Dal Events /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events.html ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝ Events RSS Feed. Fri, 20 Jun 2025 06:59:19 GMT 2025-06-20T06:59:19Z Transformative Teaching and Learning Retreat (in-person) /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/06/24/transformative_teaching_and_learning_retreat__in_person_.html <p><i>These sessions are part of the <b>T<a adhocenable="false" href="/dept/clt/events-news/transformative-TL-retreat.html">ransformative Teaching and Learning Retreat</a> </b>taking place June 24–26.&nbsp;</i></p> <p><a adhocenable="false" href="https://app.simplycast.ca/?q=forms/new/take&amp;token=67ff9b6e805219-50161678" target="_blank">Link to register for the 3-day retreat</a> (opens in tab).</p> <p>The June 24 sessions will take place in-person: <a adhocenable="false" href="https://libraries.dal.ca/hours-locations/killam.html">Killam Library</a>, Room 2600 (Collider/LINC).</p> <table cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" border="1" width="100%"> <tbody><tr><td width="50%" style="text-align: center;"><img src="/content/dam/dalhousie/images/dept/clt/LINC-clt2.png" height="183" width="275"></td> <td width="50%" style="text-align: center;"><img src="/content/dam/dalhousie/images/dept/clt/LINC-clt.png" height="183" width="275"></td> </tr></tbody></table> <table cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" border="1" width="100%"> <tbody><tr><td width="20%">10:30–11 a.m.</td> <td width="80%"><p><b>Welcome and Land Acknowledgement</b><br> Elder Ann</p> <p>*A smudging ceremony will be held as part of the event.</p> </td> </tr><tr><td>11 a.m.–12 p.m.</td> <td><p><b>Bridging Gaps: Mentorship, Accessibility, and Belonging in Graduate Education<br> </b><i>Shirin Shaikh, Program Co-ordinator, BIPOC Graduate Student mentoring Academy, ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝</i></p> <p>This session, presented by participants of the BIPOC Mentoring Academy, explores how mentorship can serve as a powerful tool to bridge systemic gaps in accessibility, equity, and belonging within graduate education. In this reflective conversation, mentors and mentees will share their experiences navigating graduate education as members of equity-deserving communities, and how culturally responsive mentorship has supported their growth and sense of belonging. The BIPOC Graduate Student Mentoring Academy was created in response to the lived experiences of BIPOC graduate students at ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝ and highlights the importance of relational approaches, shared identity, and inclusive networks in creating accessible and socially just learning environments.</p> <p><b>Shirin Shaikh</b>&nbsp;is the Program Co-ordinator of BIPOC Graduate Student mentoring Academy at ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝. Shirin role is to facilitate a supportive environment where ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝â€™s BIPOC graduate students can thrive academically, personally and professionally. She oversees the recruitment of mentees and mentors, organizes mentorship relations, curates resources, and organizes activities and engagements to address the unique needs and aspirations of BIPOC grad students within the academy.</p> </td> </tr><tr><td><h4><span style="font-weight: normal;">12–1 p.m.</span></h4> </td> <td><h4>Lunch break</h4> </td> </tr><tr><td><h4><span style="font-weight: normal;">1–2:30 p.m.</span></h4> </td> <td><p><b>Co-Creating Collaborative Leadership: Building an MBA Course with Indigenous and African Nova Scotian Wisdom</b><br> <i>Heidi Weigand, Department of Leadership and Organizations, Faculty of Management</i></p> <p>This workshop explores the co-creation of an MBA course developed in partnership with Mi'kmaq and African Nova Scotian communities to teach collaboration through diverse cultural lenses. Grounded in the principles of Two-Eyed Seeing, the course blends Western frameworks—such as Crucial Conversations, John Gottman’s relational strategies, and Priya Parker’s Art of Gathering—with Indigenous teachings like Netukulimk, Sharing Circles, and Msit No'kmaq, and Africentric philosophies like Ubuntu and Sankofa. The workshop shares the process of designing the course in three parts—Western, Africentric, and Indigenous—emphasizing the importance of community-led teaching. This course is taught collaboratively by Dr. Heidi Weigand with guest lecturers Dr. Barbara Hamilton-Hinch and Tammy Williams.&nbsp; This session will invite participants to reflect on inclusive pedagogy, community engagement, and transformative education for future leaders.</p> </td> </tr><tr><td>2:45–3:45 p.m.</td> <td><h4>Curiosity Room: LSC Dept. Biology Outdoor Learning Space</h4> </td> </tr></tbody></table> Tue, 24 Jun 2025 13:30:00 GMT /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/06/24/transformative_teaching_and_learning_retreat__in_person_.html 2025-06-24T13:30:00Z Transformative Teaching and Learning Retreat (online) /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/06/25/transformative_teaching_and_learning_retreat__online_.html <p><i>These sessions are part of the <b>T<a adhocenable="false" href="/dept/clt/events-news/transformative-TL-retreat.html">ransformative Teaching and Learning Retreat</a> </b>taking place June 24–26.&nbsp;</i></p> <p><a adhocenable="false" href="https://app.simplycast.ca/?q=forms/new/take&amp;token=67ff9b6e805219-50161678" target="_blank">Link to register for the 3-day retreat</a> (opens in tab).</p> <p>The June 25 sessions will take place online, using Microsoft Teams. Registrants will be provided with a link to the sessions closer to the date.</p> <table cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" border="1" width="100%"> <tbody><tr><td width="20%"><h4>10:30 a.m.–12 p.m.</h4> </td> <td width="80%"><p><b>Countering Common Accessible Pedagogy Misconceptions</b><br> <i><b>Dr. Ann GagnĂ©,&nbsp;</b>Senior Educational Developer, Accessibility &amp; Inclusion at Brock University</i></p> <p>There are a lot of misconceptions when it comes to accessible pedagogy and accessible assessment design. Often we hear Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and think that is the start and the limit to what needs to be taken into account in accessible course design strategies. This workshop will address some of the misconceptions commonly found in teaching and learning spaces around UDL, GenerativeAI, assessment design, engagement, and even the word access, through case scenarios, question prompts, and disciplinary connections. This workshop will approach accessible pedagogy in a holistic way that holds space for the lived reality of multi-marginalized learners and teaching teams in higher education. Participants will leave with co-created resources, and a meaningful goal for accessible pedagogy practice in their own contexts.&nbsp;</p> <p><b>Dr. Ann GagnĂ©</b>&nbsp;(she/her) is Senior Educational Developer, Accessibility &amp; Inclusion at Brock University. She has worked in higher education for over 21 years. Her work focuses on the need for accessible pedagogies through holistic awareness of disabled learners, faculty, and staff lived experiences to decrease barriers to inclusion in higher education. She has facilitated workshops and keynotes on accessible pedagogy, accessible event design, accessible social media, and trauma-aware UDL. In March 2023 she started her own podcast&nbsp;<a href="https://anngagne.ca/podcast">Accessagogy</a>&nbsp;which talks about accessibility and pedagogy in short (under 15 minute) episodes.</p> </td> </tr><tr><td>12–1 p.m.</td> <td>Lunch Break</td> </tr><tr><td><p>1–2:30 p.m.</p> </td> <td><p><b>Curating Accessible and Inclusive Learning Experiences<br> </b><i>Gabriella Mosquera, Instructor, Faculty of Computer, Science ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝</i></p> <p>Relationship between student learning experience and outcomes (e.g., performance, retention, engagement) has been well documented in various fields and disciplines. However, it is a student's sense of belonging that has become of particular interest, specifically when curating accessible and inclusive learning environments as it can help educators create learning environments with less barriers, thereby having a more direct impact on a student's perception of ability. In this interactive session, we will explore ways for creating accessible and inclusive learning environments, whether online or in person, that: foster a sense of belonging, increase student engagement, increase student retention, and increase student self-efficacy. At the end of this session, participants will be prepared to make students feel welcomed, included, supported, and connected in their courses.</p> <p><b>Prof. Gabriella Mosquera&nbsp;</b>is an Instructor at ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝'s Faculty of Computer Science, focusing on applied undergraduate and graduate Web Application Development courses for CS majors, and undergraduate electives for non-CS majors. Through a combination of Universal Design for Learning and a HyFlex course design, Gabriella's courses encourage a flexible, inclusive, and accessible experiential learning environments that foster creativity and supports all ways of learning. Gabriella is also a Cultural Competence in Computing (3C) Fellow through Duke University's Identity in Computing Group, and has teaching certifications from ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝'s Centre for Learning and Teaching (CLT) and Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences' Digital Society School. Gabriella's teaching methodology has been recognized with the ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝ Award for Excellence in Online/Blended Course Development, Design, and Delivery, and a ĂŰĚŇ´«Ă˝ Legacy Award.</p> </td> </tr><tr><td><p>2:30–3:30 p.m.</p> </td> <td><h4>Curiosity Room</h4> </td> </tr></tbody></table> Wed, 25 Jun 2025 13:30:00 GMT /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/06/25/transformative_teaching_and_learning_retreat__online_.html 2025-06-25T13:30:00Z Transformative Teaching and Learning Retreat (Hyflex) /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/06/26/transformative_teaching_and_learning_retreat__hyflex_.html <p><i>These sessions are part of the <b>T<a adhocenable="false" href="/dept/clt/events-news/transformative-TL-retreat.html">ransformative Teaching and Learning Retreat</a> </b>taking place June 24–26.&nbsp;</i></p> <p><a adhocenable="false" href="https://app.simplycast.ca/?q=forms/new/take&amp;token=67ff9b6e805219-50161678" target="_blank">Link to register for the 3-day retreat</a> (opens in tab).</p> <p>The June 26 sessions will be held in a dual format. Participants will receive a link to join the sessions online closer to the date.&nbsp;</p> <ul> <li>Online: Microsoft Teams</li> <li>In-person: <a adhocenable="false" href="https://libraries.dal.ca/hours-locations/killam.html">Killam Library</a>, Room 2600 (Collider/LINC)&nbsp;</li> </ul> <table cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" border="1" width="100%"> <tbody><tr><td width="50%" style="text-align: center;"><img src="/content/dam/dalhousie/images/dept/clt/LINC-clt2.png" height="183" width="275"></td> <td width="50%" style="text-align: center;"><img src="/content/dam/dalhousie/images/dept/clt/LINC-clt.png" height="183" width="275"></td> </tr></tbody></table> <table cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" border="1" width="100%"> <tbody><tr><td width="20%">10:30 a.m.–12 p.m.</td> <td width="80%">Michelle Mahoney,&nbsp;University of King's College&nbsp;&nbsp;<br> Dorota Glowacka,&nbsp;University of King's College&nbsp;</td> </tr><tr><td>12–1 p.m.&nbsp;</td> <td><b>Curiosity Room</b></td> </tr></tbody></table> <p>&nbsp;</p> Thu, 26 Jun 2025 13:30:00 GMT /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/06/26/transformative_teaching_and_learning_retreat__hyflex_.html 2025-06-26T13:30:00Z CLT Virtual Drop-in: Course Refresh /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/09/clt_virtual_drop_in__course_refresh.html <p>Wednesday, July 9<br> 1–3 p.m.<br> Online via Microsoft Teams</p> <p><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19:meeting_ODUzOGRkNTEtZDA5MS00NmU4LWFhOWYtNTNhNzU5ZTAxODNl%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22:%2260b81999-0b7f-412d-92a3-e17d8ae9e3e0%22%2c%22Oid%22:%2212eb325f-b343-43b6-8b82-8bc8774390b1%22%7d" title="Join the meeting now" target="_blank" adhocenable="false">Link to join the meeting</a>&nbsp;(opens in new tab)<br> Meeting ID: 265 127 631 787 3<br> Passcode: Up9YH3ur</p> <p>Come to our Course Refresh virtual drop-in session to create a personalized support experience and ask questions about how to improve your courses for the upcoming school year. Ask a CLT Senior Educational Developer how to increase student engagement, design better lecture slides, improve student assessments, and anything else you may be interested in! Drop in anytime during the two-hour window.<b> Registration is NOT required.&nbsp;&nbsp;</b></p> <h4>Facilitator</h4> <p>Daniella Sieukaran (she/her)<br> Senior Educational Developer (Program Development)</p> Wed, 09 Jul 2025 16:00:00 GMT /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/09/clt_virtual_drop_in__course_refresh.html 2025-07-09T16:00:00Z Truro Campus Mini Retreat of Teaching and Learning 2025 /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/10/truro_campus_mini_retreat_of_teaching_and_learning_2025.html <h3><br> Reimagining Student Engagement in a Changing Educational Landscape</h3> <p>Thursday, July 10<br> Truro Campus<br> McRae Library Student Learning Commons Program Room</p> <p>In times marked by rapid technological shifts, evolving learner expectations, and increasingly diverse classrooms, how do we meaningfully reflect on student engagement? Join us for a day of exploration, discussion, and engagement at CLT’s Teaching and Learning Retreat 2025.</p> <h2><a adhocenable="false" href="https://app.simplycast.ca/?q=forms/new/take&amp;token=681b80a6cd89d7-82840199" target="_blank">Link to register for the retreat</a>&nbsp;(opens in new tab).</h2> <h2>&nbsp;</h2> <table cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" border="1"> <tbody><tr><th scope="col" width="20%">Time</th> <th scope="col">Session</th> </tr><tr><td>10–10:15 a.m.</td> <td><h3>Opening/Welcome to the Retreat</h3> <h4>Facilitator</h4> <p>Shazia Nawaz Awan (Ed.D.), Educational Developer, Internationalization &amp; Intercultural Competency</p> </td> </tr><tr><td>10:15–11 a.m.</td> <td><h3>New SLEQ Questions and Dashboard Overview </h3> <h4>Facilitator</h4> <p>Bruno Roy, Student Feedback and Evaluation Coordinator</p> <p>Note: This is a 45 min in-person session with reflection and consultation time available after the session for anybody who has any questions about SLEQs.</p> <h4>Intended audience</h4> <p>Faculty member, instructors, department chairs, SLEQ liaisons.</p> <p>Join us for an information session on the updated SLEQ dashboard and homepage. We’ll walk through how to access and interpret your SLEQ data for individual terms, as well as how to identify trends over time. You'll also learn different ways to display this data and how to incorporate it into your dossier. In addition, we’ll introduce the new SLEQ questions and policy changes set to take effect in the Fall 2025–2026 term. We’ll also outline future plans for ongoing monitoring and validation of the SLEQ instrument over the coming years. </p> </td> </tr><tr><td>11–11:15 a.m.</td> <td><h3>Reflection/Discussion Time [15 minutes]</h3> </td> </tr><tr><td>11:15 a.m.–12:30 p.m.</td> <td><h3>Building Students’ Critical Engagement with A.I. (Interactive workshop)</h3> <h4>Facilitator</h4> <p>Kate Crane, MA, (Acting) Senior Educational Developer (Digital Learning), Coordinator for the Faculty Certificate in Teaching and Learning<br> </p> <h4>Intended audience</h4> <p>Faculty members and graduate students who support students engaging in group work as part of their learning</p> <p>In order to preserve the integrity of the classroom (which includes, but goes beyond, assessment/academic integrity), students should be supported in assessing, for themselves, the impact of A.I. on their learning, and the impact of A.I. on their disciplines, disciplinary communities, and their future work as disciplinary practitioners. This workshop will explore both areas, with the aim to build up a repertoire of ideas participants may draw on for course design/assessment redesigns or adjustments.</p> </td> </tr><tr><td>12:30–1:30 p.m.</td> <td><h3>Reflection, Games /Refreshments Break, Light Lunch</h3> </td> </tr><tr><td>1:30–2:30 p.m.</td> <td><h3>Meaningful gamification for student learning and engagement (Interactive workshop)</h3> <h4>Facilitator</h4> <p>Kate Thompson, PhD, Educational Developer (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning)</p> <h4>Intended audience</h4> <p>Faculty members and Graduate and Post.Doc Students</p> <p>This workshop will introduce the concept of gamification, discuss the theories that underlie it, and guide you in implementing it in a higher education context. We will explore how play can enhance student learning, and how to meaningfully incorporate game mechanics into your course design to enhance student motivation and learning. You will have the opportunity to begin conceptualizing how to gamify the design of your own course. If you do not have an existing course, you can get some experience in gamification by working with others to help design their gamified courses. Please bring your existing course outlines if you’d like to discuss specific examples with the facilitator.</p> <p>No prior gaming experience is required to participate in this webinar, but participation will certainly involve play! </p> </td> </tr><tr><td>2:30–3 p.m.</td> <td><h3>Reflection/Discussion Time</h3> </td> </tr></tbody></table> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> Thu, 10 Jul 2025 13:00:00 GMT /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/10/truro_campus_mini_retreat_of_teaching_and_learning_2025.html 2025-07-10T13:00:00Z Constructing Effective Rubrics with Rubric Swap /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/15/constructing_effective_rubrics_with_rubric_swap.html <p>Tuesday, July 15<br> 10–11:30 a.m.<br> Killam Library, Room B400*<br> <a adhocenable="false" href="https://app.simplycast.ca/?q=forms/new/take&amp;token=6814ce9dd11388-98702032" target="_blank">Link to register for the session</a> (opens in new tab)</p> <p>Want to spend LESS time grading and providing feedback? Grading using rubrics has many benefits such as reducing grading time for instructors, and providing clear and consistent expectations to students. In this in-person workshop, you will:</p> <ul> <li>Learn the purpose and principles underlying grading using rubrics.</li> <li>Be introduced to different types of rubrics, the components that make up a rubric, appropriate language to use for rubrics, and the step-by-step process for constructing effective rubrics.</li> <li>Participate in a rubric swap! Exchange rubric feedback with a peer.&nbsp;</li> </ul> <p><b><i>Workshop participants are kindly asked to bring one paper copy of a rubric that you are looking to gather feedback on. If you do not have one, a sample rubric will be provided by the workshop facilitator.</i></b></p> <h4>Facilitator</h4> <p>Daniella Sieukaran, Senior Educational Developer (Program Development), CLT</p> <h4>Intended Audience</h4> <ul> <li>Instructors</li> <li>Graduate Students</li> <li>Teaching Assistants</li> </ul> <p><i>*Please note that the B400 classroom is in the basement of the Killam Library. We are aware of, and apologize for, the accessibility barriers associated with this room. If you require the use of an elevator to reach this room, one of the CLT staff will have to access the elevator with you, using their key card. Please let us know in advance so that we can facilitate a smooth and timely transition to the basement.</i></p> <p><i>We also ask that participants be respectful of those with significant allergies and avoid wearing perfume, aftershave, cologne, and highly scented hairspray, soaps, lotions, and shampoos.</i></p> Tue, 15 Jul 2025 13:00:00 GMT /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/15/constructing_effective_rubrics_with_rubric_swap.html 2025-07-15T13:00:00Z Serviceberry Teachings: Nurturing Gratitude and Reciprocity in Teaching and Learning /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/16/serviceberry_teachings.html <p>Wednesday, July 16<br> 11 a.m.–12 p.m.<br> In-Person, Department of Biology Outdoor Learning Space<br> <a adhocenable="false" href="https://app.simplycast.ca/?q=forms/new/take&amp;token=67d81f0f8896d0-90546819" target="_blank">Link to register for the event</a> (opens in new tab).</p> <p>Join us for an enriching outdoor discussion that delves into the practices of gratitude, reciprocity, and the generosity of nature as we explore how the gift economy thinking can offer meaningful insights into fostering more inclusive and relational approaches to teaching and learning.&nbsp;</p> <p>Drawing from the inspiring work of Robin Wall Kimmerer (Potawatomi Nation), we will reflect on her vision of abundance and interconnectedness both in the natural world and human relationships. We highly recommend attendees read Robin Wall Kimmerer’s The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World (2024)&nbsp; or listen to <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oarv176EbK4" target="_blank" adhocenable="false">“Ten Percent Happier, The Antidote to Not-Enoughness | Robin Wall Kimmerer Podcast Episode Discussion” on YouTube</a> (link opens in new window) in preparation for this session.</p> <p>Through this session, we aim to explore how principles of reciprocity and gratitude can be meaningfully translated into teaching and learning contexts. How can we nurture environments that encourage generosity, mindfulness, and interconnection, both in educational spaces and beyond? What lessons can we learn from nature’s abundance, and how might we apply those lessons to our own practices of teaching and learning?</p> <p>We invite all participants to join in an open and reflective discussion, sharing ideas, experiences, and insights that may help us collectively imagine more generous and sustainable ways of living and learning.</p> <h4>Facilitators</h4> <p>Suzanne Le-May Sheffield, Director Centre for Learning and Teaching<br> Rachelle McKay, Educational Developer – Indigenous Knowledges &amp; Ways of Knowing</p> Wed, 16 Jul 2025 14:00:00 GMT /dept/clt/events-news/Calendar%20of%20Events/2025/07/16/serviceberry_teachings.html 2025-07-16T14:00:00Z