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Sessional Lecturer - Garden Design

Sessional Lecturer - Garden Design

Sparsholt College

Hampshire

  • £21,368 - £32,563 pro rata
  • Expired
Salary:
(dependent upon skills, qualifications, and experience)
Job type:
Part Time, Permanent
Apply by:
25 October 2021

Job overview

£21,368 - £32,563 pro rata (dependent upon skills, qualifications, and experience)


The role would ideally suit a practicing garden designer who could bring practical and up to the minute skills to bear in the teaching of the Award in Garden Design and Diploma in Garden Design programmes at Sparsholt College Hampshire, a leading centre of Garden Design working with members of the Society for Garden Designers.


Whilst there is no guarantee of hours it is envisaged that the teaching requirement will be two days a week, the specific days of the week being fixed in advance. The teaching year generally runs from the end of September to June with about 32 weeks of teaching commitment each year.


Teaching will encompass the teaching of Garden Design from basic graphic techniques on paper to teaching IT based skills such as Publisher, SketchUp and Vectorworks 2021, making high levels of proficiency in these applications, especially Vectorworks, an essential requirement for the job.  


Through teaching and workshops the appointed lecturer will be expected to teach design and enable students to produce designs by completing the full process of site assessment, site analysis, client interaction, the creation of concept plans and the production of master plans plus the full panoply of associated documentation and drawings by hand or by using the computer.  A particular need would be to teach a Contracts and Tendering unit, support learners with their Master Design Unit (Vectorworks skills required) and, teach Marketing strategies relatable to Garden Design Business.


The Units to be taught are well embedded and typically the students complete several assignments per Unit which must be marked with developmental feedback provided.   The existing Lecturer who is moving out of the area has developed teaching materials which would provide the basis for a new incumbent to use.  


Possession of a level 3 teaching qualification or the willingness to attain is desirable. 


Closing Date: 25 October 2021


College Benefits


• Eligibility to join the Teachers’ Pension Scheme (a defined benefit pension scheme)

• Death benefit grant of 3 X salary if in the pension scheme

• Free on- site parking

• Car Share Scheme

• Occupational Sick Pay Scheme

• Occupational Maternity Pay Scheme

• Flexible Working Policy

• Holiday entitlement of 42 days plus bank holidays (pro-rated for part-time staff)

• Access to an Employee Assistance Scheme

• Free Library membership

• On-site gym at the Sparsholt campus (membership £100 per year)

• Gym classes on the Sparsholt campus

• Facility to purchase Sparsholt produce including: plants, fruit & vegetables, fish and game.

• Access to discounted hair treatments at the Andover campus

• Ability to access a range of CPD events and support with undertaking professional qualifications.

• Various food outlets and eateries offering good value food and drink at competitive prices


There is a nursery on the Sparsholt campus operated by a commercial provider


Attached documents

About Sparsholt College

+44 1962 776441

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What’s in a name? 

Sparsholt College takes its name from the parish of Sparsholt in which it is situated and the neighbouring village. 

Pronounced “Spar - sholt” (not “Spars - holt”), the name derives from two old English words: 

Spar - a straight timber for making spears,roof timbers, etc. 

Holt - an area of managed woodland. 

Thus, rural industry, reflected in the local name, continues to be taught and promoted in its modern forms by the 
College today. 

History 

Hampshire County Council was the fourth in England to commit bricks and mortar to agricultural training and the county’s first Farm School was opened in November 1899 at Old Basing, near Basingstoke.
Its aim was “to provide instruction in the science and practice of agriculture and gardening, but particularly to make the practical side approach as nearly as possible to business conditions, consistent with educational purposes and to provide a centre for domestic work in the county”. 

In September 1914, the Farm School was transferred to the 400 acre (158 ha) Westley Farm at Sparsholt, specially bought for the purpose by the County Council. Staff and students made do with huts, barns and Westley farmhouse until 1926, when a new College building (now the administrative centre) was opened.
Numbers of students remained in the 30’s and 40’s for many years, with the development of farm and horticultural buildings in line with modern practice of the times. 

Between 1970 and the present time, other College educational buildings have developed to accommodate a rapid growth in student numbers as the breadth of land-based subjects was expanded and the depth of academic progression reflected up to six levels of course qualifications. 

Higher Education at the College began in 1983, with the introduction of an HND in Fishery Studies. Since then, HE courses have multiplied. The College is directly funded for its Higher Education courses, not as a subsidiary of university-based courses. 

In common with all colleges of further education, the College became independent from the County Council in 1993 and is now funded, for FE courses, from central government through the Learning and Skills Council. 

The present day College has excellent teaching and training facilities both for theory and practical classes. A superb library and four computer suites reflects the need to keep pace with new methods of learning, while recent construction of superb new training resources (see individual sections’ facilities) keep pace with rapidly developing industrial technology. 

More than 1,400 full-time students and 6,000 part-time enrolments have increased the demand for new teaching space and, to this end, the Sainsbury building, incorporating classrooms, lecture theatre and laboratories was opened in December 2000. 

Many students use the highly developed residential, social and sports facilities at the College (over 400 single study rooms on site most of which are en-suite). Over its 100+ year history, Sparsholt College has become one of the largest colleges of its kind in the country and, with highly rated educational standards, one of the best regarded.
As with all Further and Higher Education institutions, Sparsholt College is subject to government standards and inspection processes. 

Graded results from the last three inspection reports and recently awarded Centre of Vocational Excellence (CoVE) status show the College to be in the highest league and should give every prospective student full confidence in the quality of their course provision. 

A reputation alone does not “make” a college, nor do familiar buildings and top class resources; it is also the commitment of a dedicated staff and the motivation of the students which contribute to that “something special” which is Sparsholt College.
 

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Applications closed