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by the Teaching & Learning Centre
in the June 2019 issue
AugustThe Teaching & Learning Summer Conference will take place on August 22 and 23. This two-day conference will focus student engagement. There will be featured presentations on teaching and assessment strategies, and using technology in your classroom.
New Faculty Orientation is on Monday, August 26. This day provides an overview of the services and supports that impact teaching practice at Seneca. The New Faculty Orientation is open to all new part-time and full-time faculty.
SeptemberThe Faculty Development Program courses offered this fall:
Please note: priority will be given to the faculty who are required to take these courses.
OctoberSkoden: Teaching, Talking, and Sharing about and for Reconciliation begins on October 8, 2019. Through this course, faculty will consider how to decolonize and Indigenize their courses through the support of the Indigenous community here at Seneca. Through a lens of looking back to understand where we go forward, faculty will learn about Indigenous knowledges, Canadian colonialization, and the Indigenous resurgence. Participants will have a chance to workshop curriculum ideas and receive feedback and assistance in incorporating Indigenous content into their courses. This course is intended to assist the efforts of First Peoples@Seneca to respond to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action and improve student experiences.
The next Teaching & Learning Day will be on Monday, October 21, 2019 at Newnham Campus.
Coming Soon
The PD Plan for Non Full-time Faculty is part of the Micro-credentials at Seneca system where participants can earn a micro-credential when they complete each course. Courses in the plan:
Also coming soon for Fall 2019The Introduction to Teaching Hybrid and Online course will prepare participants to design a hybrid module from start to finish. Important issues on mixed-mode lesson planning are discussed as well as learning strategies geared towards both face-to-face and online delivery modes. Assessment strategies for hybrid delivery are also key to the design process and we will explore best practices for assessment creation and alignment.
Tools for creating interactive content, formative and summative assessments, and enabling collaborative work in a hybrid course delivery mode will be explored and utilized in developing course content.
Promoting a Culture of Academic Integrity – Why do students cheat? Academic integrity offences have been attributed to a student’s lack of moral compass, cultural differences, stress-related competition, and an expectation for attaining high grades. Infractions of academic integrity can occur because of their learning environments and this course will focus on the strategies that you can use to make cheating/plagiarism less worthwhile to the student as well as improve student learning. This course will also discuss creating classroom environments that support ethical choices, activities that promote awareness of what is and isn’t an academic integrity offence, and assignments designed to reduce academic integrity offences.
Cognition and Learning series – for more details about this series, see the The Science of Learning: Three big ideas for faculty article in this issue.
Degree Teaching Webinar Series – This four-part webinar series will provide support for faculty teaching in degree programs. For more information on degree-level teaching, visit the website and explore the Learning Modules.
Visit the Teaching & Learning Centre’s calendar for more details on all our upcoming workshops, courses, and events.
View the June 2019 issue of the Academic Newsletter.
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