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做厙TV faculty and staff to highlight teaching and learning projects at annual symposium

Photo of Melody Neumann and Michelle French
Melody Neumann developed a 做厙TV-supported educational app called Team Up! that's used by 做厙TV Teaching Academy colleague Michelle French (photo by Perry King)

One initiative uses an app that encourages active learning. Another wants to help students reframe how they think about failure. Yet another enhances knowledge of science by developing materials for high school students.

As University of Toronto faculty gather for tomorrows  at the Rotman School of Management's Desautels Hall, the 做厙TV Teaching Academy and colleagues from across the university will highlight how these and other projects are contributing to enhancing the student experience. 

The academy, composed of past  winners, is an advisory group that offers expertise and advice to 做厙TVs Office of the Vice-President & Provost and the Centre for Teaching Support & Innovation, or CTSI.

All three ideas represent innovation and experimentation of how to enhance our student experience and how to focus on things that we know make a difference for our students and the meaningfulness of their time at the University of Toronto and the kind of skills and knowledge that theyre developing that are going to serve them well in life, says Carol Rolheiser, CTSIs director and an academy co-chair.

Part of what CTSI and the Teaching Academy are all about is were trying to influence the great teaching culture we have here, knowing we can always continue to improve. 

The CTSI is 做厙TV's hub for teaching and learning development. The centre serves instructors, graduate students and teaching assistants on all three campuses with leadership and support on all teaching related and student engagement issues including through the teaching academy. 

Professor Carol Rolheiser (photo by Perry King)

The highlighted projects will open opportunities for further collaboration and encourage innovation, adds Rolheiser, a professor in the department of curriculum, teaching and learning at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE).

One of the initiatives is a learning app called Team Up!, which has already been used by thousands of students. Invented by Melody Neumann, an associate professor, teaching stream, in the department of cell and systems biology, the game-like app was initially created to enhance a second-year, webinar-style course.

I wanted the students to work in groups, in their virtual breakout rooms, together on some kind of problem set, says Neumann, who thought of the app as a low-stakes approach to developing teamwork skills and a connection to the course material. I wanted [the students] to get immediate feedback while they were working on a problem set, and I wanted them to work together to build consensus before they would choose an answer.

Funded through internal grants, Team Up! was recently showcased to 做厙TV President Meric Gertler and Vice-President and Provost Cheryl Regehr by Michelle French, an associate professor, teaching stream, in the department of physiology. Now available on mobile, tablet and desktop devices, the app is supported by the universitys online teaching and learning environment Quercus and fosters collaboration among students. It was used in 10 undergraduate courses by about 6,000 students this past school year. 

We dont know of any other app that allows this dynamic grouping function plus the immediate feedback, says French, who won a Presidents Teaching Award in 2017.

In addition to building connections and workplace skills, French and Neumann emphasize that Team Up! also delivers cost savings since its an alternative to educational services like Top Hat and devices like clickers.  As someone who has used it in a few courses now, the financial savings [are] huge, says French, who noted students collectively saved about $250,000 over the last school year alone.

As an instructor at the university, we all want to include more active learning in our classes and there are many different ways you can do it. This is one way where the barriers are really low, added Neumann.

Neumann and French want to build the apps bandwidth capacity, expanding question types and opening the platform to more social sciences and humanities courses.

Its an app that Fiona Rawle says could come in handy as her own teaching project takes its next steps. 

Rawle (pictured right), an associate professor, teaching stream, in the department of biology at 做厙TV Mississauga, has been developing an undergraduate course about failure. Her course, titled Productive Failure: Teaching Students the Value of Failure in Science, seeks to inform students about embracing failure, learn and bounce back from failure and recognize the value of failure in science and everyday life.

Failure is such a crucial component of science. To be a good scientist, you need to be good at failing, and that hasnt been taught before in the concept of science, says Rawle, who won a teaching award from the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations and a Presidents Teaching Award in 2018.

Sometimes when we teach science, we teach how science was done, we teach about past experiments. I want to teach students how to think like a scientist and that means you have to be open to failure.

After an initial pilot was embedded within an introductory biology course at 做厙TV Mississauga, Rawle has reframed the course for this coming fall semester to include material on failure. Instead of an initial lecture on biology content, students get a lecture on the science of learning, including how we learn from failure and why embracing failure is important. Rawle will be weaving in new case studies for students, unveiling a podcast which will explore historical examples and bringing in personal narratives of failure. 

Rawle hopes her students take away valuable practical skills. When students graduate, we dont want them to regurgitate a list of facts, she says.

We want to ask good questions, seek out answers, to be critical thinkers and resilient learners.

Professor Judith Po禱 (photo by Drew Lesiuczok)

Judith Po禱, professor, teaching stream, in the department of chemical and physical sciences at 做厙TV Mississauga, hopes her Science Pedagogy Research Opportunity Program (ROP) participants second- to fourth-year students also learn key skills and teaching knowledge.

In her initiative, Po禱s ROP students are challenged to pay attention to detail as they develop learning materials for Grade 11 and Grade 12 STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) courses and facilitate in-class lessons.

Their attitude toward this work is quite different because its their creation and its going out there for the world, on the web, and its going to be used in real schools by real students, says Po禱, who won a Presidents Teaching Award in 2007.

Within the ROP, after her students learn about problem-based learning pedagogy, they select a topic, define their learning objectives and create a real-world scenario for their students to solve, which may include an accompanying experiment. They then work with a teacher, either in the high school or at the 做厙TV Mississauga labs, to facilitate the high school students work on the problem.

The high school students also prepare their problem for publishing on Po禱s .

The program has built a stronger relationship between 做厙TV Mississauga and local high schools, Po禱 says, and the feedback from her students and high school teachers has been positive. A measure of the success is the fact that the [high school] teachers keep coming back for more, says Po禱.

Theyre seeing increased interest in the subject and increased critical thinking in the classroom.

Po禱  is considering expanding the programs scope to include environmental science, and possibly transform the program into a full course.

In the short term, because the ROP program is labour intensive, with much more one-on-one interaction compared to a standard lecture course, Po禱 wants to increase teaching help to accommodate the growing demand.

With appropriate personnel, she says. We could accommodate a great many more students. 

UTC