Office of Open Learning

Office of Open Learning: Workshops

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Is the technology we use in our classroom dehumanizing us and our students? Digital technologies can be distracting, have embedded racially biased decision making, lead to problems with cheating, and guide us into less complex teaching approaches. Those same technologies can also allow us to access people or resources from around the world. Most importantly, they are a fact of our living and learning lives that aren’t going away. The humanizing digital learning micro-program takes these conflicting realities as a starting point and uses the best available research and practices to reduce the dehumanizing impact of the digital while also focusing on the ways the digital can support a more human-centered classroom.

This micro-program consists of six courses that address the issues of humanizing learning from a variety of perspectives. The introductory course establishes some common language and identifies many of the challenges that will be addressed in the program. The next four courses address humanizing from the perspectives of student engagement; assessment; the technology itself; and EDI, accessibility, decolonization, and Indigenization. Following completion of the Introductory course, participants will be assigned a facilitator for the capstone course. This involves the participant choosing a specific project (a syllabus, an ebook, a complex assignment) and developing it for use in their own classes and working on that project throughout the program.

You can take each course as a stand-alone microcredential (eg. Humanizing Technology.) All courses are required for attaining the full micro certification. Participants will be expected to complete the Introductory course at the beginning of the credential and finish the certification by completing the capstone project. All other courses can be taken in any order as they are offered.

A series of technical workshops will be offered at the same time as this certificate to support development of a variety of skills.

Each course will run over four weeks, with one 2-hour synchronous online session each week, as well as opportunities for formative assessment. Participants will be expected to attend each session and engage with the material and assessments in order to achieve certification.

Audience: Faculty, staff, sessional instructors, and students with teaching responsibilities.

For more information on the program, visit the Humanising Digital Learning site, contact the Office of Open Learning by email: openlearning@uwindsor.ca or visit the team on the second floor of the Centre for Engineering Innovation (CEI) building at the 700 California entrance.

Past offerings

Show current offerings

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

An Introduction to Humanizing Digital Learning

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: Wednesday, May 10, 2023, 07:00 PM – 09:00 PM
and Wednesday, May 17, 2023, 07:00 PM – 09:00 PM
and Wednesday, May 24, 2023, 07:00 PM – 09:00 PM
and Wednesday, May 31, 2023, 07:00 PM – 09:00 PM
(list dates)
Location: Online, Microsoft Teams
Does the digital change our relationship to our classrooms, to our content or to our students? What can we do to impact our own experience of teaching and the experience of our students to make it a more humane venture. This introductory course will cover the ways in which we can impact teaching and learning in a digital world that is equitable, inclusive and often, more effective. This course will introduce the themes that will be covered in the content course, including discussion about engagement, assessment, EDDI and about the technology that underlies many of the changes that we’ve been seeing. No prior technical expertise is required for taking this course.

Participants will be expected to attend all four sessions, meaningfully engage with the content and one another, and complete short homework assignments.

Week 1: The changing face of higher education
Week 2: What does success look like in your class?
Week 3: Implications of digital technologies
Week 4: Course design and pedagogy of care

Audience: Faculty, staff, sessional instructors, and students with teaching responsibilities.

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Practicing Accessibility, EDI, Decolonization and Indigenization in Digital Teaching:  An Introduction

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: June 27 – July 18, 2023,
Tuesdays, 06:00 PM – 08:00 PM
(list dates)
Location: Online, Microsoft Teams
How do we make our classes more equitable, diverse, accessible, and inclusive for all students? What are Decolonization and Indigenization, and how can you weave those concepts into your class? Whether through making class activities and course sites more accessible, providing content that more students can see themselves reflected in, or removing all kinds of barriers for our students, this course will introduce how instructors can plan for and prepare their classes to be more inclusive. Guest speakers with expertise and lived experience will contribute to many topics. This course will also introduce Indigenous pedagogy, which will be further explored in a future HDL course more in-depth.

Pre-requisites: Completion of Introduction to Humanizing Digital Learning course; preference will be given to individuals enrolled in the Humanizing Digital Learning program.

Audience:  Faculty, staff, sessional instructors, and students with teaching responsibilities.

Wednesday, August 2, 2023

Student Engagement: Humanizing the Learning Process

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: August 02–23, 2023,
Wednesdays, 07:00 PM – 09:00 PM
(list dates)
Location: Online, Microsoft Teams
Research from the last few years has pointed to ‘student engagement’ being the primary concern of faculty when considering teaching online. This course will address student engagement from the student perspective. How can we help them see their learning as something they need to engage in? How do we build trust?
Topics will include:
  • care and uncertainty
  • unsettling your existing classroom culture
  • supporting creativity
  • student-discovered and -created content
  • engagement in face-to-face, online, and asynchronous contexts
Prerequisite: Introduction to Humanizing Online Learning course

Audience: Faculty, staff, sessional instructors, and students with teaching responsibilities.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Introduction to Humanizing Digital Learning

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: September 12 – October 03, 2023,
Tuesdays, 07:00 PM – 09:00 PM
(list dates)
Location: Online, Anywhere
Does the digital change our relationship to our classrooms, to our content or to our students? What can we do to impact our own experience of teaching and the experience of our students to make it a more humane venture. This introductory course will cover the ways in which we can impact teaching and learning in a digital world that is equitable, inclusive and often, more effective. This course will introduce the themes that will be covered in the content course, including discussion about engagement, assessment, EDDI and about the technology that underlies many of the changes that we’ve been seeing. No prior technical expertise is required for taking this course.

Participants will be expected to attend all four sessions, meaningfully engage with the content and one another, and complete short homework assignments.

Week 1: The changing face of higher education
Week 2: What does success look like in your class?
Week 3: Implications of digital technologies
Week 4: Course design and pedagogy of care

Audience: Faculty, staff, sessional instructors, and students with teaching responsibilities.

Schedule subject to change according to participant availability and preference.

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Digital Assessment Strategies

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: October 24 – November 14, 2023,
Tuesdays, 06:00 PM – 08:00 PM
(list dates)
Location: Online, Microsoft Teams
What are the purposes of assessment?  How can you make the process more fair, equitable, barrier-free and better able to assess learning?   According to Boud & Falchikov (2007), assessment “directs attention to what is important. It acts as an incentive for study. And it has a powerful effect on what students do and how they do it.” Discover the principles and options available to make your course assessments more relevant and less painful to all! Topics include: 
  • History of assessment
  • Equity and accessibility
  • Academic integrity
  • Ungrading and other alternate grading approaches
  • Technology tools
  • Large class assessment
Pre-requisites: Completion of Introduction to Humanizing Digital Learning course; preference will be given to individuals enrolled in the Humanizing Digital Learning program.

Audience:  Faculty, staff, sessional instructors, and students with teaching responsibilities.

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Ethical Educational Technology

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: January 23 – February 13, 2024,
Tuesdays, 07:00 PM – 09:00 PM
(list dates)
Location: Online, Microsoft Teams
Instructors: Nick Baker, Ashlyne O'Neil
Educational technologies are often described by the many opportunities they provide to engage with students, support and track their learning, and efficiently facilitate administrative processes. With each technology comes varying risks, privacy and ethical implications as they collect and manage huge amounts of data. Ethical and equitable use of technology in teaching can have significant advantages for students and instructors, but requires careful planning and decision making to select and appropriately use technology. This course will explore digital technologies from the perspective of their pedagogical potential and ethical implications, and provide instructors with some tools to help them determine and plan for appropriate use of technology in their teaching context.

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Practicing Accessibility, EDI, Decolonization and Indigenization in Digital Teaching:  An Introduction

Registration for this event is now closed.
Schedule: April 16 – May 07, 2024,
Tuesdays, 06:00 PM – 08:00 PM
(list dates)
Location: Online, Microsoft Teams
How do we make our classes more equitable, diverse, accessible, and inclusive for all students? What are Decolonization and Indigenization, and how can you weave those concepts into your class? Whether through making class activities and course sites more accessible, providing content that more students can see themselves reflected in, or removing all kinds of barriers for our students, this course will introduce how instructors can plan for and prepare their classes to be more inclusive. Guest speakers with expertise and lived experience will contribute to many topics. This course will also introduce Indigenous pedagogy, which will be further explored in a future HDL course more in-depth.

Pre-requisites: Completion of Introduction to Humanizing Digital Learning course; preference will be given to individuals enrolled in the Humanizing Digital Learning program.

Audience:  Faculty, staff, sessional instructors, and students with teaching responsibilities.