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  1. Disciplinary disjunctures in the transition from secondary school to higher education study of modern foreign languages: A case study from the UK.Angela Gallagher-Brett & John Canning - 2011 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 10 (2):171-188.
    Discussions of student transition from the study of languages in UK high schools to the study of languages at university usually focus on the vertical transition, comparing the differences in curricula and approach to languages taken in each sector. Whilst acknowledging that this aspect of the student transition is important, this article explores the transition in a broader disciplinary context by raising questions about how other subjects students have studied before entering higher education may help or hinder the transition. As (...)
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  • The staff–student co-design of an online resource for pre-arrival arts and humanities students.Kathryn Woods & Damien Homer - 2021 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 21 (2):176-197.
    Arts and Humanities in Higher Education, Volume 21, Issue 2, Page 176-197, April 2022. Successful induction has been evidenced to strengthen students’ learning, engagement and feelings of belonging. Technology offers opportunities for enhancing the student induction experience, especially pre-arrival, but has been under-utilised. This article provides an evaluation of an online induction learning resource for pre-arrival students in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Warwick in 2019. There will be particular focus on the method of co-designing the resource (...)
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  • Understanding the Transition from School to University in Music and Music Technology.Julia Winterson & Michael Russ - 2009 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 8 (3):339-354.
    This article considers the transition from school to university in Music and Music Technology, continuing the discussion of transitional issues which began in Volume 2 of Arts and Humanities in Higher Education. The focus of the article is a survey of undergraduates, examining areas that were key to their first experience of studying for a degree, such as entry qualifications, course choice, career prospects, difficult aspects of the course and aspects they felt well-prepared for. These data were supplemented with teacher (...)
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  • Great Expectations: Sixth-formers' perceptions of teaching and learning in degree-level English.Karen Smith & Chris Hopkins - 2005 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 4 (3):304-318.
    This article feeds into the discussion of transitional issues begun in Volume 2 of Arts and Humanities in Higher Education. It draws on research into A-level students' expectations of university English and how these compare to the experiences of first-year students, university lecturers and A-level teachers. The data presented are drawn from innovative focus group sessions which gave pre-higher education and first-year university students a range of exercises to encourage them to focus on their expectations and experiences of studying English. (...)
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  • The Transition from School to University: Who prepares whom, when, and how?Michael Marland - 2003 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 2 (2):201-211.
    This article reviews the five contributions to the Forum on ‘Access and transition to higher education’ in Volume 2 of this journal, and considers the needs of all potential undergraduate students–especially those from backgrounds from which students have rarely come, including the most disadvantaged. The article reflects upon secondary school curricula and pastoral care provision, and also on the need for more specific tuition in key skills in the courses offered by universities.
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  • University Challenge: Dynamic subject knowledge, teaching and transition.Andrew Green - 2006 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 5 (3):275-290.
    This article addresses the complex issue of lecturers’ subject knowledge and teaching. It explores the subject knowledge models of Banks, Leach and Moon and of Grossman, Wilson and Shulman . The article then delineates how these can be used in the development of robust teaching models of the subject. It also suggests how these models can be used to develop a scholarly view of teaching and how this may impact on student transition and development. The article emerges from a study (...)
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