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myday – Student Engagement Portal

Your students’ digital front door to university life
myday platform on laptop and mobile devices

The go-to student engagement portal

myday is the go-to student engagement portal that brings together everything your learners need to thrive – from timetables and course updates to wellbeing support and campus news – all in one personalized, mobile-first experience.

With seamless integrations, targeted communications, and real-time insights, myday helps institutions boost engagement, improve retention, and deliver a connected student experience. Now part of the PebblePad platform, myday combines the power of engagement with learning and assessment to support success from day one to graduation and beyond.

What is myday?

myday is a customizable student engagement portal that acts as a one-stop digital hub for students. It centralises access to academic and campus systems, streamlines communication, and provides a personalized experience across web and mobile.

With myday, students can easily access their course information, calendars, emails, grades, and campus services – all in one place.

Why use myday?

Personalized dashboards tailored to each student’s role, stage, and needs

Seamless access to academic and campus systems via single sign-on

Targeted push notifications, alerts, and banners to keep students informed

Real-time analytics and attendance tracking to support early intervention

Built-in content management tools for dynamic, relevant communications

Mobile-first design for on-the-go access to everything students need

What makes myday different?

myday is more than a portal – it’s a personalized digital companion for every student. Whether they’re checking their lecture schedule, finding their way to a seminar, or receiving a wellbeing reminder, myday ensures students stay connected, supported, and on track.

And now, with PebblePad’s backing, myday is evolving into a unified experience that links student engagement with learning. Together, we’re building a smarter, more connected campus – one that supports students not just in their studies, but in their whole university experience.

Talk to our team

Get in touch today and find out how PebblePad can help meet your needs.

Curriculum Transformation at the University of Edinburgh: co-creation and the relationship between local innovation and institutional change

Talk description: I will use the themes of reflection and experiential learning, skills development and assessment (including programme level assessment and changes in assessment practice) to explore this process in more detail. This includes the link between disciplinary and institutional curriculum reform, learning from local innovations and changes, and using this to inform University level changes and support.

Bio: My current position is leading the University wide Curriculum Transformation Project. This is a major and long term initiative for the University considering all areas of the University’s undergraduate and taught postgraduate curriculum. Prior to this Jon set up and led the Institute for Academic Development (IAD) at the University of Edinburgh. The IAD provides University level support for teaching, learning and researcher development, including direct support for students and staff, and support for enhancement and innovation in curriculum development, the student and researcher experience. Jon has a PhD in petroleum geology.

Mission Possible: The DNA of a bespoke professional development program

Talk description: The diversity of students in higher education dictates that there cannot (and should not) be a single ‘silver bullet’ approach to address the complex challenge of career readiness learning. However, the reality of modern university structures is that delivering bespoke experiences for each student is a challenge in and of itself.  And yet, all things are possible with creative use of PebblePad to streamline delivery (for the university) and make it highly personalised (for the student). 

Bio: Gayle Brent is a Learning and Teaching Consultant (Employability) at Griffith University, Queensland, Australia. Gaye’s specialist area of interest is developing and implementing strategies to enhance staff and student understanding of employability in both curricular and extra-curricular contexts. She completed a Master of Education and Professional Studies Research to explore the potential barriers and challenges to embedding employability-based learning in higher education curriculum and is currently completing a Doctor of Philosophy exploring the impact of an extra-curricular employability program on the individual student experience.

Dr Melissa Highton. Assistant Principal, University of Edinburgh

Talk description: A journey through the stories told by wicca data. How a neglected research data set was used by students to overturn historic injustice and shed new light on the lives of women in Scotland.

Bio: Melissa has worked for many years in higher education at some of the UK’s finest and most ancient institutions. In each place she enjoys discovering the hidden histories and less heard voices which can be surfaced in new ways using the most up to date and open technologies. She is a champion of playful and curious approaches to engagement with audiences on campus and online, and is an invited speaker at events about dangerous women.

Education is an Experience That Should Be Designed

Talk description: We have any number of problems and opportunities as universities, and universities must adapt to help students from diverse backgrounds develop the knowledge and skills they need to thrive and make a positive impact in the world. Key to those adaptations is understanding that we provide students with an experience. We ought to design them with intention and purpose. This talk with take up this argument and ground it within a large educational transformation project at the University of Leeds.

Bio: Jeff Grabill is Deputy Vice Chancellor for Student Education at the University of Leeds. Prior to joining the University of Leeds, Grabill was at Michigan State University (MSU) in the United States for nearly 20 years. He served Michigan State University as the Associate Provost for Teaching, Learning, and Technology. In that role, he was responsible for facilitating innovation in learning and educator professional development via his role as Director of the Hub for Innovation in Learning and Technology. Grabill’s research focuses on how digital writing is associated with citizenship and learning. That work has been located in community contexts, in museums, and in classrooms at both the K-12 and university levels. Grabill is also a co-founder of Drawbridge, an educational technology company.

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