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Faculty
of Arts & Social Sciences
New Teaching Initiative
The Department of Geography has devised a module in which students take
responsibility for their own learning. ‘Learning by doing’
is the motto of the new GE 3230 Geography Field Studies module. Students
have to engage in a variety of teamwork projects involving different kinds
of fieldwork in an overseas context. The module encourages students to
test out methods learnt in classroom settings and apply them in different
situations. Students also learn to explore the gaps and links between
‘field studies’ and ‘classroom’ teaching. Projects
are designed to encourage teamwork, creativity and knowledge of basic
skills required to collect primary data.
During May and June 2001, 29 students took part in an overseas Field
Studies course in Northern Thailand. Students involved themselves in various
projects related to broad themes such as: urban and cultural landscapes;
cultural tourism and hill-tribe peoples; ecological tourism; highland
development projects and small village communities; migrant communities
in Northern Thailand; and the clashes between resource exploitation and
environmental conservation. Future Field Studies modules are scheduled
for Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.
Faculty
of Business Administration
Advanced Modules for USP Students
Two special advanced modules have been designed specially for University
Scholars Programme (USP) students to challenge and develop their intellectual
and creative potential. The course, Conflict Resolution: Negotiation
and Mediation, introduces the theory of negotiation and conflict
resolution through short debriefs, discussions and papers. To foster negotiation
and mediation skills effectively, the course features an open, experiential
approach that allows for maximum participation, experimentation and self-reflective
learning. Participants are expected to apply and demonstrate acquired
knowledge through practice and exercises. Moreover, participants from
different backgrounds are selected for the course so that they can interact
and share different perspectives on conflict resolution. A good classroom
environment is also maintained to encourage participants’ creativity
and spontaneity.
The other course, Treasury Management, synthesises the theory
and practice of treasury management. Exposed to a wide range of theoretical
financial concepts, tools and techniques as applied to treasury activities,
USP students will gain an understanding of international financial markets,
the accompanying financial instruments and innovations, the key functions
of a Treasury department in a multinational firm, and latest trends in
treasury management. To obtain current market practices and informational
prices, students can also access a subscription-based electronic information
provider of financial and economic data.
Faculty
of Dentistry
Teaching Outside of the Classroom
Classroom teaching has limits in exposing students to certain environments
and/or experiences. In our Community Health Study module, we have designed
a series of lectures that are tied in with tutorials and field trips.
One of the projects, entitled ‘Caries risk assessment of Singaporean
kindergarten children’, allows Third Year dental students to physically
enter society, assess the needs of people/children, and develop a deeper
sense of responsibility for the community. Students are guided to establish
a new learning mode, involving the cognitive, affective, and volitional
components of their minds. Through this more holistic approach, we hope
to bring joy, creativity, and a sense of community to dental students
who will be Singapore’s next generation of oral health caregivers.
Faculty
of Medicine
Clinico-Pathological Conferences Go Online
The Clinico-Pathological Conference (CPC) is an important teaching experience
for Fourth and Fifth Year medical students. CPCs have been in the curriculum
of the Medical Faculty for many years and used to be traditional classroom
affairs. Since 2000, the CPC format has been transformed into a completely
IT-based, online exercise. The aims were to present clinical information
in a structured, holistic manner that is meaningful and engaging as well
as simulates the real world of clinical practice and decision-making.
The multi-faceted, multi-disciplinary, interactive presentations are sequenced
with breaks that elicit responses to multiple-choice questions and direct
discussions with staff clinicians. They are linked to appropriate reference
texts and other web-based resources that elaborate on the case under discussion.
An additional bonus is that students now no longer have to travel across
town from their different hospital attachments to attend CPCs.
Faculty
of Science
Read & Present: Developing Thinking &
Communication Skills in Biology
In the course, AB4220 Behavioural Ecology, students not only learn the
course contents, but also develop analytical and critical thinking as
well as communication skills. Each week, all students read a research
publication specifically chosen by the lecturer for its wide theoretical
basis, introduction to critical research methods and/or broad species
and geographic coverage. Each student must take turns to give a small
class presentation on the weekly paper and then generate a discussion
among classmates. Consequently, students must know the factual material
and develop communication strategies. If necessary, students are helped
to plan their sessions. All students and the lecturer must also participate
in the discussions. In this innovative teaching method, the lecturer only
functions as a facilitator of the process, rather than as a leader or
a dominator in the weekly discussion, thereby encouraging students to
learn how to ‘learn by themselves’.
Faculty
of Science
Timetable ‘Deregulation’ to Achieve
Small-group Teaching in Lab Sessions
Achieving small-group teaching in laboratory sessions, especially for
big classes, is often difficult due to timetable constraints, scarcity
of equipment and teaching assistants, etc. After much consideration in
the Department of Biological Sciences, timetable constraints were identified
as the root of the problem. So efforts were made to ‘deregulate’
the timetable of the BL1103 Physiology practicals. A small laboratory
was dedicated for this module. Every experiment was scheduled 9–12
times per week such that the practical schedule truly complemented the
lectures. With the help of CITA (Science), a software was developed that
enabled students to sign up for their desired slots at the beginning of
the term, which solved the problem of timetable clashes. It also allowed
students to run the practicals at their own pace. Computers and software
were purchased for data-acquisition and to give on-screen instructions.
Consequently, students were able to do their experiments independently.
Even though a small number of teaching assistants were mobilised, a TA:student
ratio of between 1:5 to 1:15 was achieved.
School of Computing
Multimedia Learning Clips
The School of Computing offers a course, CS3240, on Human-Computer Interaction.
We have been developing multimedia learning clips as resources to aid
student understanding of the course material. Designed on the principles
of visualisation and concretisation, these clips help to reify abstract
ideas and concepts through the predominant use of visual and animated
content (text is used only minimally) with synchronised audio narration
to explain the content. Navigation controls are available to move to a
preceding or following clip so that students can view the clips in logical
sequence if they want a mini-lecture. The multimedia clips are developed
in the QuickTime format and deployed on a streaming server, allowing students
anytime, anywhere access to the learning resource.

During Semester 2 of academic year 2000/2001, we surveyed students on
the helpfulness of the multimedia clips in facilitating their learning
of course materials. 4% of students said that it made no difference, 23%
said that it helped a little, 37% said that it helped moderately, 23%
said that it helped a lot, and 2% said that it helped tremendously. Although
11% of students reported that they had not tried to access the multimedia
clips, we are very encouraged that on the whole 85% found the clips helpful
for learning.
School
of Design & Environment
Seeing Deeply in Architecture: Unraveling
the Narrative
The challenge to First Year architecture students was this: to design
architecture with its milieu of spatial sequences and sensorial nuances
through the appreciation and analysis of a piece of poetry or prose. This
narrative approach, though new to the student, is not an uncommon form
of design impetus and process in architecture. Several seminal projects
sharing this heritage include the Danteum by Giuseppe Terragni and Daniel
Liebeskind’s Jewish Museum in Berlin. The potency of the narrative
is evidenced in its ability to be both the scaffolding from which to launch
the design process as well as the compass by which consistent perspective
is gained during the varied stages of design development. The student’s
journey from the immateriality of the ‘word’ to the materiality
of the ‘built’ began with works which spanned Wallace Stevens
to Alfian Sa’at and culminated in a range of projects as rich and
diverse as their origins.
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