MRU Institute for SoTL

3 SoTL sessions at the upcoming CACSL conference, May 25-27 at MRU

This year, the TransCanada International Forum on SoTL, sponsored through the Institute for Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, will be hosted in partnership with the 2016 Canadian Association of Community Service Learning conference, May 25-27 at Mount Royal University.  The Forum features 3 sessions with leading scholar Patti Clayton:

Session I (Wed, 9:00 – 12:00): Integrating Critical Reflection and Assessment to Generate, Deepen, and Document Learning
In this first of three opportunities to collaboratively explore Community Service-Learning and Community Engagement (CSL/CE) as the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) with practitioner-scholar Patti Clayton, we will focus our attention on designing critical reflection so as to both generate student learning and provide a basis for inquiry into the processes that support such learning. For over 15 years Patti and colleagues around the world have been refining a research grounded model for integrating critical reflection and assessment. This highly interactive session will invite participants to build on their work, co-create critical reflection assignments and rubrics that are well-aligned with shared learning goals, and begin to co-design SoTL questions and methods that tap critical reflection products and processes.

Throughout the session participants will be invited to identify colleagues in the room with similar interests and to explore possible collaboration during the lunch break.

Session II (Wed, 1:30 – 4:00): Revisioning SoTL for Service-Learning and Community Engagement
Who conducts SoTL? And whose learning is in question in SoTL? In this second in a series of three opportunities to collaboratively explore CSL/CE as the scholarship of teaching and learning, Patti Clayton and Janice Miller-Young will invite participants into an international conversation about broadening and deepening the meanings and the practices of SoTL, within and beyond CSL. Patti, Janice, and their colleague Peter Felten are advancing efforts to conceptualize and implement engaged pedagogies as spaces of co-teaching, co-learning, and co-generating knowledge and practice; and they are seeing in trends in this direction indications that it is time to revisit and revise Hutchings and Shulman’s seminal work defining SoTL. SoTL can be a powerful means of developing practitioner-scholars; improving teaching and learning; nurturing communities of inquiry and practice around shared commitments to learners and learning; and building bodies of knowledge, practice, and policy in support of same. To fulfill this potential in the context of engaged pedagogies and to retain its cutting edge orientation as scholarship, they suggest that SoTL can no longer be understood and enacted primarily by faculty as a vehicle to improve student learning and to produce scholarship by and for faculty. This highly interactive session will engage participants in revisioning SoTL in ways that honor CSL/CE’s foundational commitment that everyone involved teaches and learns and that leverage the questions, experiences, and learning of CSL/CE practitioner-scholars to help define the future of SoTL in CSL/CE.

At the end of the day participants will be invited to form pairs or small groups of potential collaborators and to engage in the rest of the conference accordingly (e.g., having meals together, meeting between sessions to share questions and insights).

Session III (Fri, 9:00 – 11:45): Continuing our own SoTL Journeys: Questions, Collaborators, and Next Steps
In this third opportunity to explore CSL/CE as SoTL with Patti and colleagues, we will reflect on related work we have encountered during the conference, examine Canadian examples, and further develop our own questions, collaborations, and inquiry methods. Participants will be invited to skim an article/chapter related to the SoTL interests shared by the pair/small group they formed on Wednesday (examples will be provided) and to bring a worksheet completed during the conference to the session as aids to focusing our time productively. The intended outcome of this concluding gathering in the series of 3 sessions is for participants to leave with specific ideas, collaborators, and next steps in their own journeys with CSL/CE as SoTL.

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TransCanada Forum on SoTL in Conjunction with Canadian Alliance for Community Service Learning

This year’s TransCanada Forum on SoTL will be held in partnership with the Canadian Alliance for Community Service Learning (CACSL) http://cacslconference2016.ca/ . This is a national conference for Community Service Learning (CSL) and Community Engagement (CE). Partners include Volunteer Alberta, Volunteer Canada, the Volunteer Centre Network, and Mount Royal University’s Institutes for Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, for Environmental Studies, and for Community Prosperity.

The conference runs May 25-27 at Mount Royal University and the call for proposals closes Sunday, January 31. More information can be found on the conference website.

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An interdisciplinary, international collaboration about teaching Community Service Learning courses

patti clayton

Above, left to right: Janice Miller-Young (Institute for SoTL), Yasmin Dean (Social Work), Judy Gleeson (Nursing), Victoria Clavert (Bissett School of Business), Patti Clayton (Indiana Univeristy – Purdue University Indianapolis), Melanie Rathburn (Biology), Roberta Lexier (General Education), Margot Underwood (Nursing)

This faculty research group is collaborating with leading scholar Dr. Patti Clayton to conduct a self-study of faculty learning when teaching with the challenging pedagogy “Community Service Learning”. They have conducted a series of interviews about reciprocity in their international service-learning courses and will work over the 2014-15 academic year to analyze them, place their findings within the existing literature, and ultimately produce a paper. However, we are finding the benefits of this work to be as much about process as outcome (the sharing of stories, as well as group analysis and writing are all part of the learning process). Preliminary findings are being presented at the prestigious IARSLCE conference:

  • Decoding Ourselves: faculty thinking about reciprocity in global service learning courses, International Association for Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement, Tulane University, Sept. 2014.

We anticipate that by getting this interdisciplinary community together, other collaborative projects about student learning will grow out of it in the future. Currently, I-SoTL is also sponsoring one SoTL-CSL research project in General Education (Rathburn and Lexier).

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holiday reading: some examples of Patti Clayton’s work in SoTL-CSL

The DEAL Model for Critical Reflection and Assessment that she co-developed through a long-term SoTL project has formed the basis for several projects/articles:

The first research-grounded one was:
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/mjcsl/3239521.0011.204/1/–integrating-reflection-and-assessment-to-capture-and-improve?view=image

The following piece is the product of a long-term project grounded in DEAL. This is a primary go-to piece on critical reflection and assessment in experiential learning (which this journal calls “applied learning”):
http://www.missouriwestern.edu/appliedlearning/journalvol1/Ash%20&%20Clayton,%20Generating,%20Deepening,%20and%20Documenting%20Learning.pdf

Also:

An article on a less social-sciency example of a SoTL project can be found at:
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/mjcsl/3239521.0011.106/–shifts-in-perspective-capitalizing-on-the-counter-normative?view=image&seq=1&size=100

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Engaging with Patti Clayton – CSL research workshop January 30

As part of Patti Clayton’s 2-day visit to MRU, she will be giving a full-day research development workshop on January 30.  This is intended for anyone interested in doing SoTL research in a CSL course, on student learning outcomes such as cognitive development, academic learning, civic engagement, and intercultural competence.

workshop poster-blog

Registration: Workshop #94

Register online: http://notesweb.mtroyal.ca/ADC/ADCWorkshops.nsf?open&login 
or contact the ADC at: nfunke@mtroyal.ca403-440-6042

** Faculty from our neighbouring institutions are also welcome to attend.  Please email the institute (see bottom of poster, above) for more information.

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Engaging with Patti Clayton – keynote January 29

The Institute is happy to announce this keynote talk, as part of Patti Clayton’s 2-day visit to MRU.  An expert on Community Service Learning, Patti served as lead editor for and contributing author to the 2-volume set Research on Service-Learning: Conceptual Frameworks and Assessment.  Patti will talk about models of service-learning as democratic engagement, drawing on her own experience as well as MRU examples.  This is sure to be an engaging presentation!

Slide1

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CSL Research group – save the dates!!

Arrangements are coming together for two upcoming CSL research group events!  (If you’re interested in only receiving CSL Research Group news, add a comment below requesting to be added to the email distribution list.)

12:00 Thurs Nov 28: presentation by Melanie Rathburn and Roberta Lexier, research design-in-progress for their upcoming GenEd CSL trip to Honduras

all day Thurs Jan 30: CSL-SoTL workshop presented by Patti Clayton, co-author and co-editor of two books on Research on Service Learning
Research on Service Learning: Conceptual Frameworks & Assessments

More details coming soon!!

And by the way, here’s a recent, brief article on service learning from Faculty Focus:
What Makes Service Learning Unique: Reflection and Reciprocity

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