The first ED209 “research” on the seen question

It turns out that the very first piece of research is working out if there’s enough ink in the printer cartridge as there’s getting on for 70 pages of text between the three articles included in the references within the course text.

Those of an ecological mind will be thinking that I’d be better reading these online rather than printing them out and ordinarily I would do that if only because I usually can’t be bothered lugging around actual paper when I have them all on my baby computer. However, two of the articles are two up and it’s rather difficult to read such things with all the scrolling up and down business. Sadly, one of those is the longest article so it’s gonna need to be printed.

I suspect that I’ll be needing a new printer cartridge after if not during printing this lot.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Back to school so, of course, we’ll all sick

Sniffling, coughing and sneezing have been working their way through all of us over the past week or so thanks to to James & John bringing these home from school.

Yesterday it was James’ turn to feel a bit off but now that he’s back to school ’tis the turn of John and me to feel dreadful.

Oh well, I guess another week or two and they’ll have worked their way through the range of minor colds and whatnot that their friends have…

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Time to really get going on the ED209 seen question

I’ve just been to the final tutorial for the course so there aren’t any more excuses for putting off the work for the seen question for the course.

First off, was to choose the topic from amongst the five on offer. For me the choice was relatively simple. The legal one starts by saying that it’s a bit gruesome in parts which put me off that right away. The education one seems almost exclusively for teachers so that’s out. Health psychology just doesn’t appeal. The autism one seems to require that you’ve some experience of it outside the course. Which leaves the one on specific learning difficulties which I’d have chosen anyway as it seems interesting.

That done, I’ve read the chapter on it in the course book and gone through the study guide. Which means that it’s time for the real work…

What I’ll be doing tomorrow is reading over the three journal articles that are referred to on the course website (it’s in course resources, part 4). All being well, that’ll give me an idea of what approach to take when I’m starting on the literature search which I’ll be starting later in the week.

The aim for all of this work is to produce what’s essentially a TMA of around 1000 words. I say around 1000 words but I suspect that it’ll be somewhat shorter than that as I’ll need to write it out in a little under an hour. It’s very important to keep that time limit in mind as it would be all to easy to write far more in advance than could realistically be reproduced inside that one hour time limit. Going by my tutor, the majority of resits that he has are there because they didn’t allocate their time properly so don’t under-estimate the importance of this aspect!

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

A good start for the new OU vice chancellor

I’m generally a message in a bottle kind of person as far as political activism goes rather than being that proactive with firing off letters to all and sundry as Wendy tends to do.

However, I thought that I’d drop the new Open University vice-chancellor, Martin Bean, a line about my thoughts on some rather undesireable side-effects of the ELQ fiasco. Specifically, the dropping of all but one of the science summer schools and the associated dropping of all the crop of named science degrees.

The summer schools have been a fixture of many Open University degrees from the very start. They’re the time when one feels like a “real” student for a week. They’re the time when one has the chance to get together with a whole heap of fellow students for all kinds of activities (ranging from serious study to, sometimes, the less high-minded student activities). They’re the time that one sees the Open University in the flesh.

The snag is that whilst up until a number of years ago the summer schools were an integral part of the regular courses, they were almost all separated off five or ten years ago as courses were rewritten. Thus whilst the original S100 science foundation course included a summer school, the updated S104 doesn’t and instead there’s a separate course made up entirely of the former summer school. That has the consequence that the summer school is now optional and therefore almost impossible to get a sponsor to pay for it and so many fewer people do the summer schools these days.

To add to the problems, the current proposal is to implement these changes over the next couple of years. That would be fast enough in a normal university where degrees typically span three or at most four years. In “OU-time”, it’s incredibly rapid as degrees can take anything from six to as many as eleven years even without breaks between courses. Thus even people who are well through their degree can be affected. One of those on the forum who’s almost at the end of her degree has already been forced into doing one of the summer schools a year or two “too soon” because it seems unlikely that the final summer school that she needs will be replaced after it expires. She’s one of the lucky ones: many of those at the start of their degrees will find that they can’t complete the degree they were aiming for as the required summer schools (and perhaps other courses) will long since have been cancelled by the time they’d be doing them.

Anyway, Martin tells me that he will be raising the issue fairly soon. I’m sure that this issue and other ELQ related ones will make his time an “interesting” one.

I was going to say that I was surprised to receive a personal reply from him the day after I sent my little missive but actually I’m not. It’s just what one would expect from the Open University vice chancellor and it’s good to see that he’s already taken the “open” part onboard.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

More rejigging of the course plans

Now that I’m starting to look at the course forum for SK277 it turns out that there are yet more problems in attempting to cross the ELQ minefield.

The problem is that, thanks to ELQ, several of the courses that make up the Diploma in Health Sciences may simply stop at their final presentations in 2011 and 2012 rather than being replaced by further courses. That will be a truly sad endictment on ELQ if that happens because some of those courses have been attracting comments such as “I just loved this module” (Human Biology), “one of the best OU courses I’ve taken” (Infectious Disease) and “an outstanding course!” (Signals and Perception).

At the moment, it appears to be just about possible for me to complete the entire sequence of courses before they reach their respective end dates. It does twist around my original plan somewhat but it would be a shame to miss out on courses with feedback like that. One problem for me is that it means that I have to do Biological Psychology next February and I’d not really decided about doing that then as it means I’ve to overlap that course with Human Biology which starts in October.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.
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