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Featured researches published by Russell Rimmer.


Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education | 2007

Load and academic attainment in two business schools

Mike Donnelly; Darcy McCormack; Russell Rimmer

In this paper the relationship between academic load (the number of modules attempted) and academic performance is investigated in a Scottish and an Australian university. An engagement approach to academic integration is employed, in which there is feedback between load and performance, and in which there is scope for diminishing returns to the study of additional modules once loads become high. The results indicate that full‐time students reduced module load in response to information on academic performance. At the Scottish business school many non‐traditional students had taken up opportunities to enter university under the UK governments drive to widen participation. In that school load reduction was undertaken at twice the rate of the Australian business school. For women, reductions from full‐time loads by one or two modules appear rational in that better average marks result. There are indications that status as a widening participation entrant, the learning and assessment environment, the funding regime and rest‐of‐life demands have influences on load reduction and on academic performance.


BMC Medical Education | 2015

Private schooling and admission to medicine: a case study using matched samples and causal mediation analysis

M. Houston; Michael Osborne; Russell Rimmer

BackgroundAre applicants from private schools advantaged in gaining entry to degrees in medicine? This is of international significance and there is continuing research in a range of nations including the USA, the UK, other English-speaking nations and EU countries. Our purpose is to seek causal explanations using a quantitative approach.MethodsWe took as a case study admission to medicine in the UK and drew samples of those who attended private schools and those who did not, with sample members matched on background characteristics. Unlike other studies in the area, causal mediation analysis was applied to resolve private-school influence into direct and indirect effects. In so doing, we sought a benchmark, using data for 2004, against which the effectiveness of policies adopted over the past decade can be assessed.ResultsPrivate schooling improved admission likelihood. This did not occur indirectly via the effect of school type on academic performance; but arose directly from attending private schools. A sensitivity analysis suggests this finding is unlikely to be eliminated by the influence of an unobserved variable.ConclusionsAcademic excellence is not a certain pathway into medicine at university; yet applying with good grades after attending private school is more certain. The results of our paper differ from those in an earlier observational study and find support in a later study. Consideration of sources of difference from the earlier observational study suggest the causal approach offers substantial benefits and the consequences in the causal study for gender, ethnicity, socio-economic classification and region of residence provide a benchmark for assessing policy in future research.


Nurse Education Today | 2014

Review of the integrity of a Self Administered Motivational Instrument

Tim Duffy; Marie McCaig; Amanda McGrandles; Russell Rimmer; Colin R. Martin

BACKGROUND Motivational interviewing (MI) was developed by Miller and Rollnick as an evidence-based counselling approach for use in supporting people with alcohol problems. Over the years the principles and spirit of MI have been reviewed and fine-tuned and the approach has been embraced by practitioners worldwide and across fields. Since 2001 a number of instruments have been designed to evaluate the fidelity of MI practice. For the purposes of this study, one such instrument is used to assess a self-administered motivational instrument, known as the SAMI, which takes the interviewer role. OBJECTIVES The SAMI is evaluated against the MITI 3.1.1, which is designed to assess the extent to which MI interventions perform on five global dimensions. These are evocation, collaboration, autonomy/support, direction and empathy. DESIGN The SAMI was assembled based on the principles and spirit of MI, problem solving and goal-setting. The targeted behaviour changes were student learning styles and approaches to study. SETTING The SAMI was distributed, completed and submitted electronically via the university virtual learning environment. PARTICIPANTS Thirty three mature students of a university which delivered online nursing programme were invited to complete the SAMI. Of these, 25 submitted completed transcripts. METHODS Transcripts of a sample of six completed SAMIs were assessed by a group of teachers and researchers with experience in the use and evaluation of MI, using five-point Likert scales to assess the SAMI on the five dimensions. RESULTS Overall, an average score exceeding 4.5 was attained across the five dimensions. Conventionally, such a score is recognised as competency in MI. However, on one dimension (empathy), the rating was three. CONCLUSIONS This current research confirms that global principles have been observed in the online delivery of MI using the SAMI to probe approaches to study.


Policing-an International Journal of Police Strategies & Management | 2006

Assessing the quality of police services using SERVQUAL

Mike Donnelly; Neil J. Kerr; Russell Rimmer; Edward Shiu


Tourism Management | 2014

Spiritual attitudes and visitor motivations at the Beltane Fire Festival, Edinburgh

Catherine M Matheson; Russell Rimmer; Ross Tinsley


Higher Education | 2007

Wider Access and Progression among Full-Time Students.

M. Houston; H. Knox; Russell Rimmer


The International Journal of Management Education | 2005

A comparison of academic outcomes for business and other students

M. Houston; Russell Rimmer


Archive | 2002

Surviving First Year

John Foster; M. Houston; H. Knox; Russell Rimmer


Reflecting education | 2009

A review of the positive impact of a Self Administered Motivational Instrument (SAMI) on Deep and Strategic approaches to study and on academic attainment

Tim Duffy; Russell Rimmer


Archive | 2015

Adult access to higher education: an international overview

Michael Osborne; Russell Rimmer; M. Houston

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Mike Donnelly

Queen Margaret University

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Cathy Matheson

Queen Margaret University

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Colin R. Martin

Buckinghamshire New University

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