Master of Information Studies programme postgraduate SME meeting on 23/05/2016
...
Chris King – Senior Administrator
Paul, Jane and Nick
What the programme covers
There is confusion between Master of Information Management (for IT managers) and Master of Information Studies (for librarians and archivists), especially since librarians often call themselves “information managers”. A solution could be to refer to this as 'inforamtion systems management'.
Key messages
Distance learning
Distance learning - Can do whole programme by distance and usually is, this is different from other Victoria courses.
Prospective students repeatedly don't understand this can be done remotely.
[Seems to appeal to audience – most Wellington students choose to study by distance]
Online communities: Blackboard, online conferencing system
[Sounded like it was hard going getting students involved though]
Have established reputation and market in librarian side of things [Gillian as an archivist would like to expand that], businesses with librarians know about course
Only PG programme for librarians [combine with current pitch – PG/Masters needed these days to become a librarian]
Have strong links with professional bodies
Entry and stair-casing
Cert/Dip/Masters
You must have Honours, so many students come in via the Dip
Some also use to test/trial/try-out if they want to complete the full programme, this can come from being uncertain if they are ready for study. Most students start with a Diploma, very uncertain students start in Certificate.
Don’t promote the exit qualification, this is a hidden benefit, don't promote as the University is 'punished' as this is recorded as an incomplete
Bachelor degrees often Arts, Comms, teaching
Some are working (e.g. as library assistants) [How many? If lots then info for people returning to study is more important.]
Often students need to be talked through the OES.
Future: working on a minor for BCom so there is a clear pathway. Otherwise feed from the History and Teaching majors.
Terminology
They use ‘staircasing’
They like the term ‘professional’ - to them this means 'career path to professional roles'
Not post-experience – no experience requirement
FAQs
Can I apply?
Can I cross-credit?
How do I apply/what are steps?
What are the fees?
Can I study part time?
- This is quite common.
- Matters for StudyLink student loans.
- Students don’t realise they can tee up a student loan in case they study without committing to borrowing any money.
Specialisations/structure/what you study
Mostly remote and sometimes in Auckland
Library Science (LIBS) or Archives and Records Management (ARCR) specialisations
LIBS is bigger than ARCR, but ARCR is growing
Students like these
Some do both (takes a bit longer) by doing a few more courses
Don't have to choose the specialisation upfront but the OES might be forcing this and it could be seen as a disincentive
They increase employability
Lots of emails as students are remote.
Interaction: Blackboard, conference calls, email list, some attend classes (very few - 2 students in class and 23 working online)
Current numbers
50-70 students per year
c. 203 across all programmes
[Biggest PG programme]
Wide range of ages.
Mixture of people with experience and people straight from the degree.
Consider:
- Writing a clarification note that can go on either page, explaining the difference between Master of Information Management and Master of Information Studies
- Thinking about whether we need standard content block or note about Studylink
- Checking how many students have been/are now working