Welsh PDP Newsletter Issue 4 4 | Page 4

Students as Partners: Researching Objects at Cardiff Story Museum – Aimee Ward, University of South Wales In November 2012, the HEA Students as Partners work strand defined “students as partners” as: “Involvement of both parties at all stages and levels of decision making; Students having an active part in their experience rather than being passive learners; Advising each other as equals; Students getting involved and making a difference” (http:/www.heacademy.ac.uk/ wales/students-as-partners, accessed 5 June 2014). A research project recently conducted by first year Interior Design students at the University of South Wales (USW) in conjunction with Cardiff Story Museum (CSM) exemplifies this definition, as students partnered with each other and the museum. Students Partner with Each Other Throughout the project, students worked as equals, cooperating at each phase. They created their own group contracts which outlined their expectations of each other and established a fair workload distribution. Students selected and researched an object from the museum collection together. They co-wrote and co-edited one essay on their findings. This was intended to develop transferable interpersonal skills, as well as research and analysis, more typically associated with essays. It also encouraged a continual process of peer review, not to mark the work, but rather to produce it. Students were also asked to reflect upon their experience of the project at key stages – upon introduction, at the mid-point, just before the hand-in, and a week after the hand-in. Analysis of these reflections shows that their experience of the project often centred on their experience of working as partners. At first, students expressed mixed reactions toward this but gave more distinctly positive or nega- tive reactions as the project progressed (see figure). Dissatisfaction with group work peaked just before the hand-in, but, perhaps surprisingly, a week after the hand-in, 90% of students expressed a positive reaction toward working as partners, 10% were neutral, and 0% reported a negative reaction. This indicates that, despite any stresses encountered in the process, in hindsight, students had an overwhelmingly positive reaction toward working as partners. Students Partner with Cardiff Story Museum CSM was established in 2004 and tells the story (ies) of Cardiff through objects, “…giving the local community a sense of place, an introduction to their history, and a place to record, share and preserve memories” (http:// www.cardiffmuseum.com/, accessed 5 June 2014). The CSM collection in- cludes over 3,000 objects that were donated to the museum (ibid.), many of which require further research – including those which students selected. This was a challenge for students (as noted in their reflections) but one to which they rose. After the hand-in, studen