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Keep Learning
Keep Learning
Author: dle\asyska
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© Image credit: "Conversation" by Peter Nijenhuis is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
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Keep Learning is a weekly podcast for students who like to be part of conversations about studying, writing, and making the most of university.
Each episode deals with a specific topic related to the issues you raise with us and offers short and sharp tips to help you work towards your goals. And it also brings us all together.
Each episode deals with a specific topic related to the issues you raise with us and offers short and sharp tips to help you work towards your goals. And it also brings us all together.
16 Episodes
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Whether you're getting ready for university or thinking about brushing up on your academic study skills, this episode will help you to consider if Stella Cottrell's The Study Skills Handbook is for you. The book itself is a classic - students have been using it for over 20 years now and here we're reviewing the 5th edition (2019). Our verdict is positive. We believe that the book's offer is versatile enough to satisfy most students' needs and preferences. We'd love to hear what you thought about it! Whether you find the book helpful or not, you might be quite surprised at Matthew's choice of object to represent it...
In this episode we are reflecting on the past year and its challenges. It has been a difficult, often painful and demoralising, time for many of us. And yet, we seem to have come out stronger. We adapted. We experimented. We made mistakes and failed, over and over. But every time we took a deep breath and tried again. And as a result we all learnt so much on the way. How will we build on this experience and what will we keep and want to develop further, to make ourselves and our learning even better?
Creating a study space that you love and feel positive about may change how you feel about studying in general. In this episode we discuss and share some of the tips to be considered when reviewing what works for you. Distractions, noise, comfort - these words mean different things to different people and they also change over time, so personalising your space and making it your own is a constant work in progress. But, make sure that you not only enjoy it but also ;eave it behind sometimes!
A special episode with a History graduate Josh Manning! After explaining what peer learning means to him and how it impacted on his university experience, Josh shares with us his journey from being a student to becoming a graduate intern. Then we begin bombarding him with the different nuggets of wisdom shared online and play the game of 'True/Untrue: Elaborate!' Finally, Josh presents his special object, which is not only beautiful but also very symbolic. Tune in to find out why he thinks the university experience can be likened to playing chess!
We started this episode by emphasising the important distinction between two associated words: 'criticism' vs. 'critique' and how they feature in critical thinking. But then, our special object - a light bulb - reminded us of the dark underbelly of critical thinking: conspiracy theories. Why is it more attractive to believe that thousands of people conspired to fabricate moon landings than that they actually happened, and what does it have to do with critical thinking? Tune in to find out.
Who would have thought that a Mesolithic ax could be an apt metaphor for peer learning? Our Peer Learning Specialist, Dianne Evans, who is also a secret archaeologist, shows us that we can think about collaborating in very creative ways. We talk about the Writing Cafe and how it helps students develop as writers, and we reflect on the amazing adaptability and resilience demonstrated by writing mentors, PALS leaders and all the students who have had to work in this time of profound change. Hats off to you, troopers!
Imposter syndrome is a feeling well known not only to both of us, but also to many students and colleagues we talk to. It is a phenomenon that has been defined and re-defined in multiple ways. While originally described as experienced by women who despite their high accomplishments and successes 'persist in believing that they are really not bright and have fooled anyone who thinks otherwise' (Clance and Imes, 1978), it now seems to refer to anything from the feeling of inadequacy that is a result of systemic oppression to the simple disbelief and doubt in one's own ability, or even to the experience of being an outsider entering or inhabiting a new social/cultural environment. We decided we can't really solve it for anyone but recognising its existence and facing it may be a good start.
Thinking about anxiety made Matthew and me a bit anxious at first but then talking about it was like slaying the dragon. For is there a better way of looking at intrusive thoughts than as ‘normal brain farts’ (Jonathan Abramovitz)? Or blowing anxiety like bubbles and watching them gently pop and fly away? Our special guest, Alex Way, shares her insights into how to ‘embrace the suck’ (Brené Brown) and learn to live with and tolerate anxiety in our daily life and studies.
Feedback may be considered ‘the breakfast of champions’ but it’s seldom either offered or received with enthusiasm. Some dread it, Matthew loves it, some see it as criticism and others as a form of ‘course correct’. However we engage with it, feedback serves as a mirror, revealing as much about the person who’s given feedback as about the one giving it. But since it’s all about giving… let’s indeed look at feedback as a gift.
Academic posters are a very specific form of communication, which attempts to balance text and visuals to convey an idea or research as effectively and attractively as possible. In this conversation, we pick the brains of our colleague, Dr Jason Truscott, who has a lot to say about why we use posters in academia and what best practices in this genre are. But what do they have to do with lighthouses? Tune in to find out.
Writer's block was first defined by a psychoanalyst, so it naturally has some kinky roots. But it affects so many people that thousands of writers, scholars and researchers have tried to find not only explanations of its power but also strategies to cope with it. The good news is - it's completely treatable.
In this podcast we share some of the well tested tips for how to overcome writer's block, chief among which is the golden nugget from Marcus Aurelius: 'What stands in the way becomes the way'.
In this conversation we talk with our special guest, Christie Pritchard, about learning spaces, the ways we learn and respond to learning, and the emotional aspects of learning.
The special object Christie brought with her is... a bottle of sea glass. These man-made and nature-shaped little gems that often find themselves into artisan jewellery symbolise what she sees as kernels of knowledge that constitute the learning process. Every bit of learning is learning and every bit of growth is growth, with no end goal to reach. So what happens when the bottle gets full?
This podcast is all about reading and demystifying reader's block.
Our object of the week is... a modest pencil. This simple tool may surprise you with its multiple uses as well as literal and figurative meanings. Indispensable in active reading, it could just become your next best friend! At least, it is definitely Matthew's.
Finding it hard to get back on track with your studies? In this conversation we share a few tried and tested strategies to dispel that January gloom and get excited about your course again.
In this video we talk about the myths surrounding dissertation writing and how to think differently about it. And our special object is... a cactus!
Due to their ability to survive in the harshest conditions, cacti have come to symbolise fighters: their tenacity and strength in the face of challenge and adversity. But cactus is also a symbol of unconditional love - the kind of love that endures everything.
Dissertations are a bit like that - they are products of love that also require endurance, commitment and perseverance.



