Professor Emily Banks
Higher Degree students are an increasingly important cohort in Australian Higher Education. Teaching these students is fundamentally different to teaching undergraduate students. This cohort has not been broadly recognised within the Australian Awards for University Teaching, a situation that is critical to address in order to recognise the needs of this group.
Professor Emily Banks is recognised as an outstanding supervisor of students at the 精东传媒app Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Research School of Population Health (RSPH). Since 2001, she has supervised more than 20 students, including Medical, Honours, Masters and PhD students. This is in addition to founding and leading the Epidemiology for Policy and Practice Group at ANU, which includes more than 20 academic and professional staff spanning four research programs.
In order to meet the specific challenges of supervision in large-scale epidemiology and public health, particularly for disadvantaged populations, Professor Banks developed an innovative team- and systems- based approach to supervision. This approach situates the traditional student/supervisor/panel relationship within multiple overlapping project teams, research groups and networks and provides structured central support in leadership/management, data access, methodology, collaboration/partnership and capacity building. These include research practice tools and methods which have been adopted by, and are now used routinely at more than seven institutions. The approach makes students integral to the research team and process, learning through conducting research and building on the unique elements of postgraduate teaching in providing "a direct linkage between teaching and learning activities and research."
Using this approach, Professor Banks has supported outstanding and scalable supervision results among her own students, within her research group, which supervised 44 students in 2016 alone, as well as within and beyond the ANU. This builds excellence in supervision across multiple levels, supporting and enabling high quality supervision and providing methods and infrastructure to support capacity building within and beyond the team.
Professor Banks' leadership and innovation has been recognised with multiple awards, both within and outside ANU. Some of the most recent and most significant of these include the 2016 ANU Colleges of Science Award for Excellence in Supervision, the 2016 ANU Media Award: Vice-Chancellor's Award for Advancing the Reputation of the University through the Media, a 2016 ANU Vice-Chancellor's Award for Public Policy and Outreach, and the 2017 ANU Vice-Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Supervision. Her impact throughout the wider community was also recognised when she was named in the Australian Financial Review/Westpac 100 Women of Influence in 2016.