Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Roger Dalrymple is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Roger Dalrymple.


Innovations in Education and Teaching International | 2008

The Patchwork Text: enabling discursive writing and reflective practice on a foundation module in work‐based learning

Roger Dalrymple; Patrick Smith

The Patchwork Text has emerged as one of the most influential assessment innovations in Higher Education in recent years. As an assessment strategy with the potential to engage a wide range of learners, the patchwork has enjoyed a rising profile in the range of teaching, learning and assessment methods developed in the context of the widening participation agenda. The present article reports on the use of the patchwork on a foundation degree programme in work‐based education, delivered for professionals with a role in instruction or training but with no formal teaching qualification. The study explores the student experience of working with the Patchwork Text by drawing upon exit interviews, questionnaire responses and sample ‘patches’ from a group of 19 students training for a teaching qualification. Key themes in the student experience of patchwork are identified and recommendations are offered regarding the use of this assessment form with diverse cohorts of students in the expanding Higher Education sector.


British Journal of Educational Technology | 2014

Culture, role and group work: A social network analysis perspective on an online collaborative course

Karen Stepanyan; Richard Mather; Roger Dalrymple

This paper discusses the patterns of network dynamics within a multicultural online collaborative learning environment. It analyses the interaction of participants (both students and facilitators) within a discussion board that was established as part of a 3-month online collaborative course. The study employs longitudinal probabilistic social network analysis (SNA) to identify the patterns and trends within the network. It conjectures and tests a set of hypotheses concerning the tendencies towards homophily/heterophily and preferential attachment. The paper presents identified interaction network patterns in relation to cultural differences. It also evaluates network dynamics by considering participant roles and group work in the course under study. Results of social network analyses are reported along with measures of statistical confidence in findings. The potential for extending exploratory SNA methods and visualisation techniques in educational research are discussed here.


The Journal of practice teaching & learning | 2013

Surveillance and silence: New considerations in assessing difficult social work placements

Jason Schaub; Roger Dalrymple

Studies to date have highlighted a number of key factors in the assessment of difficult social work placements including the need for adequate professional formation; communication; the changing social work education framework; and the influence of the wider social work context. Factors less widely examined are the perceptions of some practice educators that the assessment of placement students operates in a wider context of surveillance and scrutiny by a range of stakeholders. We argue that such perceptions of surveillance can cause a discursive anxiety for practice educators and can inhibit key developmental conversations between assessor and student. Drawing on interviews with ten practice educators, we examine the tendency of practice educators reflecting on a failed placement to rehearse or even enact those key developmental conversations post hoc, broaching previously unstated or tacit aspects of the placement experience. We argue for the need to create a safe discursive space for these conversations to take place in situ during the challenging placement and suggest that a diminution in perceptions of surveillance and enhanced outcomes for students and practice educators will result.


Journal of Social Work Practice | 2014

Projective Identification and the Fear of Failing: Making Sense of Practice Educators' Experiences of Failing Social Work Students in Practice Learning Settings

Jo Finch; Jason Schaub; Roger Dalrymple

The study focuses on emotional processes that may arise for practice educators when working with struggling or failing students in practice learning settings. Informed by a thematic review of the literature exploring the phenomenon of ‘failing to fail’, the study draws on two UK qualitative studies that highlighted the emotional distress experienced by practice educators when working with a marginal or failing student. The study draws key examples from these prior studies and argues that the psychoanalytic concept of projective identification offers a plausible and illuminating account of the states of mind experienced and reported by some practice educators in the ‘failing to fail’ dilemma. The notion is proffered as a conceptual framework for practice educators to explore and apply to their own practice as a means of making explicit unconscious states of mind, helping to recognise and rationalise these, thus supporting confidence in making appropriate assessment decisions.


Modern Language Review | 2006

Drama, Narrative and Poetry in the 'Canterbury Tales'

Roger Dalrymple; Wendy Harding


Journal of Further and Higher Education | 2014

Characterising Work-Based Learning as a Triadic Learning Endeavour.

Roger Dalrymple; Chris Kemp; Patrick Smith


Archive | 2000

Language and piety in Middle English romance

Roger Dalrymple


Archive | 2004

Middle English Literature

Roger Dalrymple


The Journal of practice teaching & learning | 2013

Surveillance and silence

Jason Schaub; Roger Dalrymple


Archive | 2011

'She didn't seem like a social worker': Practice Educatorsʼ experiences and perceptions of assessing failing social work students on placement

Jason Schaub; Roger Dalrymple

Collaboration


Dive into the Roger Dalrymple's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jason Schaub

Buckinghamshire New University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Smith

Buckinghamshire New University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chris Kemp

Buckinghamshire New University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard Mather

Buckinghamshire New University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge