As part of my Digital Curriculum Support and Developer role in the Institute of Health and Allied Professions (IHAP), in the School of Social Sciences at Nottingham Trent University. A part of my remit is leading on facilitating, developing, capturing and disseminating colleague effective practices in online, blended and ePortfolio-based learning, and promoting available digital technologies. A common aspect found in learning technologist roles.
As like most of my blog posts in sharing my approaches and processes, this blog post focuses on the creation of a institute-specific digital development group - a kind of special interest group. Not just what it is and what it offers but how I created it, the strategic approach and influencing membership, which are not often shared. In chronological order the following is what I did/happened, inspired by my own approach as detailed in the 'Introducing digital leadership' section in Chapter 6 of my forthcoming book 'Digital Learning, Teaching and Assessment for HE and FE practitioners'.
- Identified the need and established and documented my vision and top level information and plans for the group. Again this is integral and a core part of my role to nurture and capture technology enhanced learning and teaching practices and developments, support and facilitate digital innovation, building champions in context, consulting, showcasing, inspiring/generating ideas, sharing digital/online practice and plus many more...
- Named the group, uninspiringly called 'IHAP Digital Development Group' but offers what it says.
- Outlined a brief (top level information) group proposal and strategy through a Microsoft PowerPoint slide deck.
- Discussed the need and my vision with my Head of Department whom I work closely with and obtained her approval.
- Defined and refined the top level information into a shorter 'tantalising' slide deck, ready to communicate to staff, see video below.
- The group is informal and flexible by nature; we are all too busy for further formalities, e.g. mandatory synchronous attendance, minutes etc. The group is focused on being collaborative and productive with tangible outputs. A hands-on approach with creating and developing through digital technology.
- Synchronous meeting attendance is optional, but members encouraged to participate and communicate asynchronously if not attending.
- Show and tell style doesn’t work for everyone and this group is not about that (I learn best by doing and evaluating), and I feel that collaborating and joining up of projects brings about much better outcomes.
- The group also acts as my committee that can identify other needs and steer my own focus/priorities.
- Communicated the groups presence in our department meeting as part of my digital development agenda item.
- Shared the above slide deck to all of IHAP via email after the department meeting - a better response rate as they tend to use email more than Teams for department communications.
- To my surprise I received more responses than I thought I would. I was hoping for at least 3-5 to start off small and expand outwards as the group progressed. I received 11 expressions of interest and the department at present (constantly growing) consists 40+ people. Which includes academics, technicians and business support staff. All of which were academic responses which is the primary target for the group, but as stated in the slide deck the group is open to all that support learning.
- Besides the blanket email, I tactfully approached some people personally that I think would like and gain and contribute to the group, such as existing digital champions, early adopters of institute-specific digital technologies and those with low-level digital literacies and skills.
- Everyone’s got different confidence and competent levels of ICT skills. I envisage the group to be accessible to all, no matter the level of your ICT confidence and competence. The group should naturally develop these aspects through active participation.
- I sent a follow up email (any more for any more) to prompt further membership, and stating some names that had joined, including some Principal Lecturers, in the hope to motivate others - which it did.
- Created a Teams space to host meetings, outputs and resources. Not as a community – our main IHAP Team space provides that.
- Scheduled the first meeting, 1 March 2022, that included the following agenda items in a healthcare visual slide deck. My overall focus of this meeting is to further establish and refine the group, and have a solid ground and group goals for first 3-6 months.
- Introduce rationale for the group (5 mins)
- Confirm group structure and frequency (10 mins)
- Activity: identify our focus areas and priorities (20 mins)
- I used Microsoft Whiteboard for the activity which proved to be good digital practice modelling.
- The Whiteboard was full of responses to refine and group together. The yellow post-its are the final outcomes.
- Discuss Team space use, structure and principles of communicating (10 mins)
- Any other business
- Brief summary of meeting outcomes and action log (extract below) posted into the meeting. Which also supports asynchronous participation and communication.
- Continue the group and format as it is, along with priorities we set, but with more showcasing of digital tools and practice
- Convert group into a once-a-term CPD-style event (morning or afternoon)
- Devolve group into a less frequent once-a-term meeting to discuss priorities/development/issues to help steer IHAP digital curriculum developments
- Don’t continue with this group or alternate options