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Peter is a university lecturer in physiological sciences. He gives roughly 15 lectures a year, runs practical classes, and supervises undergraduates, and the occasional graduate. He is also a tutor in physiological sciences at his college, where he sees 12 undergraduate pre-clinical students at least once a week throughout their first year and very frequently thereafter. He runs the non-medical physiological sciences course and teaches both medical and non-medical students.

Peter uses ICTs to aid in the administration of his teaching. He uses a departmental tutorial booking system which permits students to book slots and download relevant materials for the tutorial (e.g. reading lists). He finds the system quite ‘clumsy,’ taking a couple of hours to enter a single term’s tutorials, which he considers ‘too long’. He says ‘it’s quite tricky, more academics would use it in our department division if it was easier to enter the reading lists.’ He uses word-processing software to write all of his college reports and answers a lot of e-mail queries from students.

Peter creates his reading lists in Word and uses a DOS-based program to store his references. He annotates his reading lists to indicate to students which readings are essential. He sporadically updates them and often adds more up-to-date references from an online medical bibliography called Medline a few days before the associated lecture. He finds linking directly to the online databases from reading lists unproductive as it stops the students learning how to use the online databases for themselves.

Peter describes the teaching of physiological sciences as primarily the teaching of facts:

Peter feels that ICT could pose as a solution to easing this burden, making it ‘more fun.’ Peter takes this concept into his lectures and uses power-points containing humorous cartoons included to ‘liven up’ the lecture, saying that ‘it makes them remember the boring stuff.’

Peter expresses that he strongly believes in active teaching - ‘getting them involved and doing things,’ although he considers this ‘not very IT-ish.’ He says that his lectures usually have a high degree of interactivity incorporating what he calls a ‘Quizzy’ (an on-the-spot mini-quiz), and debates. Peter’s perceptions of the benefits of active teaching relate to his own learning experiences:

When considering how ICTs could be used for active teaching Peter says that ‘in terms of active teaching and interaction, well I guess that the degree of contact time the students get exposed to here reduces the need for things like discussion boards and online quizzes; they get all that from their tutorials’.

Peter has developed two major ICT projects. The first project was a course evaluation system to collect feedback from the students. Previously the system course evaluations had been done by hand:

Equally unsatisfied with the functionality in the institutional VLE (‘It took four days and was horrendous’), Peter decided to create a new system. With previous programming experience and ‘wanting to learn a higher level Windows-based language’ he developed the course evaluation tool as a project to teach himself a new programming language. The tool has been used to collect feedback a number of times and Peter believes that the course feedback has improved as a result:

The second project Peter developed was a simulation called ‘TeaLeaves’. The simulation is designed to encourage students to look ‘creatively’ at respiratory and cardiovascular traces obtained from human subjects exercising on a bicycle, and to ask and answer physiological questions about relationships between the behaviour of the lungs and heart. It is called TeaLeaves because it is intended to help students see things that may (and occasionally may not) be there, and to test predictions about what they see. Like the course evaluation project, TeaLeaves addresses a specific problem face by Peter in his teaching:

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