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Teaching in focus conference 2023

Teaching in Focus is a pan-university conference that strives to provide a fertile terrain for informed conversations about teaching and learning while highlighting the practical benefits and conundrums in implementing these ideas wherever we teach – in the classroom, a virtual learning environment, a bilingual space, a clinical setting, or out in the field (among others). Recognizing that teaching practice can take various forms, ranging in aims and methodology, we learn as much, if

TiF 2023 is taking place in person on May 9 and 10 with a theme of Exploring Balance.

We have now seen several consecutive years during which teaching and learning across the post-secondary sector has been destabilized for many, with profound changes to course design and delivery, assessment strategies and teaching practices, and student learning and engagement. The pace of these shifts in the higher education classroom now seems to be slowing, providing us with an opportunity to reflect and consider where we go from here, both collectively and as individual educators. 

The various thematic parallel sessions include presentations on lessons from COVID, students as partners and student leadership, student engagement, STEM, belonging, care and community, scholarship of teaching and learning, assessment, and AIF presentations.

Click on 'TiF 2023: Agenda and Conference Access' in the accordion menu below to review the program from our most recent conference!

Proposals no longer than 300 words are due by February 28, 2023 at 11:45pm.

TiF 2023 is taking place in person on May 9 and 10 with a theme of Exploring Balance.

We have now seen several consecutive years during which teaching and learning across the post-secondary sector has been destabilized for many, with profound changes to course design and delivery, assessment strategies and teaching practices, and student learning and engagement. The pace of these shifts in the higher education classroom now seems to be slowing, providing us with an opportunity to reflect and consider where we go from here, both collectively and as individual educators. 

York University’s 2023 Teaching in Focus Conference, hosted by the Teaching Commons, invites you to join us in exploring balance at this moment in postsecondary education, through scholarship, accounts of teaching practice, reflections on teaching/learning identities, discussion with colleagues, or engagement with student perspectives.  

To submit a proposal, please fill out this form. The deadline for submission is February 28, 2023.

These additional guiding questions may provide further inspiration: 

  • How can we balance the successes and failures we have experienced over the past few years of change and adaptation as we now move forward? Where have we gained insights and growth into our teaching from experiences of imbalance? 
  • Can we strike the “right” balance between teaching modalities? What does an effective balance look like when it comes to online, blended, in-person, flipped, or Hy-flex teaching and learning?  
  • What approaches and practices can help balance some of the teaching tensions that have moved to the fore over the past few years? For example, the tension between a focus on content delivery versus on student engagement, or the tension between authentic/alternative assessment and grading efficiencies? Can these exist in balance? Should they? 
  • How can we create and sustain equitable, inclusive, and accessible communities and environments that balance the needs and voices of all learners and educators? Is this balance always possible or desirable? 
  • How can we use our lessons learned to build sustainable and resilient learning spaces, technologies, and communities that can remain in balance during future periods of instability? 
  • What might existing frameworks (such as experiential education, critical pedagogy, the community of inquiry model, the UN Sustainable Development Goals, among others) offer to support balance in teaching and learning? How might they disrupt the balance in fruitful and creative ways?  
  • How can we learn from Indigenous and other non-Western ways of understanding and knowing the concept of balance to continue the work of decolonization and Indigenization in postsecondary education? How can we balance this work with the institutional contexts in which it takes place?  

All York University faculty, instructors, administrators, staff, librarians, graduate and undergraduate students, and post-doctoral scholars are welcome to submit a proposal to one or more of the session formats described below.  

Session Formats: 

Note that all session formats are in-person.  

1. Individual or Team Presentation (20 minutes) 

This is a 15-minute presentation with 5 minutes reserved for Q&A. Presentations can be made by individuals or by teams, and should address the conference theme, “Exploring Balance”, as outlined above. Please indicate which of the following session foci of A Model for Engaged Teaching at York University: Moving Towards Research-Informed Practice your presentation most connects with: 

  • Scholarship of Teaching and Learning: Share your research into teaching and learning activities that are implemented and assessed systematically in the classroom or the curriculum (e.g., qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods approaches to describing and analysing pedagogical initiatives). 
  • Scholarly Teaching: Share the results of implementing teaching and learning activities in the classroom or the curriculum based upon best practices or scholarly literature (e.g., sharing student feedback from classroom assessment techniques or a survey following a teaching activity informed by the literature) 
  • Practice of Teaching: Share your classroom or curricular strategies, activities, or reflections based on your teaching experience and/or disciplinary lens (e.g., sharing your favourite teaching tip alongside informal evidence of student learning).  

2. AIF Featured Talks (20 minutes) 

Academic Innovation Fund (AIF) grant recipients are encouraged to submit a proposal for presenting the outcomes of their project. This can be done in a traditional 20-minute presentation unless otherwise specified by the prospective presenters. 

3. New: TiF Reads 

New to TiF this year, we invite you to champion the teaching/learning related read that most inspired and engaged you over the past year(s). This might be a book, a chapter, a journal article, or another resource – if it challenged you to think differently and got you excited about teaching in new ways, we want to hear about it! We will select four champions to introduce their chosen reads via the Teaching Commons blog in the weeks leading up to TiF. During TiF, you will also participate in an in-person panel from which only one champion, and one read, will emerge victorious! 

4.  Roundtable Discussions (30-40 minutes for each discussion)  

Many of you may feel that you have a perspective to share but not necessarily in a presentation format. If you would like to be part of a conversation, consider joining one of our roundtable discussions:  

  • Balance and assessment 
  • Balance and student engagement 
  • Balance and technology 
  • Balancing teaching, research, and life 
  • Others? Contact teaching@yorku.ca to suggest additional roundtable topics 

No pre-registration or submissions required – you will be able to join roundtable discussions during the conference. 

If you experience any difficulties with the submission process, please reach out to Teaching Commons or our instructional designer, Robert Winkler, and we will be happy to assist you.

Click on the image below to register for the Pre-TiF SDG Event!

Visual poster with the following text detailing the conference program:
The Right Balance: Teaching and Learning the SDGs through collaboration and connection
Date: Monday, May 8, 2023, 9:45am - 2:30pm via Zoom
Morning Program
9:45am-10:00am - Introductory Speakers: UNESCO Chair, UNAI Member
10:00-11:50AM - Panel Discussions: York University Student Panel, Interdisciplinary Instructors/Faculty Panel, SDG Partners Panel 
Afternoon Program
12:00pm-12:30pm - Live Coaching/Q&A
12:30pm-2:00pm - SDG Tasting Menu: Workshops #1 - #5
2:00pm-2:10pm - Debrief
2:10pm-2:20pm - Networking Session
2:20pm-2:30pm - Closing Remarks
Conference Co-chairs: Sandra Peniston, Nitima Bhatia, Tracy Bhoola
REGISTRATION: https://tinyurl.com/mpdwbh9u

Pre-TiF SDG Event: Comprehensive Program

Visual poster head for the conference for illustration purposes, displaying the following text:
Teaching in Focus (TiF) Conference
Exploring Balance
May 9 and 10, 2023

Join us on May 9 and 10, 2023 for our 2023 Teaching in Focus Conference at the
Life Sciences Building!


AGENDA

Click here to download a printable copy!


MAY 9: Tuesday

TIMEPROGRAM
Room 103
. ...
09:00LIGHT BREAKFAST & REGISTRATION
(Atrium)
09:45Welcoming Remarks
10:00Keynote Presentation:
by Fiona Rawle
(Biography)
(Abstract)
Watch it on YouTube
Access PPT as PDF
10:50BREAK
TIMELESSONS FROM
COVID
(Room 103)
STUDENTS AS PARTNERS
(Room 101)
ACADEMIC INNOVATION FUND
(Room 107)
STUDENT ENGAGEMENT
(Room 105)
STEM
(Room 106)
11:00Fostering a qualitative research learning community
by K. Bischoping
(Abstract)
Bridging the Gap: A look at the Students-as-Partners framework at York
by L. Wilson et al.
(Abstract)
E-Mentoring: Partnering with Nursing Students
by R. Robbio et al.
(Abstract)
Virtual Journal Club - an Exchange Experience
by K. Bernhardt-Walther et al.
(Abstract)
Open Education Resource - GAMES: A Gentle Approach
by R. McKeown et al.
(Abstract)
11:35A Balanced Return to the First-Year Classroom
by A. MacLennan
(Abstract)
A quest for homeostasis
by N. Cheng et al.
(Abstract)
Introducing Envision YU: Tools for Student Success
by C. Steele et al.
(Abstract)
Benefits of Group Work: How it can improve learning
by P. Vashisth
(Abstract)



The Effect of 3D Animations on Student Learning
by J. Atallah et al.
(Abstract)
12:05LUNCH
(Atrium)
13:00Redesigning genetics: balancing structure and...
by T. Da Sylva & T. Kelly
(Abstract)
Balancing the ‘Seesaw of Student Challenges’
by A.K. Mohammed et al.
(Abstract)
Improving First-Year Math with Adaptive Learning Software
by R. McKeown et al.
(Abstract)
SELF-CARE SESSION
(Abstract)
ROUNDTABLE: Balance & Technology (Abstract)
13:35The Elusive Search for Balance and Engagement
by J. Petropoulos
(Abstract)
Belonging in the Classroom
by A. Stypka et al.
(Abstract)
Between slates, chalk, and eClass quizzes
by K. Bernhardt-Walther
(Abstract)
ROUNDTABLE: Balance & Student Engagement
(Abstract)
Making Virtual Reality a Reality
by D. Jackson & K. Belozerov
(Abstract)
14:10Bringing Statistics to Life: Understanding Power and Potential
by M. Herbert et al.
(Abstract)
Balancing Student Engagement Online vs In-person
by A.K. Mohammed et al.
(Abstract)
Challenges & Recommendations from Students & Faculty
by B. Orazietti et al.
(Abstract)
Student Numeracy Assistance Centre at Keele (SNACK)
by R. McKeown et al.
(Abstract)
Strategies for teaching and evaluating theory-heavy courses
by A. Amirfazli et al.
(Abstract)
14:40BREAK
14:55TiF Reads
(Abstract)
More about TiF Reads...
15:40RECEPTION
(Atrium)

MAY 10: Wednesday

TIMEPROGRAM
Room 103
. ...
09:00LIGHT BREAKFAST & REGISTRATION
(Atrium)
09:45Welcome Back
09:55Plenary: Well-Being in Higher Education - Promoting Balance on the Institutional, Interpersonal, and Individual Levels
by J. Dowsett, A. Molas, & S. Farzana
(Abstract)
10:45BREAK
TIMEBELONGING, CARE & COMMUNITY
(Room 103)
SoTL
(Room 105)
ASSESSMENT
(Room 106)
STUDENT ENGAGEMENT
(Room 107)
NETWORKING SPACE
(Room 101)
10:55Zooming Universally: Fostering Engagement
by D. Woronko
(Abstract)
EDUCATE COHORT
(Abstract)
Ungrading: Reflections on Finding Balance in the Classroom
by H. Bergen
(Abstract)
Active Learning in Asynchronous Classes
by T. Totten
(Abstract)
Mingle and build relationships...
11:30Infusing fun and community building in nursing education
by A. Phillips et al.
(Abstract)
EDUCATE COHORT
(Abstract)
Mastery learning through computer-based assessments
J. Schroeder
(Abstract)
Balancing abstract with practical in teaching
by R-L. Sevel et al.
(Abstract)
Mingle and build relationships...
12:05Balancing a hybrid class: A generative collaborative conversation
by J. Vorstermans & A. Jafry
(Abstract)
EDUCATE COHORT
(Abstract)
Re-Engaging Max Labs in ADMS 2511: Juggling Time and Skills
by I. Splettstoesser et al.
(Abstract)
Striking balance between teaching content and teaching skills
by K. Reid
(Abstract)
Mingle and build relationships...
12:35LUNCH
(Atrium)
13:30Exploring Balance in Educational Development of Graduate Student TA’s
by D. Vallesi & V.L. Grimaldi
(Abstract)
Collaborative Inquiry-based Learning in Remote/Face-to-Face ESL/EAP Courses
by O. Makinina
(Abstract)
ROUNDTABLE: Balance & Assessment
(Abstract)
Using simulated electronic health records for documentation practice
by K. Pedernal & S. Evans
(Abstract)
Mingle and build relationships...
14:05ROUNDTABLE: Balancing Teaching, Research, & Life (Abstract)Fostering international student success
by R. Heynen & S. Zhao
(Abstract)
Finding Balance in Flexible Deadlines
by M. Barranti et al.
(Abstract)
Finding balance with experiential education
by D. Dobney et al.
(Abstract)
Workshopping Teaching Competencies
by L. Fisher
(Abstract)
This is an hour-long workshop running from 14:05 to 15:05. Participants should plan to attend the full hour.
14:40SELF-CARE SESSION
(Abstract)
Complexity genetics - determining levels of genetic deterministic thinking
by S. Balaji et al.
(Abstract)
Using peer grading (Kritik) in large gen ed online courses
by M.H. Armour
(Abstract)
Demystifying Academic Writing: Helping Our Students Become Better Writers
by D. Baus & M. Bernholtz
(Abstract)
Workshopping Teaching Competencies
by L. Fisher
(Abstract)
This is the continuation of an hour-long workshop running from 14:05 to 15:05. Participants should plan to attend the full hour.
15:10BREAK
15:25Closing Plenary:
What is your burning teaching and learning question?
(Abstract)
16:10CONCLUSION