The Annual Conference of EDEN Digital Learning Europe was held at Dublin City University 18-20 June 2023. I was delighted to have the opportunity to attend this conference, funded by FASSTEST, to present some of the findings to date of the FASSTEST project Evaluating the Impact of ‘Write Now’ Sessions: Adapting Approaches from Academic Writing Retreats to Create a Learning Community of Student Writers on A233.
EDEN Digital Learning Europe is an educational association focused on e-learning and open and distance education. The 325 delegates gathered at the 2023 conference came from 60 countries around the world, bringing together expertise and research in educational digital technologies and pedagogies of teaching and learning in online spaces. The theme of the conference was ‘“Yes we can!” – Digital Education for Better Futures’, placing the focus on the ’art of the possible’. It was an uplifting event, with inspiring keynote speakers from HE institutions across Europe and beyond, plus an extensive programme of papers detailing work being done in the field.
The Open University had a strong presence at the conference, with colleagues from several Faculties sharing scholarship focused on enhancing our students’ experience as online distance learners. I delivered a conference paper co-written with my Open University colleagues Dr Hannah Lavery (Director of Teaching, School of Arts and Humanities) and Dr Jennifer Hillman (Senior Manager, Student Support Services). This paper will be published in the forthcoming EDEN’s Conference Proceedings for 2023 (ISSN: 2707-2819).
Preparing this collaborative paper enabled us to draw together work on several current Open University pilots of online live writing and study support sessions:
Each of these three projects uses the Pomodoro Technique to help students focus on their work in short bursts and make immediate progress with their assignment planning and writing during the session. They also draw upon the findings of scholarship on the impact of academic writing retreats by providing
Feedback from students (gathered via online surveys) indicates that they find these sessions enable them to focus on their work and make positive progress that they can build on in their individual time afterwards. They also value the interpersonal aspect of participation, benefitting from hearing from their peers, gaining reassurance from realising they are not alone in finding something difficult and from sharing encouragement and practical strategies which can help. Attendees described the feeling of accountability that the synchronous online sessions helped to sustain, making it easier to focus during the session and helping sustain momentum afterwards. These positive outcomes demonstrate that it is possible to create supportive communities of student learners online, replicating many of the benefits which have been previously identified as linked to in-person writing retreats.
Work on these projects continues. The ‘Write Now’ FASSTEST project is about to enter a second year, rolling out these sessions to other Undergraduate Arts and Humanities modules and monitoring this expansion. We are keen to integrate these sessions more closely with ‘Catch Up’ sessions, so that students who have fallen behind can be supported to get back on track and then access assignment preparation support before they miss a future deadline. We are also keen to look more closely at the pattern of attendance at ‘Write Now’ sessions, where 45% of attendees during the pilot chose to attend two or more sessions. The implications of repeat attendance, in terms of session design and students’ sense of being part of a community of learners, will be a focus of the next phase of the project.
Author
Debbie Parker Kinch, Lecturer and Staff Tutor in English
References
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