
Centering Centers
By Lindsay Doukopoulos, Digital Resources and Innovation Committee

Centering CentersDec 01, 2023

Reflecting on the POD Conference with New Educational Developers
In Episode 53 of Centering Centers, we hear from three brand new educational developers who recently attended the POD Conference in November of 2023. Grouped in the "getting started" two day workshop, these new PODsters share their takeaways and reflections on their experience. This conversation will be of interest to those who are new to an educational development role as well as to those who lead and mentor new educational developers, as each of the three brings a unique disciplinary perspective and each is at very different places in their professional careers.
Dr. Rebecca Conley joined the Department of Mathematics and Statistics at Saint Peter’s University in 2016, and she has been the Director of Faculty Research and Development since 2022. She earned her BA in mathematics and political science from Pace University, her MA in pure mathematics from Hunter College and her PhD in applied mathematics from Stony Brook University. She is the PI of the LEAPS S-STEM grant, which is in its third year and supports low-income, high-achieving students who are majoring in STEM.
DeElla Wiley joined the Biggio Center for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning at Auburn University in 2022 as a graduate teaching assistant and transitioned into a full-time position in 2023. She earned her BA in English in 2009, MA in English Literature in 2012, and a Master of Technical and Professional Communication degree in 2023 from Auburn University. She has taught or developed curriculum in English and ESL in community colleges and at Auburn, and managed instructors who served under-represented minority students. In her current role at the Biggio Center, she creates and facilitates teaching and learning professional development opportunities for Auburn's academic community, including facilitating the Teaching with AI course that has nearly 5,000 learners from nearly 40 institutions across the country.

Creative Play as Community Building
In this episode, Joan Zaretti from Bryant University, Karen Hopkins from Auburn University, and Josh Luckens from Wentworth Institute of Technology discuss their experiences creating playful and play-based programs and activities aimed at engaging their campus and building community. They share strategies for cultivating a sense of belonging, purpose, and trust among students and faculty through the joy of play.
*This episode is another installment of our PODFest series which was recorded December 1, 2022.

Scarlet Letters & Storytelling
Josh Eyler, acclaimed author of How Humans Learn, delves into the pivotal role of storytelling in teaching, learning, and educational development and some of the systemic issues around grading practices tackled in his upcoming book, Scarlet Letters. He offers reflections and stories about his own developmental journey leading different CTLs and shares insights and inspiration for others engaged in educational development and institutional change.
Josh Eyler is Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching & Learning and Director of the Think Forward Quality Enhancement Plan at the University of Mississippi, where he is also Clinical Assistant Professor of Teacher Education. He previously worked on teaching and learning initiatives at Columbus State University, George Mason University, and Rice University. A sought-after speaker for his expertise about the science of learning and about compassion in education, especially in connection with students, grades, and mental health, he has spoken at college and universities across the country. Eyler is the author of the book How Humans Learn: The Science and Stories behind Effective College Teaching (West Virginia University Press, 2018), which Book Authority named one of the “100 Best Education Books of All Time”. Called a “splendid repository of ways to rethink how we teach college” by the Los Angeles Review of Books, it was named a “Book of the Year” in the Chicago Tribune. His second book is forthcoming from Johns Hopkins UP in 2024. Scarlet Letters: How Grades are Harming Children and Young Adults, and What We Can Do about It, is about one of the most urgent issues in education today, grading and alternative assessment.

Centers for Teaching and Learning, A Love Letter, with Mary Wright
Mary Wright is the Associate Provost for Teaching and Learning, Executive Director of the Sheridan Center, and a Research Professor in Sociology. She is a former president of the POD Network in Higher Education. Before joining Brown, she served as Director of Assessment at the University of Michigan's CRLT. She holds degrees in sociology and higher education administration from Princeton and the University of Michigan.
Her research focuses on teaching evaluation, educational development impact, and graduate student development. She is a co-author on the ACE-POD Center for Teaching and Learning Matrix (2017), which created operational standards for Centers for Teaching and Learning, as well as Defining What Matters (2018), which established guidelines for Center for Teaching and Learning evaluation. In 2021-22, she served on the commission (co-chaired by Barbara Snyder, AAU, and Peter McPherson, APLU) that authored The Equity/Excellence Imperative: A 2030 Blueprint for Undergraduate Education at U.S. Research Universities, a report which can be accessed at: https://ueru.org/boyer2030.
Mary co-edits the International Journal for Academic Development, aiming to advance the field of academic development globally, and she has authored two books on educational development, including Centers for Teaching and Learning, the subject of our conversation in this episode
Get Your Copy: Centers for Teaching and Learning: The New Landscape of Higher Education (2023) by Mary Wright, published through JHUPress. Use promo code HCTL23 in the check-out for a discount (active through 7/7/24).
Below are CTL websites that Mary Wright identified as effectively presenting information that goes beyond offering resources for instructors or students.
(1) Centers that offer a clear and concise overview of their statement of purpose (mission, goals, vision, values, and or/ guidelines)
Coppin State University's Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning
(2) Centers that offer a clear picture of the norms of how they work
UCLA's Center for the Advancement of Teaching and their visualization of collaborations
Saint Louis University's Reinert Center for Transformative Teaching and Learning
UNC Asheville's Center for Teaching and Learning
Washington & Lee's Harte Center for Teaching and Learning
(3) Centers that document, longitudinally, how might one expect to work with them over time (e.g., their curriculum)
UCSF School of Medicine's Center for Faculty Educators*
(4) Centers that offer an understanding of their history and origin story
Oklahoma State University Institute of Technology's Center for Advancement of Teaching and Learning*
CUNY Hostos Community College's Professor Magda Vasillov Center for Teaching and Learning
Auburn University's Biggio Center
(5) Centers that have a sense of humor about how they make visible their work
Oklahoma City University's Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning

Organizational Positioning of Centers for Teaching and Learning
How do we optimize our Center for Teaching and Learning (CTL's) organizational structure for maximizing impact and resources? In this episode, Chris Hakala, Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching, Learning, and Scholarship and Professor of Psychology from Springfield College in Springfield, MA and Bonnie Mullinix, a Research Fellow at the Centre for Integration of Research Teaching and Learning at University College Cork (UCC) in Ireland and President of Jacaranda Educational Development, LLC discuss the importance of reporting lines, integrating with other campus units, space logistics, and being a persistent advocate to advance teaching and learning.
*This episode is another installment of our PODFest series which was recorded December 1, 2022.

Advocating for the Future with POD President, Stacy Grooters
In this episode, we speak with Stacy Grooters, the current President of the Professional and Organizational Development (POD) Network in Higher Education. Stacy shares her vision for leading POD, reflects on its history of diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, and discusses how educational developers can advocate for higher education.
Stacy Grooters is currently the Executive Director of the Center for Teaching Excellence at Boston College and the President-Elect of the POD Network. She earned her PhD in English literature, with a concentration in Women’s Studies, from the University of Washington, where she also taught in the departments of English, American Ethnic Studies, and Women Studies. She then spent eight years at Stonehill College, a small liberal arts, Catholic college in Massachusetts, where she founded the Center for Teaching and Learning and co-directed the Gender and Sexuality Studies Program. Stacy’s research focuses on the ways that commitments to diversity, equity, and inclusion are practiced within the field of educational development. Her 2014 article, “Tracking POD’s Engagement with Diversity,” analyzes 35 years of POD conference sessions and journal articles to track changes in how questions of diversity have been taken up by the field. Her current project seeks to define what it means to be an “equity-minded educational developer” and identify the pathways that educational developers take towards growing an equity-minded practice.

Graduate Students in Teaching Centers: Chapter 2
What is the role of a graduate student in a center for teaching and learning? Does it vary by institution or are there predictable patterns that we as educational developers can use to craft job descriptions, direct projects, and provide opportunities for growth through assessment and reflection?
This episode is hosted by Yianna Vovides from CNDLS and features an interview with Haya Jalal.

Ungrading & Alternative Assessments
In this episode, Holly Parker from the Center for Teaching and Learning at the University of Vermont speaks with Leigh Wright, Associate Professor of Journalism and Mass Communications at Murray State University and Ciera Cornelison, Instructional Designer at the University of Alabama about their experiences and thoughts on alternative grading practices. They discuss how these approaches can promote a more nuanced and personalized understanding of student learning beyond mere numbers and letters.
*This episode is another installment of our PODFest series which was recorded December 1, 2022.

Graduate Students in Teaching Centers: Chapter 1
What is the role of a graduate student in a center for teaching and learning? Does it vary by institution or are there predictable patterns that we as educational developers can use to craft job descriptions, direct projects, and provide opportunities for growth through assessment and reflection?
This episode is hosted by Laura March and Yianna Vovides from CNDLS and features interviews with:
- Stefanie Chae
- Pulkit Goyal
- Nikisha Kotwal
- Oluwafikayo Odugbemi
- Kathleen Waterston

Faculty Engagement: How Are We Inviting Folks Back To Programming?
Following the Covid-19 pandemic, faculty and students alike have experienced burnout, stress, and disengagement with professional activities. For educational developers, this can show up as dwindling numbers of participants in our programs and services. As developers we know our job is to make our programs relevant and impactful to our academic communities, but how do we re-engage them in ethical, sustainable, and meaningful ways? In this episode, Chris Adamson from Dakota State University and Tara Harvey an educational developer and founder of True North, an educational development company focused on supporting intercultural teaching and learning discuss the challenges, opportunities, and innovative approaches they are using to solve this challenge.
*This episode is another installment of our PODFest series which was recorded December 1, 2022.

Becoming A New Faculty Developer
What is the journey to educational development like? What are the challenges and opportunities that come with starting out as a new faculty developer? This episode is another installment of our PODFest episodes featuring a conversation between April Tallant, Senior Educational Developer at Coulter Faculty Commons at Western Carolina University; and the POD Network's DRI Committee Co-Chair, Yianna Vovides, Senior Director, Learning Design & Research at Georgetown University's Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship (CNDLS).

How to Help New Faculty Get Started with SoTL Projects
How do we make SoTL accessible (and not scary) to new faculty?
This episode features a lively and engaging conversation between Maria Gallardo-Williams of North Carolina State University, Nancy Chick of Rollins College, and Erin Garcia of Auburn University on the topic of introducing faculty to SoTL. It was recorded as part of the PODFest event hosted by the DRI committee on December 1st, 2022.

How to Help STEM Faculty Help Students Learn
Professors are expected to have extensive expertise in their fields of study in order to qualify to teach at the post-secondary level, but can graduate coursework in quantum mechanics or X-ray crystallography prepare you to be a supportive advisor and an inclusive educator?
Ashley McNeill, Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Springfield College in Springfield, MA, and Elizabeth McDonald, Instructional Designer at The University of Alabama, discuss faculty preparedness for teaching (or lack thereof) for new STEM educators. It’s important for new faculty, particularly in STEM, to be introduced to Centers and other resources intended to help them navigate their new roles as educators, mentors, and academic advisors. Traditional training in a STEM PhD program famously lacks opportunities to be exposed to this aspect of a professor’s work, particularly at large R1 institutions where many graduate students receive their training from professors whose responsibilities largely focus on grant writing and research. Ashley and Elizabeth review several approaches to learning more about student needs in the classroom, course design, and adapting assignments to classrooms of different sizes. Perhaps even more importantly, Ashley and Elizabeth spend some time talking about connecting with your students and teaching them to engage meaningfully in their STEM education.
A PODFest Collaboration
Host, Ashley S. McNeill, Springfield College
Elizabeth McDonald, University of Alabama

Developing a Teaching Center Podcast
Is it time that your teaching center started its own podcast? That’s the question that brought four POD Network colleagues together in a breakout session at PODFest 2022 to talk about teaching center podcasts. What goals might a teaching center podcast have? How would you know if you were meeting those goals? And how would your center go about planning and producing a podcast? This episode features a lively conversation between two teaching center podcast producers, Derek Bruff of the University of Mississippi and Tom Pantazes of West Chester University of Pennsylvania, and two colleagues interested in starting new podcasts, Karen Skibba of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Jasmine Parent of McGill University. They discuss podcasting as an educational development tool as well as practical strategies for starting and sustaining a teaching center podcast.
ODLI on Air, https://open.spotify.com/show/7dlveEuHbzzJ9BfgotUyq8
Leading Lines, https://leadinglinespod.com/
Intentional Teaching, https://intentionalteaching.buzzsprout.com/
Teaching in Higher Education, https://teachinginhighered.com/episodes/
Two Profs in a Pod, https://twoprofsinapod.blogspot.com/

Inflections & Innuendos
I do not know which to prefer,
The beauty of inflections
Or the beauty of innuendoes,
The blackbird whistling
Or just after.
--Wallace Stevens, "13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird"
In this season of Centering Centers, we are speaking with educational developers from diverse centers about their inspirations and innovations – what drives their work and approaches that have impact.
Today we are speaking with Robert Gray, an Associate Professor of University Pedagogy in the Department of Education at the University of Bergen in Bergen, Norway who has over 20 years of experience in higher ed professional development. Before moving to Norway, Rob taught literature courses and led professional development at numerous institutions including: University of Alabama at Birmingham, the University of South Alabama, and the University of Stavanger. His research interests include teaching and learning in higher education, how technology impacts assessment practices in higher education, peer feedback, various aspects of interaction inside and outside the classroom, and how we define quality in teaching and learning. In addition, he has published three books of poetry and directed an award-winning documentary film on race relations in the American South.
Resources Mentioned:

Collaboration Across Universities and Across Borders
In this episode of Centering Centers, guest host Derek Bruff talks with Jessica Riddell, professor of early modern literature and the Stephen A. Jarislowsky Chair of Undergraduate Teaching Excellence at Bishop’s University in Quebec, Canada. Jessica is also the executive director of the Maple League of Universities, which is not, in fact, a group of Canadian super-heroes, but rather a consortium of four small universities that have banded together to support quality undergraduate education. Jessica shares her journey into the field of educational development, how collaboration across institutions can support the missions of those institutions, what she’s learning in her new position on the board of directors of the American Association of Colleges and Universities, and how she manages to get so much stuff done in her week.
https://www.jessicariddell.com/

Integrating Academic Technologies with Faculty Development
“I want my people to look like the experts they are, because I want them to be treated as colleagues, even though we are a service organization.”
In this episode of Centering Centers, guest host Derek Bruff talks with Shawn Miller, director of Learning Innovation at Duke University. Shawn’s unit combines faculty development, instructional technology, online program management, and more. Shawn shares how Duke Learning Innovation came to be and how the unit continues to integrate these different functions, and he provides strategic advice for centers for teaching and learning who are navigating the academic technology landscape.
Resources Mentioned in the Episode:
https://learninginnovation.duke.edu/

How One CTL is Responding to the AI Disruption of Higher Education
In this episode of Centering Centers, we are concluding our trifecta of episodes on the AI disruption by sharing a specific example of how one center is responding to the challenge. Many of us have been benefitted from sharing examples of policies, statements, assignments, and ideas online through the AI for Educators Google group and pod listserv, in that spirit, I wanted to share out through this platform how my colleagues and I are working through these challenges.
My guests are my colleagues, Asim Ali, executive director of the Biggio Center, and Shawndra Bowers, who is, like me, an Associate Director in the Biggio Center, but whose focuses on learning experience design and online course production.

Unpacking the Ethics of AI in Educational Development
In our last episode, we learned about ChatGPT with Cynthia Alby. Today we are diving deeper into the ethics of AI and how we as educational developers might best support the conversations happening across our campuses.
To guide us in this conversation, we are speaking with Dr. Kevin Yee, Director of the Faculty Center at the University of Central Florida. Kevin has held numerous faculty and leadership positions at a range of institutions through his career including USF, Duke, Iowa, Pomona College and UC Irvine.
His research interests within pedagogy are wide, and have included student motivation, study skills, and various emerging technologies for teaching. He is currently co-editing a book of case studies on the intersection of VR and ethics in the college classroom.
Resources Mentioned:
UCF's resource on Academic Integrity and Artificial Intelligence Writing
Christina DiMicelli's "A Discussion for Education" - Google Slide Repository of her research and resources on ChatGPT

Let's Chat about ChatGPT
Today on "Centering Centers", we are speaking with Cynthia Alby, who is Professor of Teacher Education and Faculty Director of Georgia College Journeys, in Milledgeville, Georgia, USA. She shares her perspectives on ChatGPT and how it can catalyze needed change in the teaching landscape of higher education.
- Learning that matters: A field guide to course design for transformative education
- Website: https://learningthatmatters.weebly.com/resources.html
- Media Kit: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1EB9sls15WITsiRqYUuRyrdoBFTalwktEOv836ISFv5Y/edit?usp=sharing
- A link to a specific article referenced: Autumm Caines’ Prior to (or Instead of) Using ChatGPT with Your Students.

Advocating for Adjuncts
Today on "Centering Centers", we are speaking with Teresa Focarile who is the Associate Director for Educational Development at the Center for Teaching and Learning, and Adjunct Faculty in the Department of Theatre, Film and Creative Writing at Boise State University. We discussed the many-layered approach they are implementing to support adjunct faculty's professional learning as well as job satisfaction.
- Two examples of their Adjunct Faculty Newsletter: April 2022 and November 2021
- The link to the POD Special Interest Group (SIG) for Adjunct and Part-Time Faculty (you need to be logged in to the POD website as a member to access that page; you can also email the SIG with questions at adjunct-sig@podnetwork.org)
- A recent publication by the Pullias Center for Higher Education, Designing Accessible and Inclusive Professional Development for NTTF.

Medallions and Medicine
Today on "Centering Centers", we are speaking with Tom Laughner who is the Director of the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center Teaching and Learning center, in Memphis, Tennessee.
Our conversation explores his work supporting faculty in the health professions and the successful micro-credentialing program called the Medallion Program.
Learn more about the Medallion initiative!

Take-aways from the In-Person POD Conference
Today on "Centering Centers", we are speaking with Dana Grossman Leeman who is the Senior Associate Director of the Center for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning at Tufts University. We discussed her experiences, noticings and wonderings from attending the POD conference in person in Seattle this fall.

What Teaching Looks Like: Higher Education through Photographs
This is Episode 30 and we are speaking with Cassandra Volpe Horii and Martin Springborg about their new free, open-access book: “What Teaching Looks Like: Higher Education through Photographs.” Click on the title to go to access the book through the Elon University's Series on Engaged Learning website.
Cassandra Volpe Horii (@cvhorii) is the associate vice provost for education and director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at Stanford University. A former president of the POD Network (2018-19) and founder of educational development centers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and Curry College, Cassandra brings her background in STEM and college writing instruction to life in her current work on educational and systemic change at her institution and in higher education more broadly, as well as through projects such as the collaboration we discuss in today’s episode.
Martin Springborg has worked in the field of educational development since 2007. His writing and photographs on the topic of teaching and learning in higher education have appeared in Thought and Action and To Improve the Academy Stemming from his work as arts faculty and in educational development, Martin also co-authored the books “Meaningful Grading: A Guide for Faculty in the Arts” and of course, the book we will be talking about today: “What Teaching Looks Like: Higher Education through Photographs”

Centering Centering Centers
This is episode 29 of the CC podcast. This is the next installment in our chapter on SoEd. Our guest is Dr. Laura Baecher. Laura is an Associate Professor of TESOL at Hunter College (which is part of cuny system) and she is a leader in their Academic Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching.
We know Laura as the founder and co-host of the centering centers podcast and that is the focus of this episode: how it started, how it's going, and where it might go in the future.
PODFEST Invitation
I want to give a quick plug for a new event that the POD Squad, a subcommittee of POD’s DRI committee, is hosting, called POD Fest. It is a fully virtual, totally free event for POD members who are interested in podcasting and interested in creating content for THIS podcast. Bonnie Stachowiak, Catherine Ross, and Siobhan McHugh will “headline” the program and participants will have the opportunity to collaborate in small groups to create an episode of Centering Centers that will air in 2023. The event will be held on Zoom on December 1st, 1 - 3pm EST.
To register for PODFEST go to aub.ie/podfest22

Power, Positionality, and Peer Review
This is Episode 28 of the Centering Centers Podcast. I’m your host for this episode, Lindsay Doukopoulos. I serve as Associate Director for Educational Development in the Biggio Center at Auburn University. I also serve as co-chair of PODs Digital Resources and Innovations committee. This episode is the next installment in our chapter on the Scholarship of Educational Development and today I’m thrilled to speak with Anna Flaming.
Anna L. Bostwick Flaming is Director of the Center for Teaching in the Office of Teaching, Learning & Technology and affiliate faculty in the Department of Gender, Women’s & Sexuality Studies at the University of Iowa. Anna’s interests include inclusive teaching, active learning, course design, the Scholarship of Educational Development (SoED), the history of higher education, and the history of gender. She is chair of the Professional and Organizational Development (POD) Network in Higher Education’s Scholarship Committee, which supports the POD Network’s strategic goal of “advancing evidence-based practice.”
Our conversation covers topic ranging from the value of multi-disciplinary perspectives in the scholarship of educational development to the power-dynamics of CTL vocabulary choices to the way in which considerations of positionality and inclusion inform the work of the POD Network's Scholarship Committee and its subcommittees.
A link to the ICED pre-conference session Anna mentioned about doing SoED research in combination with our practice: https://medialib.cmcdn.dk/medialibrary/80234312-1C55-406C-86A7-410099EB2739/0DDAA258-5F83-EC11-84B2-00155D0B0901.pdf
A link to the article Anna recommended by Chavella Pittman and Thomas J. Tobin "Academe Has a Lot to Learn About How Inclusive Teaching Affects Instructors": https://www.chronicle.com/article/academe-has-a-lot-to-learn-about-how-inclusive-teaching-affects-instructors

Unpacking Failure and Other Threshold Concepts in Academic Development with Julie Timmermans, Co-Editor of IJAD
Julie Timmermans is a Senior Lecturer in the Higher Education Development Centre at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. Julie is a teacher, researcher, and academic developer with experience facilitating learning in various universities and countries, including Canada, Japan, France, and now, New Zealand. Her research interests focus on academic development and threshold concepts. Julie has been a co-editor of the International Journal for Academic Development since 2020.
In this conversation on the Scholarship of Educational Development, we speak with Julie Timmermans to learn how her experiences in multiple institutions and across countries has informed her work and her perspective as one of the Co-Editors of the International Journal for Academic Development.

Improving the Academy with Michael Palmer & Lindsay Wheeler
Should educational development seek to define itself as a discipline? What are the urgent conversations around our research and practice? Is the academy improving?
In today's episode, I am excited to share my conversation with Michael Palmer and Lindsay Wheeler, Co-Editors of To Improve the Academy (TIA for short), which is the flagship peer-reviewed journal of the POD Network. It is an open-access, electronic journal that focuses on educational development practice and research. TIA publishes two issues annually with occasional special issues that respond to the profession and moment: Link to the Journal.
Michael Palmer and Lindsay Wheeler, colleagues in the Center for Teaching Excellence at UVA, became the first ever Co-Associate Editors of To Improve the Academy in 2020 and now serve as the journal's first co-Editors. Michael, a Chemist by training, leads the Center for Teaching Excellence and has won numerous awards and recognition for his educational development scholarship and innovations. Like many POD Network members, my first encounter with Michael Palmer was the "Measuring the Promise" student-centered syllabus rubric that we use to both model and assess student-centered syllabi from faculty who go through our CDIs each summer.
Lindsay Wheeler, Assistant Director of Educational Development Research and Assessment, is a prolific and award-winning scholar in the field of educational research. Recently she was awarded the 2021 International Journal of Academic Development Article of the Year Award for her article, co written with Dorthea Back, titled: “Understanding the impact of educational development interventions on classroom instruction and student success”. Her approach to educational development research embraces collaboration as evidenced by some of her recent projects: the SoTL Collaboratory in Virginia, and the Pandemic Educational Development Research Collaboratory, which she co-leads with Eric Kaldor, in collaboration with educational developers from other four-year institutions, which focuses on documenting and reflecting on the work of educational developers during the pandemic
This article by Jamiella Brooks, Heather Dwyer, and Marisella Rodriguez, published in Faculty Focus, is mentioned in the interview
"A Call to Interrogate Educational Development for Racism and Colonization"Here is the transcript of our conversation.

Embracing the Complexity of SoED with Laura Cruz
This is the first episode of our 5th season of Centering Centers which focuses on the Scholarship of Educational Development and I’m thrilled to welcome Laura Cruz today who will give us an overview of the SoED landscape.
Laura Cruz is an associate research professor of Teaching and Learning Scholarship
At Penn State's Schreyer Institute of Teaching Excellence. In addition to authoring numerous articles and launching and leading multiple Centers for teaching and learning, she has served as editor on academic journals including To Improve the Academy and recently co-authored a book that many folks in our listening audience might value in called “Taking Flight: Making your Center for Teaching and learning soar” which synthesizes research and provides practical guidance for running centers of teaching and learning.
In this episode, Laura provides an overview of the SoED landscape and shares experiences and ideas that inspired and informed her recent IJAD article, Embracing complexity: an inclusive framework for the scholarship of educational development, Laura Cruz, Elizabeth Dickens, Anna L. Bostwick Flaming, and Lindsay B. Wheeler

Lessons from Dr. Arshad Ahmad, Part 2: A Master Class in Transformational Leadership
This is part 2 of Episode 23 of the Centering Centers podcast. This is the second half of our interview with Dr. Arshad Ahmad, Vice Chancellor of LUMS, which is the top raked university in Pakistan.
In part one of our conversation, Dr. Ahmad shared his journey from a professor of Accounting who struggled with his teaching to 3M National Teaching Fellow - Canada’s most prestigious recognition of teaching at the post-secondary level to director of the MacPherson Institute at McMaster University and now to the ultimate leadership role at LUMS.
In part two, he shares concrete ideas, strategies, and actions he has taken as Vice Chancellor that are informed by his previous role as an educational developer and faculty members. His story provides an answer to the question of what happens when you an educational developer in charge of a major institution with the resources to enact meaningful change--without giving too much away, amazing things happen. His story is of interest to all educational developers but will be particularly inspiring to those on the path to provost, president, or other distinguished leadership positions in higher education.
Dr. Ahmad completed his PhD in Educational Psychology at McGill University and was a Professor of Finance at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada for over 20 years. In 2014, he was appointed Vice-Provost, Teaching and Learning and Director of the MacPherson Institute at McMaster University. He also held academic leadership positions as Chair of Teaching and Learning Canada, President of the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, and Vice President of the International Consortium of Educational Developers. In 1992, he was awarded the 3M National Teaching Fellowship--Canada’s most prestigious recognition of excellence in educational leadership and teaching at the post-secondary level. His research interests include student evaluations of teaching, approaches to teaching, teaching philosophies and student partnerships. In 2018, he became the sixth Vice-Chancellor of LUMS University.

Lessons from Dr. Arshad Ahmad, Part 1 - From Educational Developer in Canada to Vice Chancellor of Pakistan's Top University
This is episode 23 of the Centering Centers podcast. This is the first of a two part interview with Dr. Arshad Ahmad, Vice Chancellor of LUMS, which is the top raked university in Pakistan.
In part one of our conversation, Dr. Ahmad shares his journey from a professor of Accounting who struggled with his teaching to 3M National Teaching Fellow - Canada’s most prestigious recognition of teaching at the post-secondary level to director of the MacPherson Institute at McMaster University and now to the ultimate leadership role at LUMS. His story is of interest to all educational developers but will be particularly inspiring to those on the path to provost, president, or other distinguished leadership positions in higher education.
Dr. Ahmad completed his PhD in Educational Psychology at McGill University and was a Professor of Finance at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada for over 20 years. In 2014, he was appointed Vice-Provost, Teaching and Learning and Director of the MacPherson Institute at McMaster University. He also held academic leadership positions as Chair of Teaching and Learning Canada, President of the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, and Vice President of the International Consortium of Educational Developers. In 1992, he was awarded the 3M National Teaching Fellowship--Canada’s most prestigious recognition of excellence in educational leadership and teaching at the post-secondary level. His research interests include student evaluations of teaching, approaches to teaching, teaching philosophies and student partnerships. In 2018, he became the sixth Vice-Chancellor of LUMS University.

Turning Lonely Fighters into Critical Friends
This is Episode 22 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. We are speaking with Tracy Zou (@ZouTracy) who has worked as an educational developer at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and who has now transitioned back to a faculty role as an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong. In addition to teaching, she is an associate editor of IJAD – the International Journal for Academic Development and an editorial member of Asian Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning as well as a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
Our conversation centers on the lessons learned in the shift from faculty to developer and back, as well as the importance of fostering collaboration and critical friendships with people who not only support but challenge us to think and do things differently. And why those connections are so important to grow and sustain one’s teaching.
Connect with Tracy on Twitter - @ZouTracy
Acknowledgement: Part of this sharing is based on the findings from the research project Professional Development at a Meso-level: Conceptual Development and Impact Analysis funded by the Research Grants Council of the government of HKSAR (Project no. 17609318).

Connecting Across the Borders of Difference with the COIL Program
In this episode, we speak with Stephanie Doscher, Director of the Office of Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) at Florida International University, and Eva Haug, who works as Educational Advisor for Internationalisation of the Curriculum and COIL in the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences. Our conversation focuses on their leadership of COIL programs at their respective institutions, the challenges and opportunities of recruiting and developing faculty to participate, as well as approaches for assessing impacts of the program on students, faculty and developers like themselves. Finally, they share the unique cultural experiences and motivations that brought them together and sustain them as leaders and as professional collaborators in this effort to, as Stephanie eloquently put it, "connect faculty and students across the borders of difference."
Here is a transcript of the conversation.
Resources for getting in touch with Stephanie and Eva & for getting started and engaging with the COIL program:
- Stephanie Doscher: sdoscher@fiu.edu
- Eva Haug: e.m.haug@hva.nl (email) & on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/eva-haug-Amsterdam
- FIU COIL: https://coil.fiu.edu, coil@fiu.edu
- The Guide to COIL Virtual Exchange (forthcoming from Stylus, September 2022)
- COIL Connect
- International Virtual Exchange Conference (IVEC)
- UNICollaboration
- The Stevens Initiative
- Latin American COIL Network

Creating a SoTL Collaboratory
This is Episode 20 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Laura Lukes, Assistant Professor of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of British Columbia (Vancouver Campus), providing an overview of the Virginia SoTL Collaboratory. Click here for the episode transcript.

Ethics of SoTL
This is Episode 19 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Jill McSweeney-Flaherty, Educational Developer at the Centre for Learning and Teaching at Dalhousie University, providing insights on how educational developers can approach supporting faculty with the ethics of SoTL research.

Teaching as Research
This is Episode 18 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Marsha Lovett, Senior Associate Vice Provost for Educational Innovation & Learning Analytics, Director, Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence & Educational Innovation and Teaching Professor, Department of Psychology at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, discussing how a research-mindset is being infused into teaching practice at her institution.
Eberly's Teaching as Research website: https://www.cmu.edu/teaching/teaching-as-research/index.html

Faculty Leading Faculty: A SoTL Institute
This is Episode 17 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Maria Gallardo-Williams, Teaching Professor and Director, Organic Chemistry Teaching Laboratories and SoTL Faculty Fellow, and Diane Chapman, Executive Director for Faculty Development, Office of Faculty Excellence at North Carolina State University, discussing their tips to run successful SoTL faculty institutes. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Some of the resources mentioned in the podcast are linked below.

A Strategic Framework to Support CETL Planning
This is Episode 16 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Carlos Guevara, Co-Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning and Director of the Office of Educational Technology at Hostos Community College, City University of New York. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Links:
Wolfe, K. S., Lyons, K., & Guevara, C. (Eds.). (2019). Developing Educational Technology at an Urban Community College (1st ed.). Springer International Publishing. https://www.amazon.com/Developing-Educational-Technology-Community-College/dp/3030170373.
https://library.educause.edu/resources/2022/4/2022-educause-horizon-report-teaching-and-learning-edition

Faculty Identity Shifts: Findings from the SOAR Project
This is Episode 15 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Stephanie Laggini Fiore, Assistant Vice Provost, Center for the Advancement of Teaching at Temple University in Philadelphia discussing the SOAR course redesign initiative that has shown positive impact on high DFW courses. Here is a transcript of the podcast.

The Gold, Silver and Bronze of a Reflective Practitioner Program
This is Episode 14 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Nick Monk, Director, and Brian Wilson and Steven Cain, Senior Instructional Designers, Center for Transformative Teaching at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Links:
https://news.unl.edu/newsrooms/today/article/reflective-practitioner-program-aims-to-recognize-professional-development/
https://teaching.unl.edu/rpp/

Turning Lessons Learned from Instructional Coaching into Faculty Onboarding
This is Episode 13 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Andrea Jackson, Instructional Coach, Center for Faculty Development at Fayetteville Technical Community College in North Carolina. Here is a transcript of the podcast.

Cultivating our Common Humanity: A Contemplative Practices Program
This is Episode 12 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Ileana Hernandez, Assistant Director for Assessment, Evaluation & Development, Center for the Advancement of Teaching at Florida International University. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Some of the resources mentioned in the podcast are linked below.
- FIU's Contemplative Practices in Education initiative
- The Inner Work of Racial Justice: Healing Ourselves and Transforming Our Communities Through Mindfulness by Rhonda V. Magee
- Trauma-Sensitive Mindfulness by David Treleaven
- Permission to Feel by Marc Brackett
- Contemplative Practices in Higher Education: Powerful Methods to Transform Teaching and Learning by Daniel P. Barbezat and Mirabai Bush
- Contemplative Mind in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning by Patricia Owen-Smith
- UCLA Mindful Awareness Practices classes
- Dr. Mays Imad, neuroscientist & expert on trauma-informed teaching and education
- Center for Contemplative Mind in Society and the Contemplative Practices Tree

Bringing Students to the Table: A Students as Partners Program
This is Episode 11 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Mark Hofer, Director, Studio for Teaching & Learning Innovation and Professor, School of Education at the College of William and Mary in Virginia, USA. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Some of the resources mentioned in the podcast are linked below.
Studio for Teaching & Learning Innovation (STLI) - https://stli.wm.edu/
STLI Student Partner Program - https://stli.wm.edu/studentpartnerprogram/
Student-Produced Video on the Student Partner Program - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CecnSFNqRQs
Student-Produced STLI Podcast - Teachers and Students Coming Together - https://stli.wm.edu/podcast/
Student-Produced Video on Innovative Teaching in the Pandemic - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mj3f_ES7DDg

Getting on the Write Track: The Value of Faculty Writing Retreats
This is Episode 10 of "Centering Centers", a POD Network podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Kim Case, Director of Faculty Success, and Sharon Zumbrunn, Provost Faculty Fellow, Center for Teaching and Learning Excellence at Virginia Commonwealth University. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Some of the resources mentioned in the podcast are linked below.

On Podcasting as Personal and Professional Development
This is Episode 9 and the first episode of Season 2 of "Centering Centers", which is now officially a POD Network podcast! This podcast explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features John Kane, Director, Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching and Rebecca Mushtare, Associate Dean of Graduate Studies at the State University of New York, Oswego talking about their podcast, Tea for Teaching. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Episode 204, Preventing Workplace Burnout. Tea for Teaching

Backstage Serendipity
This is Episode 8 of "Centering Centers", a podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Lindsay Doukopoulos, Associate Director of the Educational Development team at Auburn University in Alabama. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Some of the resources mentioned in the podcast are linked below.
1. Six Dead Bodies Duct-Taped to a Merry-Go-Round: https://newplayexchange.org/plays/215732/six-dead-bodies-duct-taped-merry-go-round/recommendations
2. Biosensors Show Promise as a Measure of Student Engagement in a Large Introductory Biology Course: https://www.lifescied.org/doi/full/10.1187/cbe.19-08-0158
3. Significant conversations and significant networks – exploring the backstage of the teaching arena: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03075070802597200
4. Coming (at some point) to To Improve the Academy: "Taking Teaching and Learning Seriously: Approaching Wicked Consciousness through Collaboration and Partnership" inspired by Randy Bass's original 1999 article, "The Scholarship of Teaching: What's the Problem" https://my.vanderbilt.edu/sotl/files/2013/08/Bass-Problem1.pdf

Keeping the Whys and the Hows in Mind
This is Episode 7 of "Centering Centers", a podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Deandra Little, Assistant Provost and Director of the Center for the Advancement of Teaching and Learning at Elon University in North Carolina in conversation with David Green, Director of the Center for Faculty Development at Seattle University in Washington state. Here is a transcript of the podcast.

Nimble Skill Sets
This is Episode 6 of "Centering Centers", a podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Isis Artze-Vega, Vice President for Academic Affairs at Valencia College in Central Florida, formerly Assistant Vice President for Teaching and Learning at Florida International University. Here is a transcript of the podcast.

Thinking Institutionally
This is Episode 5 of "Centering Centers", a podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Susan Shadle, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Studies and founder and former director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at Boise State University in Boise, Idaho. Here is a transcript of the podcast.

Embodying Inclusiveness in Educational Development
This is Episode 4 of "Centering Centers", a podcast that explores the work of Centers of Teaching and Learning and the vision and insights of educational developers in higher education. This episode features Tracie Addy, Associate Dean of Teaching & Learning and Director of the Center for the Integration of Teaching, Learning, and Scholarship at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania. Here is a transcript of the podcast.
Link to her website with publication links-