This page contains resources from the 2018 Early Careers Workshop at the University of Oxford. We will be adding more resources during and after the workshop.
Before the workshop
Pre-workshop task
- Watch the first 24 minutes of Michael Sandal's What's the right thing to do lecture, and reflect on which elements of the lecture that you would consider adopting in your teaching.
- Read this paper from Economic Letters
UK Higher Education
Before attending the workshop, it will be useful to familiarise yourselves with some details of the UK higher education system. We therefore recommend watching the video and reading the articles/resources linked below:
- Glossary of UK Higher Education terms, related to compliance, education structure and professional development.
- Article on the Teaching Excellence Framework, see page 12 of our 2016 newsletter.
Workshop programme and guide
After the workshop
Hints and tips
- Communicating with students
- Virtual Learning Environments
- Case studies: Student engagement
- Producing online clips
Knowing your students
Module Design
Large group teaching
- Presentation
- Handbook chapter: large group teaching
- Case studies: large group teaching
- TED Talk: How to avoid death by Powerpoint
Assessment and feedback
Presence in the classroom
- Access to VOX Academy (access code: UBL536)
- TED Talk
Improving pedagogy and career development
Teaching analytical sessions
Teaching interpretative sessions
- Paper from Economic Letters
- Handout
Games and the media in teaching
- Presentation
- Case studies: Classroom experiments, games and role-play
- Handbook chapter: The use of media and technology in the classroom
- Handbook chapter: Economic classroom experiments
- Instructions: Market game
- Handout: Market game - buyers' record sheet
- Handout: Market game - sellers' record sheet
- Instructions: Production function game
- Instructions and handout: Prisoners' dilemma game
Photos
- Photos from the workshop (please contact Alvin Birdi if you would like high resolution copies)
Swap example to the end. One of the course I teach is public economic analysis for graduates and I use this example for my lecture on distributive justice which includes a detailed analysis of moral schools of thought. As a matter of fact I start with the theory and classification of those schools of thought and I finish with the example to make sure students understand.

Maria Garcia Reyes (not verified) Thu, 05/Apr/2018 - 20:23 Permalink