On site, in-house training for SUs: Summer 2025

Jim is an Associate Editor (SUs) at Wonkhe


Mack Marshall is Wonkhe SUs’ Community and Policy Officer

Our subscriber SUs are each entitled to a full day’s “in house”, in-person training delivered by one of us at Team Wonkhe.

We believe passionately that SUs know what’s going on, and understand what’s going on, they are better able to influence what’s going on – in the student interest.

Other providers focus on teambuilding, organisation and management skills and personal development – our offer is focussed on building a deeper understanding of the way that policy and politics works.

Our team has decades of experience in students’ unions and higher education, and all of our exercises, games and sessions have been stress tested on officers and staff from across SUs.

Our offer is principally aimed at student officers (and staff that support officers are welcome) and can be taken over the summer during (or adjacent to) officer induction, or later in the year as part of “taking stock / review and action planning” activity.

No two days are the same, and we try to shape the content around your needs and your particular induction programme. The sessions below are indicative and we are happy to run additional content as required – just drop us a line to discuss.

If you’re a small team, maybe with just 1 or 2 full time officers, or have “downsized” your sabb team, we’d encourage you to “pair up” with another SU or two – the discussions when you do that can often be more fruitful.

Register your preferred day(s) here, or drop us an email with any questions.

How to plan your day

Think of the elements below as roughly 60-90 minute building blocks, with a full day taking up around 4-5 blocks. We make materials/blogs available after the event so that staff can follow up with additional support.

Our training is interactive and delivered on-site, in-person by Jim Dickinson, Mack Marshall or someone else from Team Wonkhe (or one of our associates). We’re not usually able to run “hybrid”. If that poses a problem do let us know.

  • Timings: We typically run from 9.30am for 10.00am to 4.30pm, with around an hour’s break for lunch. Our content is mainly focussed on games, exercises and group discussions. Note we may need to start at 10.30am if one of the team is presenting a morning webinar that day – if so we’ll let you know.
  • Space: We tend to need a room with plenty of space, some tables to work around, a flipchart stand and paper, the ability to project onto a screen, and access to campus wifi.
  • Location: It’s up to you where it’s held – but it’s really important that the full day is blocked off in diaries for participants where possible.
  • Staff: It’s not vital for a staff member to attend, but it’s always helpful where someone whose role it is to support officers attends.
  • Prep: We’ll send a short preparation exercise for participants to complete before the day, and if any of your participants have access requirements, just let us know.
  • It’s helpful if officers have attended or watched back SU Essentials, which this year will run “live” on Monday June 16th. Details are on this page.

If you want more than one day, we’re happy to discuss pricing. And over the past couple of years we’ve also put together days just for staff on supporting officers and building a better relationship between officers and staff, featuring many of the components below. Again, if you’d like to discuss, just let us know.

When thinking about your day(s), take a look at the blocks below. We’re happy to work flexibly from the key issues that come up in the first session, or to include specific blocks (time permitting) – again just let us know.

Register your preferred day(s) here, or drop us an email with any questions.

Building blocks

Educational journeys: All standard in-house days begin with an opening exercise that encourages participants to reflect on sources of power, how organisations and institutions learn, the role of student representation and the way in which experiences can drive change. We’ll also offer a brief into Wonkhe and how Wonkhe SUs works.

It’s all coming up – owning the agenda: In this session we share the latest expertise on what is going on in the policy sphere for students and students’ unions, consider the difference between planned representation and response work, and think through how teams can prepare for the policy year ahead.

Manifesto to methods: There are lots of ways to make change on an issue for students – direct delivery, policy change, getting students involved in campaigning, lobbying for policy change and more. This session works with officer manifestos to identify the options and plot the strategies for success that will work.

Getting powerful people to implement your goals: What were you hoping to secure in your manifesto? What are the problems at your university and how might they be solved? What sort of leadership should you expect from your university in solving them? This session pulls it all apart and reveals lobbying leadership secrets to solve problems for people.

Getting people to do things: Often it’s not as simple as just lobbying a leader – a huge amount of effective student representation is about trying to influence collective behaviour – students, academics, landlords and so on. This session looks at the policy tactics and techniques that are used to deliver effective change, and considers the choices that university and political leaders have when setting standards.

Equality and equity: Thinking about the winners and losers on campus – and why some students have a better experience than others – is crucial to understanding how to make a fairer university. SUs have always led work in this area – but with access and participation emerging as a major strategic issue for SUs, this session considers where officer goals on EDI fit in wider regulatory concerns for the university.

The price is right, righting the wrongs: An assertive relationship between students and their university, or between the SU and the university, requires us to promote, defend and extend students’ rights. This session looks at the issues that students face and identifies the rights students have over those issues, their source, and how to ensure they can be enforced, established or improved.

Communicating to win: Are there ways for officers to improve their profile and purpose with students that mark them out as people to be rooted for rather than to be resented? How can students’ unions and their officers create fans that advance the union’s goals autonomously? This session reveals the latest thinking from tech and industry.

Making the most of university committees: Are the hours spent in meetings really worth it? In this session we look at the secrets to reading papers, being heard and listened to, and making time on university boards, working groups and committees impactful in the student interest. We also explore interpersonal influence for student officers – how to have conversations that achieve purpose, the role of “tactical empathy”, and where to target influence to deliver maximum change for students.

Advanced influencing: If you have a group of (mainly) second year officers, this session uses advanced theory and practical reflection to look at balancing productive relationship building with the university whilst being “live” enough to disrupt – so that meetings and policy makers are left talking about what officers said and make positive changes as a result.

Building a civic agenda for students: The student experience is inherently about the town and city they study, live and work in. But decision makers know little about how things like student finance works, that students don’t pay council tax or that many propp up local economies. In this session we explore what the decision makers don’t know, build a civic agenda for students and get into causing those in power to understand and care about student issues.

Cross cultural influence: In this session we explore cross-cultural competence from multiple angles by exposing participants to the challenges of interacting with unfamiliar cultural norms. Participants experience culture shock by engaging with two contrasting groups, helping them understand how cultural differences influence behavior and perception.

Register your preferred day(s) here, or drop us an email with any questions.

Powerful public speaking

We also offer (chargeable at £500 per day) a one-day public speaking masterclass for up to eight participants.

There are lots of companies and consultants that offer training on speaking in public. Most of it follows a well-trodden path – focussed on the basics of breathing or effective preparation.

But what if a one-day masterclass was shaped specifically around the role that SU officers play in influencing policy, inspiring students and winning the confidence of university audiences?

This isn’t about presenting, it’s about persuading – giving participants the tools and ability to mobilise ideas, appeal to values and inspire action. There are many different “skills” involved in speaking well, but ultimately officers need to know how to choose and organise words – and they need to be able to write. This masterclass teaches how.

It will also help officers to develop a unique style and a unique command of their subject, with techniques that have worked for some of the greatest speakers in history. The session has an eight participant maximum, runs for a full day and involves exercises, writing and intensive coaching, along with follow up support throughout the year.

Register your preferred day(s) here, or drop us an email with any questions.

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