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Module Description |
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The ability to communicate and employ other key skills effectively is of paramount importance, not just to scientists and engineers but to every professional. The programmes of the School of Physics reflect this and so students will find themselves needing effective communication skills to complete many of their modules. After graduation, this need will intensify and communication and key skills could well prove decisive in obtaining a job and in performing that job well. The Communication and Key Skills module addresses this need and aims to provide all undergraduates with a common grounding in oral, written and inter-personal skills by the end of their first year.
At the end of the course, candidates should be able to: keep a neat, accurate laboratory notebook describing a simple physics investigation; successfully use the notebook as the basis for writing a condensed formal report; prepare an impressive CV and letter of application when job-hunting; critically read and understand a short scientific article and then deliver a concise, intelligible talk summarising its contents; operate effectively within a team in order to complete a major problem solving exercise.
Accurate and objective record keeping; oral and written presentational skills; personal presentation skills; the ability to work in small and large teams i.e. to organise others and to delegate, to accept the direction of others; critical reading and summarising of a report or other substantive document.
The 3 day course is activity-based. Each new activity is introduced by a course lecturer, who briefly describes the task and its relevance to the course. The activity is completed and then followed by a debriefing session in which the group's (or individual's, where appropriate) performance is reviewed.
Completion of a simple experiment and writing a condensed report on it, delivery of a 10 minute talk to an audience, production of a plan to solve the energy requirements of a fictitious island republic.
This 'module' is a component of the Stage 1 laboratory modules PHY1027 and PHY1030. Attendance and satisfactory performance is mandatory, and enables presentational marks to be obtained in subsequent modules of the candidate's programme.
DAY 1
DAY 2
DAY 3
This module is supported by its own set of exercises. Students are able to monitor their own progress by noting their performance in the exercises. Students who do not complete the course satisfactorily will be informed as such and required to re-take the course in the following academic year. Students with specific problems with the course should approach one of the instructors.
The module will be evaluated using information gathered via the student representation mechanisms, the staff peer appraisal scheme, and measures of student attainment based on summative assessment.