Nominations are open for 2021 Teaching and Learning with Technology Impact Award

Nominations are open for 2021 Teaching and Learning with Technology Impact Award

Teaching and Learning with Technology (TLT) is searching for Penn State faculty who work at the intersection of technology and pedagogy to improve teaching and learning. Those who do can be nominated for the 2021 TLT Impact Award.

The call for nominations for the 2021 TLT Impact Award is open now through Friday, October 16. Given annually, the TLT Impact Award recognizes excellence in teaching and learning at Penn State and celebrates cross-disciplinary projects, courses, and collaborations that have positively enhanced teaching, learning, and the use of learning spaces across the University and beyond.

Penn State tenure-line faculty or non-tenure-line teaching faculty are eligible for nomination. University faculty, staff, and students can submit nominations, and self-nominations also are welcome.

The TLT Impact Award includes a commemorative medal, a $3,000 cash award, an invitation to serve as a TLT ambassador, and additional support to extend the impact of the recipient’s work.

Last year, Pierce Salguero, associate professor of Asian history and religious studies at Penn State Abington, received the TLT Impact Award.

More information can be viewed on the Impact Award’s webpage.

New Faculty Learning Communities are forming

New Faculty Learning Communities are forming

Teaching and Learning with Technology (TLT) will continue to support Faculty Learning Communities (FLCs) at Penn State for the 2020-21 academic year. This program allows tenure and teaching faculty to explore topics like learning spaces, immersive experiences, data science, and more in peer-led groups.

Leaders are needed for the upcoming year, and applications are now being accepted until May 15, 2020. Proposals selected for support will be announced the week of June 8, 2020.

Applications can be submitted on any topic related to teaching, learning, and technology. Communities that form around these topics will be cross-college, cross-campus, and cross-discipline. Leadership for the FLCs will come from a full-time faculty and receive support from TLT. 

Virtual office hours will be held on April 23 from 2:00-3:00, April 27, from 12:00-1:00 May 6 from 12:00-1:00 or on Zoom. Send TLT an email for more information on these sessions, or on applications for 2020-21 FLCs.

Newest Teaching and Learning with Technology Faculty Fellows focus on learning spaces

Newest Teaching and Learning with Technology Faculty Fellows focus on learning spaces

Teaching and Learning with Technology (TLT) has welcomed four new faculty fellows for the 2019-20 academic year; Ed Glantz, Siu Ling (Pansy) Leung, Pierce Salguero, and Priya Sharma. Each member of the cohort will undertake a project intended to enhance unique spaces where students learn.

“This year’s group of faculty fellows brings a diverse set of perspectives to our theme of learning spaces,” said Kyle Bowen, director of innovation with TLT. “Learning spaces can be physical, digital, virtual, blended, or data-informed places where students interact with course material. Each of our fellows is taking an innovative approach to improve learning spaces, and our staff is eager to support their work.”

For the next year, each fellow will work with a dedicated team of TLT staff to realize the goals set forth by their projects. They cover an array of topics that are strongly influenced by each fellow’s discipline and background.

Ed Glantz – Personalizing Learning Spaces by Streaming and Recording Lectures

Glantz, a teaching professor and assistant director of masters programs in the College of Information Sciences and Technology (IST), will use his project to explore best practices in recording lectures in the classroom and how it can be used for reflective teaching.

“Two years ago, TLT’s BlendLT seminar and the idea of a flipped class planted the seed for this project,” said Glantz. “Recent technological innovations in video management and cloud storage give us the opportunity to expand learning beyond the physical spaces and provide course content in alternative formats.”

Glantz and his team will explore the technical requirements and the pedagogical value of recording lectures in the classroom. This will be paired with new data science capabilities that analyze the topical content in a recorded lecture that will be displayed in a dashboard for the purposes of reflective teaching.

Siu Ling (Pansy) Leung – Using Mixed Reality to Prepare Students for Better Laboratory Learning Experiences

Leung is an assistant teaching professor and director of undergraduate laboratories in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. She will investigate how virtual labs can deliver higher quality learning experiences than traditional science and engineering laboratories.

“Performing experiments from fundamental concepts to complex systems requires tremendous time and space,” said Leung. “For instance, learning how an airplane flies without understanding thrust and drag is impossible. A solution could be to transform fundamental topics experiments into virtual labs so students can visualize and revise concepts at their own pace before performing tests on complex scenarios.”

Along with the intent to create multiple virtual lab experiments for students to conduct, the team will study the impact of technology-enhanced learning, and roadmap a platform designed to help other educators create immersive learning experiences.

Pierce Salguero – Expanding the Asian Studies Classroom Through Virtual Learning Spaces

Salguero, associate professor of Asian history and religious studies at Penn State Abington, will work with his group to build on an ongoing pedagogical project that is used in the classroom to deliver ethnographic data, photography, and short documentary films to students. Immersive technology will be the backbone of the project’s expansion so that students can experience Japanese Buddhist temples without the expense of travel.

“The project’s website provides all content freely through a Creative Commons license,” noted Salguero. “These valuable teaching materials will be available to faculty at other Penn State campuses – and elsewhere throughout the world – as open educational resources. The use of open, public, and free technologies makes the work and content both accessible and sustainable so that, long term, students can have deeper learning experiences.”

The scope of Salguero’s project aims to include interactive maps and virtual tours of Buddhist temples native to Japan and virtual tours of Buddhist temples in Philadelphia. Supplemental to the immersive content will be pedagogical supports that aide faculty in the incorporation of the multimedia materials.

Priya Sharma – Reconceptualizing Places of Learning

Sharma is an associate professor in the College of Education and hopes to use her project to shift the focus from “spaces” to “places” within the context of learning and design. She posits that learning spaces are arrangements of objects, tools, learners, and instructors within a geometrical area while a learning place centers around a lived, personalized experience.

“Penn State is uniquely positioned to engage with the idea of how to create places of learning,” said Sharma. “There is a focus on reinventing and revamping learning spaces across the University’s physical campuses along with World Campus’ continued focus on expanding access to high quality online learning opportunities.”

Beyond knowing that space design requires consideration of seats, scheduling, writable surfaces, etc.; Sharma and her team will work to discover how place design considerations like, “How do users create a common and shared experience through their work within a space,” can work in concert with space design. That would provide the foundation of a framework to guide practical and theoretical learning design and architecture efforts around spaces and places.

Explore digital fluency with TLT and the College of Agricultural Sciences

Explore digital fluency with TLT and the College of Agricultural Sciences

This October, Teaching and Learning with Technology (TLT) and the College of Agricultural Sciences will team up for a one-day symposium on digital fluency. Registration for the event is open, and it is free to attend.

“The goal of the symposium is to introduce topics and conversations that will develop and define our University community’s understanding of digital fluency,” said Kyle Bowen, TLT’s director of innovation. “Also, attendees will be able to identify resources to support their digital fluency efforts.”

Digital Fluency Symposium: The Future of Teaching, Learning, and Research in a Digital World is scheduled for Wednesday, October 2, 2019, and will take place from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at Robb Hall at the Hintz Family Alumni Center on the University Park campus. A light breakfast, lunch, and refreshments are included with registration.

Speakers at the symposium will each address a specific theme that contributes to digital fluency. They are: code competency, design thinking, data visualization, communication and storytelling, diversity and inclusion, and teaching and learning.

Jennifer Sparrow, associate vice president with TLT, is scheduled to give a presentation at the symposium alongside keynote speaker Evan Peck, Ph.D., assistant professor of computer science at Bucknell University; Kristen Beck, Ph.D., lead bioinformatician with the industrial and applied genomics group in the Accelerated Discovery Lab of IBM Research; and others.

Click here to register for Digital Fluency Symposium: The Future of Teaching, Learning, and Research in a Digital World.

Faculty Learning Communities explore educational concepts and technology

Faculty Learning Communities explore educational concepts and technology

Effective teaching and learning methods are at the heart of what makes Penn State a leader in higher education. Those methods constantly evolve in an effort to match the rapid emergence of new technology that has the potential to transform education. Ideally, those evolutions will increasingly make a Penn State education more accessible and beneficial.

Teaching and Learning with Technology (TLT) annually provides a resource that allows University faculty to be at the forefront of investigating how new technologies can support innovative pedagogy. Faculty Learning Communities (FLCs) are open to tenure-track and teaching faculty at any Penn State campus, and each small cohort works together for a year toward a shared goal. Also, these groups can be formed cross-college, cross-campus, and/or cross-discipline.

Each FLC is created and led by a full-time Penn State faculty member with support coming from TLT. Leaders of these communities receive a $500 stipend and up to an additional $500 in funding to conduct lunches, tech tools sessions, guest speaker appearances, and other meetings with their FLC.

The group of FLC leaders for the 2018-19 academic year met a number of criteria in order to secure their roles. Along with enthusiasm for their topics, they were able to bring along at least three peers to participate in their FLC, collaborate with a TLT staff member on a kickoff meeting, schedule and facilitate regular meetings, and share their FLC’s outcomes at the TLT Symposium.

This year’s FLCs reach across Pennsylvania from Erie to Berks County and cover a broad range of topics from teaching data visualization to global learning in agriculture.

Here is the full list of 2018-19 Faculty Learning Communities at Penn State and their respective leaders:

FLC Leader                          Campus               Topic

Benjamin Lear                    University Park    Teaching of Data Visualizations

Dawn Pfeifer Reitz             Berks                   Innovative Instructional Technologies in the Classroom

Heather Cole                      Erie                       Digital Fluency and Content Development

Lara LaDage                       Altoona               Mentoring Undergraduate Student Researchers

Melanie Miller Foster &

Noel Habashy                     University Park    Global Learning in Agriculture

Neyda Abreu                      DuBois                 Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Chemistry

Beth Egan                           University Park    Open Education Resources: Local & Global Appeal