Dear Christine and everyone
As Nicole just mentioned, we have a multimedia option (not a live presentation) in UCL Arena. This replaces part of the application, specifically the case studies that form the largest part of the application (at least in word-count).
The rationale is that it's fairer to people whose fields and expertise are less textual. Applicants are given a fairly free rein and have been known to include short interviews with students.
If you're thinking about assessing, I'd throw these thoughts in:
- you can get a really interesting kind of engagement this way.
However, it's not as easy to work with for either applicants or assessors as it might first appear:
For applicants:
the standards for video production are tricky. Video editing is extremely time-expensive. You might want to get round this by saying eg it should be a 15-minute talking head or slides/graphics with voiceover, or some kind of 'live shot' that won't have them up all night editing to get it right.
shots of students active are great but you need permission
audibility is actually more important than picture quality
For assessors
it's very difficult to scan back over a video in the way you can text to double-check if they meet the descriptors. This means you have to take a lot of notes as you go along -- it's quite an intensive activity
you can get errors eg in playback that you are not sure are in the original (eg stuttering)
until you've done a few, it's hard to tell what works.
In haste, those are the issues that come to mind. I'd always have it as an option rather than mandated, and keep the bar low or they'll spend ten times as long as is needed.
Hope this helps, interested in others' thoughts too.
Jason
On 3 Mar 2017, at 14:16, Christine Smith wrote:
My question to you, good colleagues, is to ask if you have done something similar and any guidance you might offer. I'd be more than happy to collate responses to share with others.
--
Dr Jason P Davies
Interim Director, UCL Arena
UCL Arena Centre for Research-Based Education (formerly CALT)
10th Floor, 1-19 Torrington Place, London, WC1E 7HB
@JasonPtrDaviesVisit the UCL Teaching and Learning Portal