Our Journey: Map your study journey. What were the challenges and achievements?

Activities

The principle behind the tools is to support students to represent and communicate the student journey from their own perspectives. This lends itself to several different activities, including as a means to feedback and dialogue with staff, and as a means to reflection on their approach and goals. Our understanding of this is evolving as we devise and trial different activities using the tools. We are very interested to see how others use them too.

Students and staff workshops

The printed posters and cards are designed for discussion and work well with small groups. The tools are very flexible. An approach that we have found useful has been for each small group to include a student who represents their journey using the tools. Staff can discuss this with the student during the process to gain insight, and can add additional notes to the journey representation with their reflections.

Five people around a table creating a journey together using the Our Journey cards and poster

Student reflection activities

A key point raised in the design process was the potential for the tools to engage students in reflecting on their journeys. This could be an individual activity, but journeys can also become a shared artefact for discussion with tutors or peers.

The learning outcomes we suggest for these activities include to be able to:

Research and evaluation

The online or printed tool can be used as part of research conducted with students to understand their experiences. The use of the tool as part of an interview method is being piloted, and we are planning a trial where journeys are captured at scale as a means of feedback.

The journey as an interface for guidance and support

A more ambitious vision for the online journey tool is that it could become an active guide for students. For example, that they would periodically update it and receive support information based on their input.