Centre for Teaching and Learning
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The Centre for Teaching and Learning invites faculty, staff, sessional instructors, students and the community to the 4th annual Summer Series on Teaching and Learning: Developing independent and autonomous learners.

Developing learners who are able to think and work independentlyand autonomously is an overarching goal of post-secondary education, and is implicit in both the undergraduate and graduate degree level expectations for the University of Windsor.  Learning environments that support and develop these skills in students can be highly rewarding and engaging for both the student and the instructor. Strategies that promote independent and autonomous learning can also lead to more efficient teaching for instructors, with learners who are able to problem-solve for themselves, spend more time on their own learning, and have the ability to learn with less direct instruction from the teacher. This series will explore some of the myriad of approaches that can be applied to enhance these skills in your students. Workshops will explore sub-themes of accessible classrooms and universal instructional design, learning and teaching technologies, and assessment practices.

Past offerings

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Monday, August 23, 2010

Self Assessment as the Foundation for Developing and Encouraging Independent Learning

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Monday, August 23, 2010, 01:30 PM – 04:30 PM
Location: The Katzman Lounge
Instructors: Don Woods

The Centre for Teaching and Learning's 2010 Summer Series on Teaching and Learning will kick off with “Self Assessment as the Foundation for Developing and Encouraging Independent Learning” Monday, August 23, from 1:30pm-4:30pm. The workshop will be facilitated by Dr. Don Woods, emeritus professor of chemical engineering at McMaster University, and winner of numerous awards for leadership and teaching including the prestigious 3M Teaching Fellowship and the OCUFA Teaching Award.

The workshop will focus on the notion that developing student confidence, skills, and attitudes surrounding peer and self assessment can help promote increased responsibility and encourage independent learning.

During this session, participants will learn how to request and assess written self-reflections and learning journals, and to use these forms of evidence to indicate student self-directedness and independence in learning.  Participants will also experience part of a mini-workshop that they can adapt to help students in their own classes develop these skills. Participants will leave the session with a variety of tools that can help their students understand how prepared they are for independent learning through enhancing their abilities in self-assessment.

Dr. Woods has over 400 publications and has given over 500 workshops on effective teaching and process skill development, problem-based learning, and motivating and rewarding teachers to improve student learning all across the world.  His research interests include improving student learning and developing skill in problem solving, troubleshooting, group and team work, self assessment, change management, and lifetime learning.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

9:30 AM

Aim for student success: Accessibility in the classroom

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Tuesday, August 24, 2010, 09:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Location: The Katzman Lounge
Instructors: Anne Carrick, Irene Carter, Kenneth Cramer, Erika Kustra, Donald Leslie, Beth Oakley, Christine Quaglia, Karen Roland, Lorna Stolarchuk

How can you make your classroom even more accessible, to ensure that everyone has the best opportunity to learn?  This workshop is interactive session exploring strategies of universal design for instruction (UDI) that will best promote learning for all of your students.  The new government Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005 (AODA) requires changes in the way that universities teach and provide professional development for all of their employees.  Through this workshop, you will become aware of your personal responsibility under the new Act, as well as learn and share successful strategies that will help your students learn most effectively.

By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • identify alternative ways to encourage more effective interaction and communication with differently challenged students- in person, in print, or on- line.
  • begin to incorporate the AODA regulatory principles of inclusion and equal opportunity with the application of pedagogical principles of universal instructional design.
  • identify professional supports and resources available to help develop accessible course material and a barrier free learning environment.

1:00 PM

Encouraging Self-Directed Learning

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Tuesday, August 24, 2010, 01:00 PM – 03:00 PM
Location: The Katzman Lounge
One fundamental purpose of higher education is to encourage students to take increasing responsibility for their own learning, to take charge of their learning. How can we facilitate self-directed learning or learning autonomy? What are the preferred avenues and the best strategies to stimulate self-directed learning? What are the limits in terms of student readiness and institutional constraints? This interactive workshop, based on a reading of the literature as well as student and faculty surveys conducted by the presenters, will explore various facets of the stimulation of self-directed learning and encourage the identification of practical implementation strategies for University of Windsor classes.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

9:30 AM

Using CLEW to support independent learning

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Wednesday, August 25, 2010, 09:30 AM – 11:30 AM
Location: The Katzman Lounge

Learning Management Systems are ubiquitous in modern higher education. Systems such as the University of Windsor’s CLEW are used to enhance flexibility in learning and teaching and to improve learning opportunities. There is evidence that using tools such as CLEW in your teaching can also improve student self-direction and autonomy in learning, by providing students with options that may be more suitable to their learning style, greater flexibility to study on a schedule that suits them, enhancing motivation to learn, support for perseverance in challenging courses, and improved self-monitoring and metacognitive skills.

This workshop will explore some of the teaching techniques that can be used with the support of tools in CLEW to enhance student learning and autonomy.

1:00 PM

Tapping into the personal technology revolution to support learner autonomy

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Wednesday, August 25, 2010, 01:00 PM – 03:00 PM
Location: The Katzman Lounge

Personal digital technologies are all around us – almost every student in our classes will have at least one or more devices such as a laptop, netbook, iPad, iPhone, SmartPhone, PDA, tablet PC, digital cameras, video cameras/flip cams, MP3 players, digital smartpens and a vast array of other technologies. The question that is often asked is, can we make use of those everyday devices for learning purposes? This interactive workshop aims to demonstrate some of the ways in which instructors can tap the potential of the technology that students already own to support them in developing as independent learners.

Objectives
By the end of this session, participants will:
- have been exposed to some of the personal technologies that university students are likely to have access to;
- have experienced some of the many possible ways in which personal technology can be used to support independent learning;
- be able to discuss elements of social media that may be used to support student engagement and, learning;
- describe how these tools can enhance the student experience.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

9:30 AM

Using PBL to develop independent learners

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Thursday, August 26, 2010, 09:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Location: The Katzman Lounge
Instructors: Erika Kustra, Maggie Liddle

How do you encourage students to ask good questions and take more responsibility for their learning?  Problem based Learning (PBL) is one method of teaching that can encourage students to think more critically, to become more self-directed in their approach to learning, and to develop skills that closely relate to research in your discipline.  In this interactive workshop, you will have the chance to experience a PBL case.  We will explore questions such as:

  • What is PBL?
  • How do you do it?
  • Should you use it or not?

1:00 PM

Creating assessment tasks that support independent learning

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Thursday, August 26, 2010, 01:00 PM – 03:00 PM
Location: The Katzman Lounge
Instructors: Nick Baker

Assessment is one of the strongest drivers of learning in students, but can it be used to promote independence and autonomy in learners? While it has been argued that traditional methods of assessing student learning (exams, essays etc.) may not help students develop the necessary skills to support a commitment to lifelong learning, there are many alternative approaches that may lead to engagement with the learning, and greater autonomy.

This workshop aims to revisit the basic principles of both assessment and independent learning, and explore some of the approaches to assessment that may enhance student autonomy in learning.

Friday, August 27, 2010

9:30 AM

Student learning portfolios: developing, documenting and evaluating the independent lifelong learner

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Friday, August 27, 2010, 09:30 AM – 11:30 AM
Location: The Katzman Lounge
Instructors: Nick Baker

Student learning portfolios are being used increasingly in grade schools, colleges and universities to document the progress of students towards meeting their learning goals. For teachers, the portfolio approach can provide a framework for a dynamic curriculum, and can facilitate transfer of information between teacher and individual students, other teachers, and beyond the walls of the institution to potential employers of graduates. The learning portfolio can be one of the most powerful tools available to support both teaching and learning. Portfolios have many different goals and approaches, and many argue that they encourage students to assume greater responsibility for their own learning.

This workshop examines approaches to development of learning portfolios, considers various components that may contribute to them, provides a framework for helping students develop their own portfolio, and explores suggestions on how to evaluate them for formative and summative purposes.

12:00 PM

Summer Series BBQ - A celebration of teaching

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Friday, August 27, 2010, 12:00 PM – 01:30 PM
Location: The University Club

BBQThe Summer Series Barbecue is the perfect way to finish a week of celebrating teaching and learning at the University of Windsor. The BBQ is held on the final day of the Summer Series, and is an opportunity for faculty, staff and graduate students to come together to network and informally discuss teaching and learning in their own context, as well as the sessions they have experienced throughout the week. It provides a place to share ideas and experiences, explore new ideas and teachng challenges, and make new connections with colleagues around the University. The BBQ also provides an opportunity for participants to gain a better understanding of the services and support that is available to them at the University.

The Summer Series BBQ is free to participants, and will be held in the Katzman Lounge at 12:00pm on Friday, 27th August.

For catering purposes, please register for this event using the 'Register' button on this page.