Category: Education

Roundtable 4 – Safeguarding students, digital learning journeys and wellbeing in pandemic times

Covid-19 has accelerated and amplified, digital transformation in universities. With universities shifting their entire workforce and ways of working from on-campus to home to enable remote teaching, it’s had a significant impact on student wellbeing, and with that, an unprecedented change in roles and responsibilities of the educator.

In this session, we discuss how technology providers, educators and stakeholders can closely work with institutions to combine technological innovation that delivers healthier and safer digital learning spaces.Covid-19 has accelerated and amplified, digital transformation in universities. With universities shifting their entire workforce and ways of working from on-campus to home to enable remote teaching, it’s had a significant impact on student wellbeing, and with that, an unprecedented change in roles and responsibilities of the educator.

We did a pulse survey and we found an enormous number of students, about 60% were, registering that they had some kind of digital poverty implications.

Jackie Potter, Professor of HE Learning, Oxford Brookes University

Watch the roundtable discussion

In the UKTCG’s forth roundtable event, a panel of experts gather higher education and university organisations to discuss best practises, solutions and strategies to develop better service provisions.

Panel speakers

  1. Peter Nikoletatos, Education Industry Manager, TechnologyOne 
  2. Ben Shorrock, UKTCG Steering Board
  3. Jackie Potter, Professor of HE Learning, Oxford Brookes University 
  4. James Gardiner, Associate of Innovation, University of East Anglia 
  5. Laura Stevens, Centre Director, Future Space University West of England 
  6. Siobain Hone, Graduate Enterprise Manager, University of Bath and SETsquared Student Enterprise Practice Group Chair (SETsquared is the enterprise collaboration of the Universities of Bath, Bristol, Surrey, Southampton and Exeter) 
  7. Simon Chutter, Sussex Innovation & Education
  8. Therese Reinheimer-Jones, Associate Director Student Engagement and Achievement, University of Sussex 
  9. Robyn Guillaume-Smith, Programme Manager, Mentally Healthy Universities Programme, MIND

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Accelerating Regional Recovery

As a collective group of individual organisations, the UK Tech Cluster Group (UKTCG) assembled over a year ago to connect, share and grow the communities we serve. While we regularly meet to discuss regional technology issues and share opportunities, the impact of COVID-19 on the UK tech sector has seen us work even more closely together. As the established voice of grassroots tech, we are prioritising efforts to accelerate the rate of regional recovery following widespread economic disruption caused by the pandemic.  

An independent voice 

The UKTCG represents geographical clusters of technology and digital businesses across the UK. Independent from government and self-financing, our member organisations include the entire spectrum of businesses that make up the UK’s tech economy – not just the big players. Despite the prominence of a few large corporations and so called “unicorns”, the UK’s tech economy is in fact largely skewed towards small businesses. This ecosystem naturally revolves around local clusters, usually with one or more universities involved as well. These regional ecosystems need to be understood and nurtured at a regional level.  

UKTCG’s member organisations are focused on the entirety of their local tech ecosystems, not just start-ups, scale-ups or specific vertical sectors. We support regional economic growth in both the tech sector and the wider economy. 

The organisations that make up the UKTCG are all firmly rooted in their communities and are uniquely placed to provide in-depth, granular local and regional intelligence in a way that is impossible (or very time consuming and expensive) to do at a national level. 

The UKTCG member organisations are all run by people who have years of experience of working within their local tech economy – we understand the economic and political landscape of our regions and in turn we are extremely well connected and are trusted as intermediaries. 

The group has grown out of a natural tendency of the existing regional cluster organisations to collaborate and share information and resources. Together, our robust and trusted network has an extensive reach across the UK which we believe can be harnessed to accelerate ecosystem recovery following the disruption caused by COVID-19.  

Regional intelligence and regional response 

Since early March the group has been gathering intelligence in our respective regions to understand how both companies and our regional ecosystems have been affected by COVID-19. As well as consulting with government on how to strategically combat sector pain points at large, we have been working at a grassroots level day in, day out to provide companies with immediate relief to individual problems.  

We are uniquely placed to best solve the challenges the sector faces at regional level, given our unrivalled local knowledge, current business support activity and connections across regional ecosystems.  

We therefore hope we can work with the government as a key delivery partner to quickly bring relief to our UK regions. Only by prioritising regional recovery will we see our much-coveted tech sector bounce back at large from the pandemic.  

The UK Tech Cluster Group is in a unique position to provide the voice of the industry at a truly national level and to advise the Government on providing the right support, at the right time to our industry to both survive and thrive moving forward.  

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How has your tech business been impacted by events in 2020?

Share your insights in the national Digital Skills Audit

The UK Tech Cluster Group is undertaking a national Digital Skills Audit in partnership with the Institute of Coding to understand the effect of the pandemic on the technology sector and employment across the regions of the UK. We are looking for businesses and employees to fill in the survey and share their insights and views. If you are an employer or work in a technology business, please help us to understand what is happening on the ground in your business and how we can support you over the next few years.

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