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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230911T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230911T143000
DTSTAMP:20260425T085418
CREATED:20230728T185425Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230821T132632Z
UID:10000609-1694437200-1694442600@cirtl.net
SUMMARY:Writing an Effective Teaching Philosophy Statement Section 1
DESCRIPTION:REGISTRATION CLOSED; AT CAPACITY AS OF 8/21 \nDraft a peer-reviewed statement that reflects your teaching beliefs and experiences in this interactive\, two-part online workshop. Participants will work to draft and edit a teaching statement\, which is often required for US academic job applications. We will discuss elements of teaching statements\, evidence of effective teaching tailored for different academic jobs\, and strategies to get started or polish existing teaching statements. Participants from all disciplines will become better equipped and prepared to communicate their teaching practice through this workshop’s collaborative\, peer-review process. By the end of this workshop\, participants will be able to: \n\nUnderstand common components of a teaching philosophy statement\nIdentify their own teaching accomplishments\, beliefs\, and goals\nDraft a teaching philosophy statement\nRefine their work through peer review feedback\n\nThis workshop is part of CIRTL’s fall programming on academic professional development. \nInstructors\nDenise Leonard\, Washington University in St. Louis\nKaren Menzel\, Iowa State University \nWorkshop Schedule\nThis workshop meets in Zoom on Mondays\, September 11 and 25 at 3-4:30PM AT / 2-3:30PM ET / 1-2:30PM CT / 12-1:30PM MT / 11AM-12:30PM PT. \nAudience\nThis workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in STEM/SBE disciplines\, but generally relevant to anyone looking to develop or refine their teaching statement. \nRegistration & Enrollment\n* At capacity and registration is closed as of Monday\, August 21 * \nCap: 50. Registration opens Monday\, August 14 and closes when capacity is reached. Enrollment will be processed on a first-come\, first-served basis; registrants who are from CIRTL member institutions or CIRTL alumni will receive priority. \nAccessibility\nIf you have a disability\, please let us know your learning needs. Contact Kate Diamond (kdiamond3@wisc.edu)\, who is supporting this workshop\, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs\, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students: \n\nUsing alt-text on images in reading materials\nSending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students\nSharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides\, activity instructions\, etc.)\nEnabling live captioning in synchronous sessions\nIncorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions\n\nLearning Outcomes\nAll CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes. \nAssociate: Evidence-Based Teaching\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of realistic well-defined\, achievable\, measurable and student-centered learning goals.\n\nAssociate: Learning Community\n\nRecognize the value of and participate in local professionally-focused learning communities associated with teaching and learning.\n\nAssociate: Learning-through-Diversity\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content\, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning.\nDescribe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies.
URL:https://cirtl.net/event/writing-an-effective-teaching-philosophy-statement-section-1/2023-09-11/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230913T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230913T143000
DTSTAMP:20260425T085418
CREATED:20230728T185939Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230925T155831Z
UID:10000611-1694610000-1694615400@cirtl.net
SUMMARY:Writing an Effective Teaching Philosophy Statement Section 2
DESCRIPTION:REGISTRATION CLOSED; AT CAPACITY AS OF 9/7 \nDraft a peer-reviewed statement that reflects your teaching beliefs and experiences in this interactive\, two-part online workshop. Participants will work to draft and edit a teaching statement\, which is often required for US academic job applications. We will discuss elements of teaching statements\, evidence of effective teaching tailored for different academic jobs\, and strategies to get started or polish existing teaching statements. Participants from all disciplines will become better equipped and prepared to communicate their teaching practice through this workshop’s collaborative\, peer-review process. By the end of this workshop\, participants will be able to: \n\nUnderstand common components of a teaching philosophy statement\nIdentify their own teaching accomplishments\, beliefs\, and goals\nDraft a teaching philosophy statement\nRefine their work through peer review feedback\n\nThis workshop is part of CIRTL’s fall programming on academic professional development. \nInstructors\nRique Campa\, Michigan State University\nKate Williams\, Georgia Institute of Technology \nWorkshop Schedule\nThis workshop meets in Zoom on Wednesdays\, September 13 and 27 at 3-4:30PM AT / 2-3:30PM ET / 1-2:30PM CT / 12-1:30PM MT / 11AM-12:30PM PT. \nAudience\nThis workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in STEM/SBE disciplines\, but generally relevant to anyone looking to develop or refine their teaching statement. \nRegistration & Enrollment\n* At capacity and registration is closed as of Thursday\, September 7 * \nCap: 50. Registration opens Monday\, August 14 and closes when capacity is reached. Enrollment will be processed on a first-come\, first-served basis; registrants who are from CIRTL member institutions or CIRTL alumni will receive priority. \nAccessibility\nIf you have a disability\, please let us know your learning needs. Contact Kate Diamond (kdiamond3@wisc.edu)\, who is supporting this workshop\, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs\, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students: \n\nUsing alt-text on images in reading materials\nSending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students\nSharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides\, activity instructions\, etc.)\nEnabling live captioning in synchronous sessions\nIncorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions\n\nLearning Outcomes\nAll CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes. \nAssociate: Evidence-Based Teaching\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of realistic well-defined\, achievable\, measurable and student-centered learning goals.\n\nAssociate: Learning Community\n\nRecognize the value of and participate in local professionally-focused learning communities associated with teaching and learning.\n\nAssociate: Learning-through-Diversity\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content\, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning.\nDescribe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies.
URL:https://cirtl.net/event/writing-an-effective-teaching-philosophy-statement-section-2/2023-09-13/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230921T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230921T150000
DTSTAMP:20260425T085418
CREATED:20230728T160309Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230925T155910Z
UID:10000588-1695303000-1695308400@cirtl.net
SUMMARY:Teaching Discomfort: Facilitating Challenging Discussions in the Classroom
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER BY SEPTEMBER 21 \nLearn best practices on navigating challenging classroom discussions in this two-part workshop. In STEM disciplines\, where knowledge is considered to be “objective\,” instructors can be caught off-guard when challenging topics – especially ones that relate to social or cultural trauma – arise. In this workshop\, participants will learn best practices for “difficult knowledge”—content that causes students to analyze social trauma (Britzman 1998)—in diverse disciplinary contexts\, and apply those practices to design a pedagogical tool applicable in their own classrooms. In doing so\, participants will gain a better understanding of how to address pressing ideological issues in their discipline and incorporate them in their teaching. By the end of this workshop\, participants will be able to: \n\nDefine “difficult knowledge\,” explain its impact on students\, and identify examples from their own field\nDescribe and apply best practices for addressing difficult knowledge topics in their classrooms\nCreate a pedagogical tool that addresses a difficult knowledge topic in their field\n\nThis workshop is part of CIRTL’s fall programming on evidence-based teaching fundamentals. \nInstructors\nValerie Hsieh\, Columbia University\nValeria Spacciante\, Columbia University\nAbby Schroering\, Columbia University \nWorkshop Schedule\nThis workshop meets in Zoom on Thursdays\, September 21 and 28 at 3:30-5PM AT / 2:30-4PM ET / 1:30-3PM CT / 12:30-2PM MT / 11:30AM-1PM PT. \nAudience\nThis workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students\, faculty\, and instructional staff in STEM/SBE disciplines\, but generally relevant to anyone looking to learn approaches to facilitating challenging classroom discussions at the college level. \nRegistration & Enrollment\nNo cap. Registration opens on Monday\, August 14\, and closes Thursday\, September 21.\nREGISTER BY SEPTEMBER 21 \nAccessibility\nIf you have a disability\, please let us know your learning needs. Contact Kate Diamond (kdiamond3@wisc.edu)\, who is supporting this workshop\, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs\, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students: \n\nUsing alt-text on images in reading materials\nSending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students\nSharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides\, activity instructions\, etc.)\nEnabling live captioning in synchronous sessions\nIncorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions\n\nLearning Outcomes\nAll CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes. \nAssociate: Evidence-based teaching\n\nDescribe several known high-impact\, evidence-based effective instructional practices and materials and recognize their alignment with particular types of learning goals\n\nAssociate: Learning-through-diversity\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content\, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning\nDescribe how an instructor’’s beliefs and biases can influence student learning\nDescribe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies\nDescribe the impact of diversity on student learning\, in particular how diversity can enhance learning\, and how inequities can negatively impact learning if not addressed\nDescribe the scope of diversity in learning environments\, of both students and instructor
URL:https://cirtl.net/event/teaching-discomfort-facilitating-challenging-discussions-in-the-classroom/2023-09-21/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230925T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230925T143000
DTSTAMP:20260425T085418
CREATED:20230728T185425Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230821T132632Z
UID:10000610-1695646800-1695652200@cirtl.net
SUMMARY:Writing an Effective Teaching Philosophy Statement Section 1
DESCRIPTION:REGISTRATION CLOSED; AT CAPACITY AS OF 8/21 \nDraft a peer-reviewed statement that reflects your teaching beliefs and experiences in this interactive\, two-part online workshop. Participants will work to draft and edit a teaching statement\, which is often required for US academic job applications. We will discuss elements of teaching statements\, evidence of effective teaching tailored for different academic jobs\, and strategies to get started or polish existing teaching statements. Participants from all disciplines will become better equipped and prepared to communicate their teaching practice through this workshop’s collaborative\, peer-review process. By the end of this workshop\, participants will be able to: \n\nUnderstand common components of a teaching philosophy statement\nIdentify their own teaching accomplishments\, beliefs\, and goals\nDraft a teaching philosophy statement\nRefine their work through peer review feedback\n\nThis workshop is part of CIRTL’s fall programming on academic professional development. \nInstructors\nDenise Leonard\, Washington University in St. Louis\nKaren Menzel\, Iowa State University \nWorkshop Schedule\nThis workshop meets in Zoom on Mondays\, September 11 and 25 at 3-4:30PM AT / 2-3:30PM ET / 1-2:30PM CT / 12-1:30PM MT / 11AM-12:30PM PT. \nAudience\nThis workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in STEM/SBE disciplines\, but generally relevant to anyone looking to develop or refine their teaching statement. \nRegistration & Enrollment\n* At capacity and registration is closed as of Monday\, August 21 * \nCap: 50. Registration opens Monday\, August 14 and closes when capacity is reached. Enrollment will be processed on a first-come\, first-served basis; registrants who are from CIRTL member institutions or CIRTL alumni will receive priority. \nAccessibility\nIf you have a disability\, please let us know your learning needs. Contact Kate Diamond (kdiamond3@wisc.edu)\, who is supporting this workshop\, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs\, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students: \n\nUsing alt-text on images in reading materials\nSending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students\nSharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides\, activity instructions\, etc.)\nEnabling live captioning in synchronous sessions\nIncorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions\n\nLearning Outcomes\nAll CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes. \nAssociate: Evidence-Based Teaching\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of realistic well-defined\, achievable\, measurable and student-centered learning goals.\n\nAssociate: Learning Community\n\nRecognize the value of and participate in local professionally-focused learning communities associated with teaching and learning.\n\nAssociate: Learning-through-Diversity\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content\, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning.\nDescribe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies.
URL:https://cirtl.net/event/writing-an-effective-teaching-philosophy-statement-section-1/2023-09-25/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230927T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230927T143000
DTSTAMP:20260425T085418
CREATED:20230728T185939Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230925T155831Z
UID:10000612-1695819600-1695825000@cirtl.net
SUMMARY:Writing an Effective Teaching Philosophy Statement Section 2
DESCRIPTION:REGISTRATION CLOSED; AT CAPACITY AS OF 9/7 \nDraft a peer-reviewed statement that reflects your teaching beliefs and experiences in this interactive\, two-part online workshop. Participants will work to draft and edit a teaching statement\, which is often required for US academic job applications. We will discuss elements of teaching statements\, evidence of effective teaching tailored for different academic jobs\, and strategies to get started or polish existing teaching statements. Participants from all disciplines will become better equipped and prepared to communicate their teaching practice through this workshop’s collaborative\, peer-review process. By the end of this workshop\, participants will be able to: \n\nUnderstand common components of a teaching philosophy statement\nIdentify their own teaching accomplishments\, beliefs\, and goals\nDraft a teaching philosophy statement\nRefine their work through peer review feedback\n\nThis workshop is part of CIRTL’s fall programming on academic professional development. \nInstructors\nRique Campa\, Michigan State University\nKate Williams\, Georgia Institute of Technology \nWorkshop Schedule\nThis workshop meets in Zoom on Wednesdays\, September 13 and 27 at 3-4:30PM AT / 2-3:30PM ET / 1-2:30PM CT / 12-1:30PM MT / 11AM-12:30PM PT. \nAudience\nThis workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in STEM/SBE disciplines\, but generally relevant to anyone looking to develop or refine their teaching statement. \nRegistration & Enrollment\n* At capacity and registration is closed as of Thursday\, September 7 * \nCap: 50. Registration opens Monday\, August 14 and closes when capacity is reached. Enrollment will be processed on a first-come\, first-served basis; registrants who are from CIRTL member institutions or CIRTL alumni will receive priority. \nAccessibility\nIf you have a disability\, please let us know your learning needs. Contact Kate Diamond (kdiamond3@wisc.edu)\, who is supporting this workshop\, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs\, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students: \n\nUsing alt-text on images in reading materials\nSending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students\nSharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides\, activity instructions\, etc.)\nEnabling live captioning in synchronous sessions\nIncorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions\n\nLearning Outcomes\nAll CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes. \nAssociate: Evidence-Based Teaching\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of realistic well-defined\, achievable\, measurable and student-centered learning goals.\n\nAssociate: Learning Community\n\nRecognize the value of and participate in local professionally-focused learning communities associated with teaching and learning.\n\nAssociate: Learning-through-Diversity\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content\, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning.\nDescribe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies.
URL:https://cirtl.net/event/writing-an-effective-teaching-philosophy-statement-section-2/2023-09-27/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230928T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230928T131500
DTSTAMP:20260425T085418
CREATED:20230728T181311Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230929T214356Z
UID:10000604-1695902400-1695906900@cirtl.net
SUMMARY:Beyond participation: Inclusive Perspectives on Student Engagement and Feedback
DESCRIPTION:Explore inclusive teaching and active learning frameworks in order to develop practices and class policies that support student engagement in this two-part workshop. Student participation is undeniably desirable in any classroom\, and yet it remains challenging to define its scope: how can we address the value of participation effectively and through an inclusive lens? In this workshop\, participants will explore both the student perspective and the instructor perspective of “participation” and consider the intersections between these practices and those of inclusive teaching. In session 1\, we will work on defining and setting expectations for student engagement\, and on building strategies within the framework of active learning in order to provide a practical approach to creating significant learning experiences. In session 2\, we will look at how instructors can harness the language of growth in the classroom when providing feedback on student engagement to center equity in the learning space. Participants will leave with a cache of inclusive participation strategies and a draft participation policy for a syllabus. By the end of this workshop\, participants will be able to: \n\nExplain how participation policies contribute to inclusive teaching and active learning\nDescribe evidence-based practices for increasing student engagement\nApply inclusive participation strategies in their own teaching contexts\nCraft an inclusive participation policy for a syllabus in their discipline\n\nThis workshop is part of CIRTL’s fall programming on evidence-based teaching fundamentals. \nInstructors\nLaura DiNardo\, Columbia University\nTamara Hache\, Columbia University\nAbby Schroering\, Columbia University\n \nWorkshop Schedule\nThis workshop meets in Zoom on Thursdays\, September 28 and October 5\, at 2-3:15PM AT / 1-2:15PM ET / 12-1:15PM CT / 11AM-12:15PM MT / 10-11:15AM PT. \nAudience\nThis workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students\, faculty\, and instructional staff in STEM/SBE disciplines\, but generally relevant to anyone looking to learn new approaches to fostering inclusive student participation in the classroom at the college level. \nRegistration & Enrollment\nNo cap. Registration opens on Monday\, August 14\, and closes Thursday\, September 28. \nAccessibility\nIf you have a disability\, please let us know your learning needs. Contact Kate Diamond (kdiamond3@wisc.edu)\, who is supporting this workshop\, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs\, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students: \n\nUsing alt-text on images in reading materials\nSending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students\nSharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides\, activity instructions\, etc.)\nEnabling live captioning in synchronous sessions\nIncorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions\n\nLearning Outcomes\nAll CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes. \nAssociate: Evidence-based teaching\n\nDescribe several known high-impact\, evidence-based effective instructional practices and materials and recognize their alignment with particular types of learning goals.\n\nAssociate: Learning-through-diversity\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content\, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning\nDescribe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies\nDescribe the impact of diversity on student learning\, in particular how diversity can enhance learning\, and how inequities can negatively impact learning if not addressed\n\nPractitioner: Evidence-Based Teaching\n\nAccess the literature and existing knowledge to develop a deeper understanding of existing evidence- based knowledge concerning high- impact\, evidence-based teaching practices.\nImplement one or more evidence-based teaching strategies for students in a learning experience.\nIntegrate one or more evidence-based teaching strategies into a teaching plan so as to accomplish learning goals.\n\nPractitioner: Learning-through-Diversity\n\nAccess the literature and existing knowledge to develop a deeper understanding diversity and its impact on accomplishing learning goals.\nCreate a teaching plan that incorporates content and teaching practices responsive to the students’ backgrounds.\nImplement one or more LtD strategies in a teaching experience.\nIntegrate one or more LtD techniques and strategies in a teaching plan so as to use students’ diversity to enhance the learning of all.
URL:https://cirtl.net/event/beyond-participation-inclusive-perspectives-on-student-engagement-and-feedback/2023-09-28/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230928T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230928T150000
DTSTAMP:20260425T085418
CREATED:20230728T160309Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230925T155910Z
UID:10000589-1695907800-1695913200@cirtl.net
SUMMARY:Teaching Discomfort: Facilitating Challenging Discussions in the Classroom
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER BY SEPTEMBER 21 \nLearn best practices on navigating challenging classroom discussions in this two-part workshop. In STEM disciplines\, where knowledge is considered to be “objective\,” instructors can be caught off-guard when challenging topics – especially ones that relate to social or cultural trauma – arise. In this workshop\, participants will learn best practices for “difficult knowledge”—content that causes students to analyze social trauma (Britzman 1998)—in diverse disciplinary contexts\, and apply those practices to design a pedagogical tool applicable in their own classrooms. In doing so\, participants will gain a better understanding of how to address pressing ideological issues in their discipline and incorporate them in their teaching. By the end of this workshop\, participants will be able to: \n\nDefine “difficult knowledge\,” explain its impact on students\, and identify examples from their own field\nDescribe and apply best practices for addressing difficult knowledge topics in their classrooms\nCreate a pedagogical tool that addresses a difficult knowledge topic in their field\n\nThis workshop is part of CIRTL’s fall programming on evidence-based teaching fundamentals. \nInstructors\nValerie Hsieh\, Columbia University\nValeria Spacciante\, Columbia University\nAbby Schroering\, Columbia University \nWorkshop Schedule\nThis workshop meets in Zoom on Thursdays\, September 21 and 28 at 3:30-5PM AT / 2:30-4PM ET / 1:30-3PM CT / 12:30-2PM MT / 11:30AM-1PM PT. \nAudience\nThis workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students\, faculty\, and instructional staff in STEM/SBE disciplines\, but generally relevant to anyone looking to learn approaches to facilitating challenging classroom discussions at the college level. \nRegistration & Enrollment\nNo cap. Registration opens on Monday\, August 14\, and closes Thursday\, September 21.\nREGISTER BY SEPTEMBER 21 \nAccessibility\nIf you have a disability\, please let us know your learning needs. Contact Kate Diamond (kdiamond3@wisc.edu)\, who is supporting this workshop\, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs\, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students: \n\nUsing alt-text on images in reading materials\nSending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students\nSharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides\, activity instructions\, etc.)\nEnabling live captioning in synchronous sessions\nIncorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions\n\nLearning Outcomes\nAll CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes. \nAssociate: Evidence-based teaching\n\nDescribe several known high-impact\, evidence-based effective instructional practices and materials and recognize their alignment with particular types of learning goals\n\nAssociate: Learning-through-diversity\n\nDescribe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content\, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning\nDescribe how an instructor’’s beliefs and biases can influence student learning\nDescribe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies\nDescribe the impact of diversity on student learning\, in particular how diversity can enhance learning\, and how inequities can negatively impact learning if not addressed\nDescribe the scope of diversity in learning environments\, of both students and instructor
URL:https://cirtl.net/event/teaching-discomfort-facilitating-challenging-discussions-in-the-classroom/2023-09-28/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR