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In the Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering, students have undergraduate degrees in engineering, science, medical science or allied health. A student with a background in pharmacy could find herself trying to keep up with a bio-mechanics class!

This unusual student demographic is what prompted Lauren Kark to develop a comprehensive online content support system to ensure that her students have the appropriate prior knowledge to succeed in her classĀ ā€œMechanics of the Human Bodyā€.Ģż

By cleverly recycling online modules developed for a lower level course that is taught in flipped mode, Lauren directs students to the content required to properly understand new concepts being covered in theĀ higher-levelĀ course.Ā 

ā€œItā€™s important to link to very specific resources,ā€ Lauren says, ā€œYou canā€™t just link to the whole course. It has to be specific modules, resources or external links that will help them get through the topic at hand.ā€Ā 

By hyperlinking to modules that have beenĀ duplicated inĀ a self-enrol course, students can move seamlessly between the Moodle Course and the assumed knowledge modules.

Since Lauren started using these online modules for prior knowledge refreshers, other academicsĀ in Biomedical EngineeringĀ have also started linking to them to support their own courses. There is tremendous potential for more sharing of online modules between courses and even schools ā€“ particularly for Biomedical Engineering, where a student might need a detailed understanding of Chemical, Electrical, Mechanical or Software Engineering in order to successfully navigate their graduate level Biomedical Engineering course.Ā 

ā€œStudents without a mechanical engineering background have found the modules very helpful and they say thatĀ it hasĀ given them more confidence,ā€ says Lauren, ā€œIt also means that inĀ classĀ I donā€™t have toĀ explain a fundamental conceptĀ that some of the students are already comfortable withĀ ā€“ I can just refer them to the online module and keep moving.ā€Ā 

Another bonus is that byĀ referring backĀ to a past course, students can consciously or subconsciously acknowledge that the information they learnt in earlier years does actually link to their learning in later years, and, by inference, it will link to the knowledge they need for their future careers.Ā 

One standout characteristic of Lauren as a teacher is her playfulness and her willingness to let go of some control. This is demonstrated by one of the assignments inĀ Mechanics of the Human Body, which is essentially a gallery of failures! As part of the course, students need to create simulations of human movement, based on data collected in the lab. Itā€™s very easy to misuse the software, resulting in disastrous, and sometimes hilarious, simulation fails.Ā Ā 

Lauren has one assignment where students postĀ in Moodle simulation mistakes theyā€™ve madeĀ ā€“ she kicks it off by posting one of her own ā€“ thereby making failure acceptable, building resilience and creating a joyful and interactive learning environment for the students. The assignment isnā€™t just silliness though; the students explain what they did wrong to create the disaster,Ā and in the processĀ demonstrate that they have learnt something.Ā If they havenā€™t made a genuine mistake, the students can create a deliberate failure, which encourages them to explore the software further for fun.