-staff partnership literature calls for increased collaboration and power sharing...
The rhetoric of teaching in higher education is now placing more emphasis than ever on the student v...
The rhetoric of teaching in higher education is now placing more emphasis than ever on the student v...
Much of the student-staff partnership literature calls for increased collaboration and power sharing...
Unfamiliarity and uncertainty can be disorienting, but when provided space to collectively navigate ...
Forming partnerships beyond academia can be an effective method for universities to offer students u...