Australian Learning and Teaching Council - Initiatives & Grants

The Australian Learning and Teaching Council was established to promote and advance learning and teaching in Australian higher education. Two of its initiatives to achieve this goal are the Promoting Excellence Initiative and the Grants Scheme.

Promoting Excellence Initiative

The Promoting Excellence Initiative provides one-off funding to build and strengthen the capacity of institutions and individuals to respond to the programmes of the Carrick Institute.

The initiative is designed to strengthen the quality of applications and nominations under the various programmes, to assist institutions to use the programmes to support their own priorities in ways that promote quality and diversity, and to maximise the opportunities for effective dissemination and adoption of innovation and good practice.

For further information about the Promoting Excellence Initiative please see the ALTC's website.

2008 Scheme

 

Project Leader Project Title   Documents
Professor Keith Trigwell

 Enhancement of reflective scholarly teaching in communities of inquiry

 

 

Grants Scheme

The Programs that are part of the Grants Scheme are:

Competitive Grants Scheme

2008 Program

Projects funded with the University of Sydney as the lead institution:

 

Project Leader Project Title   Documents
 Dr Patricia McCabe  Communciating effectively with Indigenous people: A resource for health science students to learn culturally safe interviewing practices  

2007 Program

Projects funded with the University of Sydney as the lead institution

Project Leader Project Title   Documents
Dr Mary-Jane Mahoney Guest lecturers in disability education: investigating strategic use of communication technologies for specialist input  

 Dr Charlotte

Taylor

 Using threshold concepts to generate a new understanding of teaching and learning biology  

Projects funded with the University of Sydney as a partner institution

 

Lead Institution  University of Sydney Staff Member  Project Title Documents 
Charles Sturt University   on-line student supervision training - accessible and cooperative learning in social work  
University of Canberra  Dr Adam Bridgeman A cross-disciplinary approach to language support for first year students in the science disciplines  
University of the Sunshine Coast Associate Professor Mark Freeman The Whole University Experience: retention, attrition, learning and personal support interventions during undergraduate Business studies  
University of Technology Sydney   Strategies and approaches to teaching and learning cross cultures  

Priority Projects Scheme

2008 Scheme

Projects funded with the University of Sydney as the lead institution:

Project Leader Project Title Document
Associate Professor Joseph Davis Curriculum renewal in postgraduate information technology education: a response to growing service sector dominance  
Dr Sue McAllister Establishing infrastructure and collaborative processes for cross-institutional benchmarking of student clinical performances in speech pathology  
 

Projects funded with the University of Sydney as a partner institution:

 

Partner Institution University of Sydney Staff Member Project Title Document
University of Technology   Facilitating staff and student engagement with graduate attribute development, assessment and standards in business faculties  
Murdoch University Dr John Baguley Curriculum development and assessment of methods to enhance communication and life skills in veterinary students  

Discipline Based Initiatives Scheme

2007 Scheme

The University of Sydney has the following successful grants:

Project Leader

Project Title

Documents 

Dr Simon Barrie  Integration and Assessment of Graduate Attributes in Curriculum  
A/Prof Mark Freeman Business as usual  
A/Prof Jill Thistlethwaite Developing interprofessional learning and practice capabilities within the Australian health workforce  
Dr Leanne Togher Facilitating the integration of evidence based practice into speech pathology curricula: a scoping study to examine the congruence between academic curricula and work based needs