We found 83 results that contain "ctli"
Posted on: #iteachmsu
NAVIGATING CONTEXT
Michigan State University's Crisis Response Resources Immediately following 02/13/2023
Last updated at 3:24pm on 02/20/23 MSU resumed classes on Feb. 20. The university has asked faculty to provide the greatest flexibility to adjust syllabus expectations and accommodate needs of students. FAQs and other important updates, as well as mental health and supportive resources, are available -- along with updates and the most current information-- at the Campus Safety Information page.Crisis Counseling Available at Hannah Community Center & East Lansing Public Library Free, confidential crisis counseling is available to MSU students, staff, faculty at the Hannah Community Center (ELHCC).Community members are also advised that counseling services will be offered at the ELHCC, 819 Abbot Road, from 2-6 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 20 Tuesday, Feb. 21; Wednesday, Feb. 22; and Thursday, Feb. 23. Counseling services will also be offered at East Lansing Public Library (ELPL), 950 Abbot Road, from noon-5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 21; Wednesday, Feb. 22; Thursday, Feb. 23; and Friday, Feb. 24.Therapy dogs will continue to be available at both locations on an intermittent basis as well.Need someone to talk to right now? Crisis services are available 24/7. Call (517) 355-8270 and press “1” at the prompt to speak with a crisis counselor. If you think you or someone around you is in danger, call 911 or head to the nearest emergency room.
Additional (non-MSU) support available:
Clinton/Eaton/Ingham County Community Mental Health: 517-346-8460
Disaster Distress Helpline available 24/7 at 800-985-5990
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline available 24/7 at 800-273-8255
Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) warmline – operates 7 days a week from 10 a.m. to 2 a.m. at 888-733-7753
Intended to serve individuals living with persistent mental health challenges including anxiety, depression, and trauma
Reflect and Connect: A Framework for Processing and Self-Care [MSU faculty, staff, and graduate students]In response to the February 13th shooting on campus the Spartan Resilience Training Program is offering several reflect and connect sessions for MSU faculty, staff, and graduate students.The intent of these sessions is for people to come together and be in community with fellow Spartans experiencing a wide range of emotions. Session will include a framework for grounding and navigating these challenging events. Resources and practical self-care strategies will be provided. Sessions facilitated by Lisa Laughman, Coordinator, Spartan Resilience Training Program.
February 20 | 4 - 5:15 p.m.
Register for this session
February 21 | 2 - 3:15 p.m.
Register for this session
February 22 | 12 - 1:15 p.m.
Register for this session
February 23 | 12:30 - 1:45 p.m.
Register for this session
Teaching on Days After: What to Do When You Don’t Know What to Do - Further Discussion with Alyssa Dunn Feb. 20 - Feb. 23, 2023 (in-person or virtual)Dr. Alyssa Hadley Dunn, is a renowned expert on teaching after a crisis; with insights on supporting our students and colleagues as we return to the classroom. She can provide practical tools and techniques for creating a safe, welcoming, and inclusive learning environment and addressing the unique challenges and opportunities that arise in the aftermath of a crisis. Alyssa is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, as well as group conversations (for colleges, departments, units, or groups).To see Alyssa's remaining available discussion times and register, visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Vigil at Auditorium/Rock Feb. 15, 2023recording at https://msu.edu/vigil
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on MANAGING CHANGE
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Dr. Sheila Marquardt for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically on managing changes in content and expectations. Sheila is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Managing Change - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
1:1 from 11:15-11:45am on 2/21
1:1 from 11:45am-12:15pm on 2/21
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on LARGE CLASSES
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Dr. Brandy Ellison for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically in regard to large classes. Brandy is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Large Classes - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Group discussion from 12-1pm on 2/21
1:1 from 1:15-1:45pm on 2/21
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on ASSIGNMENT MODIFICATIONS
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Dr. Sheila Marquardt for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically on Assignment Modifications . Sheila is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Assignment Modifications - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Group discussion from 12:30-1:30pm on 2/21
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on USING TRAUMA INFORMED PRINCIPLES IN SMALL CLASSES
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Cheryl Williams-Hecksel and Kelley Blanck for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically in regard to Using Trauma Informed Principles in Small Classes. Cheryl and Kelley are offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Using Trauma Informed Principles in Small Classes - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Group discussion from 1-2pm on 2/21
Additional (non-MSU) support available:
Clinton/Eaton/Ingham County Community Mental Health: 517-346-8460
Disaster Distress Helpline available 24/7 at 800-985-5990
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline available 24/7 at 800-273-8255
Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) warmline – operates 7 days a week from 10 a.m. to 2 a.m. at 888-733-7753
Intended to serve individuals living with persistent mental health challenges including anxiety, depression, and trauma
Reflect and Connect: A Framework for Processing and Self-Care [MSU faculty, staff, and graduate students]In response to the February 13th shooting on campus the Spartan Resilience Training Program is offering several reflect and connect sessions for MSU faculty, staff, and graduate students.The intent of these sessions is for people to come together and be in community with fellow Spartans experiencing a wide range of emotions. Session will include a framework for grounding and navigating these challenging events. Resources and practical self-care strategies will be provided. Sessions facilitated by Lisa Laughman, Coordinator, Spartan Resilience Training Program.
February 20 | 4 - 5:15 p.m.
Register for this session
February 21 | 2 - 3:15 p.m.
Register for this session
February 22 | 12 - 1:15 p.m.
Register for this session
February 23 | 12:30 - 1:45 p.m.
Register for this session
Teaching on Days After: What to Do When You Don’t Know What to Do - Further Discussion with Alyssa Dunn Feb. 20 - Feb. 23, 2023 (in-person or virtual)Dr. Alyssa Hadley Dunn, is a renowned expert on teaching after a crisis; with insights on supporting our students and colleagues as we return to the classroom. She can provide practical tools and techniques for creating a safe, welcoming, and inclusive learning environment and addressing the unique challenges and opportunities that arise in the aftermath of a crisis. Alyssa is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, as well as group conversations (for colleges, departments, units, or groups).To see Alyssa's remaining available discussion times and register, visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Vigil at Auditorium/Rock Feb. 15, 2023recording at https://msu.edu/vigil
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on MANAGING CHANGE
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Dr. Sheila Marquardt for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically on managing changes in content and expectations. Sheila is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Managing Change - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
1:1 from 11:15-11:45am on 2/21
1:1 from 11:45am-12:15pm on 2/21
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on LARGE CLASSES
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Dr. Brandy Ellison for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically in regard to large classes. Brandy is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Large Classes - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Group discussion from 12-1pm on 2/21
1:1 from 1:15-1:45pm on 2/21
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on ASSIGNMENT MODIFICATIONS
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Dr. Sheila Marquardt for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically on Assignment Modifications . Sheila is offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Assignment Modifications - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Group discussion from 12:30-1:30pm on 2/21
Rebuilding Hope: Further Discussion on USING TRAUMA INFORMED PRINCIPLES IN SMALL CLASSES
Last week, over 1000 educators came together for the "Rebuilding Hope: Teaching in the Aftermath" webinar. Join Cheryl Williams-Hecksel and Kelley Blanck for a further discussion of what teaching and learning looks like now and in the coming weeks - specifically in regard to Using Trauma Informed Principles in Small Classes. Cheryl and Kelley are offering opportunities for one-on-one conversations, in addition to small group conversations.
To see remaining available discussion times on Using Trauma Informed Principles in Small Classes - and register- visit the CTLI Events calendar.
Group discussion from 1-2pm on 2/21
Posted by:
Makena Neal

Posted on: #iteachmsu

Michigan State University's Crisis Response Resources Immediately following 02/13/2023
Last updated at 3:24pm on 02/20/23 MSU resumed classes on Feb...
Posted by:
NAVIGATING CONTEXT
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024
Posted on: #iteachmsu
Register today to attend the 2023 MSU Educational Technology Summit
Join us for the 2023 MSU Educational Technology Summit Monday, June 5 through Friday, June 9.
Click the link to enroll: https://apps.d2l.msu.edu/selfenroll/course/1898946
This week-long virtual event will highlight the technologies that enhance teaching and learning and promote student success. In addition to demos from partner vendors, MSU instructors, instructional designers, and support staff will present and discuss the use of educational technology available at MSU.
Presentations will cover a variety of topics including:
Leveraging AI
Classroom technology
Record and share lectures easily
Streamline content delivery
Develop better feedback strategies
Effectively use D2L
Utilize interactive classroom response systems
Scale online discussion among students
Boost engagement in any modality
Accessibility
Visit the D2L learning community to enroll and visit the course home page to find the complete schedule. Sessions will take place each day in the morning and afternoon. Attend and engage in as many sessions as you wish. Participating vendors scheduled to present include Zoom, D2L Brightspace, Qualtrics, Camtasia, PackBack, iClicker and many more.
Hosted by MSU IT’s Educational Technology department, the MSU Educational Technology Summit is open to the MSU community for the purposes of increasing awareness of supported educational technologies, promoting IT services available to our MSU communities, and sharing useful strategies for using these technologies._______________________________
Schedule:
Monday, June 5th
8:30 A.M. - Boosting Course Engagement: Easy Tactics and Tools to Connect in any Modality
Presented by: Ellie Louson, MSU CTLI and Lyman Briggs College & Makena Neal, MSU CTLI
Description: This interactive session will lead participants through several easy ways to boost engagement in courses of any modality (synchronous in-person, blended, hybrid; asynchronous). Using various tools, we will focus on low-barrier ways to build connections in hybrid or online classrooms. No prior experience with these technologies is required.
9:45 A.M. - How to Develop Engaging Feedback Cycles with Eli Review
Presented by: Casey McArdle, MSU WRAC
Description: This presentation will showcase how to use Eli Review to help faculty develop better feedback strategies in their courses. It will model effective feedback frameworks and showcase how Eli Review works to model inclusive and engaging feedback points.
11:00 A.M. - Let Your Goal Lead Your Tool
Presented by: Ha-Neul Kim, MSU School of Social Work
Description: The appropriateness of the tool used should start with solid learning goals. No matter how fancy the tool is, the importance of ‘learning’ is dependent on clear goals and having students facilitate the tool to achieve them.
1:00 P.M. - TextHelp: Creating Digital and Accessible STEM Content with Equatio
Presented by: Rachel Kruzel, TextHelp
Description: Creating digital STEM content is a challenge. Making sure it is accessible is just as important. This session will focus on Texthelp’s digital and accessible STEM creation tool, Equatio. Built on Universal Design for Learning principles and guidelines, Equatio is beneficial to users across campus. Student users can easily respond to assignments and assessments through a variety of functions. Educators can support the remediation of course content into accessible formats and create content accessibly from the start.
2:15 P.M. - D2L Brightspace: Core Technology and Engagement
Presented by: Randolph Streich, D2L Senior Solution Engineer
Description: Dive deep into the core tools and interfaces of Brightspace. This presentation will look at common workflows and the tools that make online learning instruction easier. There will be a focus on automation and alerts and the use of video for crafting strong messages and engagement.
3:30 P.M. - Insert More Stuff…With Kaltura Video!
Presented by: Suzanne Rees, Kaltura - North American EDU Customer Success & JaBari Scott, Kaltura - Senior Solutions Engineer
Description: Kaltura will showcase opportunities for faculty & instructional designers to develop engaging video content on any subject matter and enhance them for a more robust student experience.
Tuesday, June 6th
8:30 A.M. - Accessible Technologies for Educational Access: Demonstrations and Discussions
Presented by: Tyler Smeltekop, MSU RCPD
Description: This session will highlight some of the most-implemented assistive technologies among our students. Learn about software such as Read & Write, auto-captions and CART, screen readers, and speech-to-text transcription. Live demonstrations will accompany discussion about how students utilize these assistive technologies and how faculty can support students using them.
9:45 A.M. - Using ChatGPT and AI in Developing Course Materials
Presented by: Caitlin Kirby, MSU Enhanced Digital Learning Initiative & Min Zhang, MSU Enhanced Digital Learning Initiative
Description: An overview of how ChatGPT and other large language models work. Hear ideas for how ChatGPT can be used in developing curriculum plans, various types of assessments, and rubrics for instructors to work with in their courses. This includes discussion on how students might use ChatGPT and ethical considerations. Other AI tools that instructors might consider using will also be discussed.
11:00 A.M. - Qualtrics: Experience Management for Higher Education
Presented by: Lara Davis, Qualtrics, Josh Sine, Qualtrics - VP of Higher Education Strategy, Steve Sartori, Qualtrics - AVP Higher Education Enterprise Accounts & Lara Davis, Qualtrics - Enterprise Account Executive
Description: A discussion of strategies and best practices for accelerating student retention, reducing faculty workload through automation, designing education experiences that deliver, and capturing and improving the student experiences that drive retention.
1:00 P.M. - Making Space for Makerspaces in the Classroom
Presented by: Isaac Record, MSU Lyman Briggs College
Description: This discussion is for anyone interested in assignments in which students make something, from a sculpture or a podcast to a model or a board game. We will talk through some of the challenges around this kind of assignment, including how to welcome students into an unfamiliar space that may include intimidating equipment like 3D printers, how to scaffold assignments for students with little experience, and how to assess assignments that involve skills well outside the central learning objectives for a course.
2:15 P.M. - Crowdmark: How to Grade Faster with Richer Feedback using Crowdmark
Presented by: Virginia Woodall, Crowdmark
Description: Crowdmark is a grading and assessment solution that enables educators to grade paper-based and digital exams and assignments 3X faster than traditional workflows. Instructors can give richer, more formative feedback by leaving comments, annotations, links, and points directly on the student answer. This supports students' understanding of errors while reducing regrade requests. Join us for this informational session for an intro and demo of Crowdmark.
3:30 P.M. - iClicker: Classroom Engagement Enhanced Via Technology
Presented by: David Maltby, iClicker
Description: Become more familiar with iClicker, a tool for student engagement, formative assessment, attendance, quizzing, and polling. Recently launching new mobile-device usage options, question types, and D2L Brightspace integrations, this demo will cover the basics of the iClicker Cloud instructor software and the iClicker student mobile app. Participants will experience iClicker as a student and learn how it can improve performance in a spectrum of situations.
Wednesday, June 7th
8:30 A.M. - Use Brief Explainer Animations and Podcast Episodes to Cultivate Inclusive Practices in IAH Courses
Presented by: Stokes Schwartz, MSU Center for Integrative Studies in the Arts and Humanities (IAH)
Description: Learn how to facilitate digital and face-to-face collaborative activities while teaching inclusive principles. Collaborative learning builds on the idea that learning is a social activity, which takes place when learners interact with their social environment. The approach is a general expression for group learning in which students share the workload equitably as they progress towards intended learning outcomes.
9:45 A.M. - Creating a Connected Classroom with MSU Commons
Presented by: Larissa Babak, MSU Humanities Commons, College of Arts & Letters
Description: MSU Commons is a multipurpose platform where users can develop a digital profile, join collaborative groups, build WordPress websites, and add materials to an open access repository. MSU Commons is available to all current faculty, staff, and students, as well as retired faculty and staff. With many different functionalities built into the platform, MSU Commons is an ideal place for developing an online, scholarly presence. In this session, participants will learn how MSU Commons can be used within courses at MSU.
11:00 A.M. - Spartan 365 Overview
Presented by: Laura Nagy, MSU IT Training
Description: This class will introduce learners to the suite of software collaboration tools that will help users store data, collaborate, and work efficiently. Spartan 365 has powerful tools that allows users to get more done with Microsoft apps like OneDrive, Forms, OneNote, Teams, and Outlook.
1:00 P.M. - Piazza: Collaborative Learning with Piazza Q&A
Presented by: TJ Kidd, Piazza Technologies
Description: A demo and overview of Piazza to create learning environments that allows students to collaborate with their peers and instructors any time, especially in virtual classes. Wiki-style formatting enables collaboration, anonymous posting encourages participation, and detailed statistics help track student engagement.
2:15 P.M. - Turnitin: Advance Academic Integrity & Innovate Assessments
Presented by: Megan DeArmit, Turnitin
Description: Instructors are spending more time grading and less time providing actionable feedback and use assessment insights on student learning to improve teaching. Without this valuable time and flexibility, student outcomes are at risk. Learn how Turnitin can make informed decisions about originality in submitted student work through our new AI writing detection feature in Turnitin Feedback Studio. And how Gradescope can be used by both administrators and faculty to deliver assessments with pedagogical flexibility, better insights, and fairness.
3:30 P.M. - PackBack: Revitalizing Classroom Discussion: Leveraging AI Technology for Active Learning
Presented by: Amanda Wickham, PackBack & Kathryn Stegman, PackBack
Description: Facilitating discussion (online or in-person) doesn’t have to be complicated, time-consuming, or difficult to grade. Using Packback Questions within classroom can build community and facilitate deeper learning. Packback Questions is an online discussion forum that integrates directly into D2L. Students receive real-time feedback from instructional AI; which coaches students to ask high-quality, open-ended questions and encourages actual discussion. Attendees of this workshop will see live examples of Packback communities and how it is course agnostic and successfully supports all modalities and course sizes.
Thursday, June 8th
8:30 A.M. - ELI Review - Focusing on Review & Revision in the Era of AI Writing
Presented by: Bill Hart-Davidson, MSU College of Arts and Letters
Description: With more AI applications making drafting fast and easy, it is more important than ever that we prepare students to be good reviewers and revisers. Eli Review provides a service that makes practice in criterion-referenced review and revision planning easy to set up and integrate into a course. Facilitate in person, hybrid, hyflex, and online courses that are synchronous and asynchronous. Help students develop two of the most valuable leadership skills in any discipline or career: the ability to give great feedback and the ability to use feedback to make improvements.
9:45 A.M. - Let’s Talk About CATME Smarter Teamwork
Presented by: Andrea Bierema, MSU Center for Integrative Studies in General Science and Department of Integrative Biology
Description: CATME is a program used to create teams and evaluate team members. This session will consist of a presentation about how I have used CATME for several years in face-to-face and online sections comprised of 100 to 200 students. I will discuss how I create teams, have students practice rating team members, evaluate their peers, and most recently, metacognitively reflect on their own teamwork skills. Instructions for students and grading rubrics will be provided. An open discussion will include attendees describing how they use or would like to use CATME.
11:00 A.M. - Collaborative Tools to Support Language Classroom Development and Community Involvement
Presented by: Dustin De Felice, MSU English Language Center & Debra M. Hardison, MSU Department of Linguistics, Languages, and Cultures
Description: We run a teaching practicum each year that attracts students, scholars, and community members to participate in a six-week program focused on the development of oral communication skills for adult nonnative speakers. While this program was in-person for years, we were forced to turn this experience into an online, synchronous modality in 2020. Over the last few spring semesters, we have had to run an all-virtual experience where we tried to replicate the in-person experience from registration to classes through a variety of tools. We will highlight the current structure, provide the pros and cons for the various tools, and discuss the possible directions for future iterations.
1:00 P.M. - Zoom: Driving Student Engagement in Zoom Classes
Presented by: Elysha Gellerman, Zoom & Janice Adamonis, Customer Success Manager with Zoom's Higher Education team
Description: This session will review best practices for driving student engagement and increasing retention in a virtual class setting. Tools reviewed will include, but not be limited to polls, breakout sessions, virtual backgrounds, spotlighting, and transcription. This session will be didactic and participants will leave the session with the ability to confidently conduct these functions as needed.
2:15 P.M. - Assessment Using LON-CAPA
Presented by: Stuart Raeburn, MSU Department of Physics & Astronomy
Description: The LON-CAPA Course Management System (CMS) features a powerful and flexible assessment engine. It can be used to deliver individualized homework, quizzes, and exams, either online or offline, as PDFs for printing, or for use with bubblesheets (which can be scanned by the MSU Scoring Office, and then uploaded into LON-CAPA for grading). Creation of assessment items using some of the 46 available templates will be demonstrated. Set-up of a deep linked LON-CAPA assessment for access from within a D2L course will also be shown.
3:30 P.M. - DigitalDesk Learning Suite: A Comprehensive Approach to Class Management
Presented by: Robert Gomm, DigitalDesk, Inc
Description: Learn to manage all aspects of class management in a unified platform:
Grading instruments to include paper/pencil and online exams andassignments.
Monitor student success in real-time.
Integrated remote proctoring.
Collaboration integration with Zoom and instant messaging
Friday, June 9th
9:45 A.M. - MSU’s Immersive Visualization Ecosystem
Presented by: Denice Blair, MSU Museum, Shannon Schmoll, MSU Abrams Planetarium, Amanda Tickner, MSU Libraries & Carrie Wicker, MSU Museum
Description: This presentation showcases MSU's “ecosystem” of immersive visualization technologies for applications in teaching, learning, and research. This ecosystem includes the Abrams Planetarium Sky Theater, MSU Libraries Digital Scholarship Lab’s 360 Room, and the MSU Museum’s Science on a Sphere. These technologies are rich in possibility for multi-media engagement and custom content creation by members of the MSU community. Learn about using the displays, content creation processes, and how the displays are suited for different types of visual representation. Explore practical examples of how the technologies are used by people on campus for research, teaching, and artistic work. You will be inspired to think about how one or all of these technologies can support your work.
11:00 A.M. - TechSmith: Camtasia & Snagit for Education
Presented by: Casey Seiter, Techsmith
Description: Join for a walkthrough of both Snagit and Camtasia. Casey will conduct a live demo showcasing start to finish production of still image and video production using the TechSmith suite of tools.
1:00 P.M. - Respondus: Protect the Integrity of Brightspace Quizzes with LockDown Browser + Respondus Monitor
Presented by: Arie Sowers, Respondus, Rebecca Schkade, Trainer, Respondus & Stephanie Ploof, Senior Account Manager, Respondus
Description: LockDown Browser is a custom browser that prevents digital cheating during an online exam. Respondus Monitor is a companion product for LockDown Browser that deters cheating when students take online exams in non-proctored environments. Students use their own computers with a standard webcam to record assessment sessions. Learn how to use these tools to protect exam integrity and confirm student identity.
Click the link to enroll: https://apps.d2l.msu.edu/selfenroll/course/1898946
This week-long virtual event will highlight the technologies that enhance teaching and learning and promote student success. In addition to demos from partner vendors, MSU instructors, instructional designers, and support staff will present and discuss the use of educational technology available at MSU.
Presentations will cover a variety of topics including:
Leveraging AI
Classroom technology
Record and share lectures easily
Streamline content delivery
Develop better feedback strategies
Effectively use D2L
Utilize interactive classroom response systems
Scale online discussion among students
Boost engagement in any modality
Accessibility
Visit the D2L learning community to enroll and visit the course home page to find the complete schedule. Sessions will take place each day in the morning and afternoon. Attend and engage in as many sessions as you wish. Participating vendors scheduled to present include Zoom, D2L Brightspace, Qualtrics, Camtasia, PackBack, iClicker and many more.
Hosted by MSU IT’s Educational Technology department, the MSU Educational Technology Summit is open to the MSU community for the purposes of increasing awareness of supported educational technologies, promoting IT services available to our MSU communities, and sharing useful strategies for using these technologies._______________________________
Schedule:
Monday, June 5th
8:30 A.M. - Boosting Course Engagement: Easy Tactics and Tools to Connect in any Modality
Presented by: Ellie Louson, MSU CTLI and Lyman Briggs College & Makena Neal, MSU CTLI
Description: This interactive session will lead participants through several easy ways to boost engagement in courses of any modality (synchronous in-person, blended, hybrid; asynchronous). Using various tools, we will focus on low-barrier ways to build connections in hybrid or online classrooms. No prior experience with these technologies is required.
9:45 A.M. - How to Develop Engaging Feedback Cycles with Eli Review
Presented by: Casey McArdle, MSU WRAC
Description: This presentation will showcase how to use Eli Review to help faculty develop better feedback strategies in their courses. It will model effective feedback frameworks and showcase how Eli Review works to model inclusive and engaging feedback points.
11:00 A.M. - Let Your Goal Lead Your Tool
Presented by: Ha-Neul Kim, MSU School of Social Work
Description: The appropriateness of the tool used should start with solid learning goals. No matter how fancy the tool is, the importance of ‘learning’ is dependent on clear goals and having students facilitate the tool to achieve them.
1:00 P.M. - TextHelp: Creating Digital and Accessible STEM Content with Equatio
Presented by: Rachel Kruzel, TextHelp
Description: Creating digital STEM content is a challenge. Making sure it is accessible is just as important. This session will focus on Texthelp’s digital and accessible STEM creation tool, Equatio. Built on Universal Design for Learning principles and guidelines, Equatio is beneficial to users across campus. Student users can easily respond to assignments and assessments through a variety of functions. Educators can support the remediation of course content into accessible formats and create content accessibly from the start.
2:15 P.M. - D2L Brightspace: Core Technology and Engagement
Presented by: Randolph Streich, D2L Senior Solution Engineer
Description: Dive deep into the core tools and interfaces of Brightspace. This presentation will look at common workflows and the tools that make online learning instruction easier. There will be a focus on automation and alerts and the use of video for crafting strong messages and engagement.
3:30 P.M. - Insert More Stuff…With Kaltura Video!
Presented by: Suzanne Rees, Kaltura - North American EDU Customer Success & JaBari Scott, Kaltura - Senior Solutions Engineer
Description: Kaltura will showcase opportunities for faculty & instructional designers to develop engaging video content on any subject matter and enhance them for a more robust student experience.
Tuesday, June 6th
8:30 A.M. - Accessible Technologies for Educational Access: Demonstrations and Discussions
Presented by: Tyler Smeltekop, MSU RCPD
Description: This session will highlight some of the most-implemented assistive technologies among our students. Learn about software such as Read & Write, auto-captions and CART, screen readers, and speech-to-text transcription. Live demonstrations will accompany discussion about how students utilize these assistive technologies and how faculty can support students using them.
9:45 A.M. - Using ChatGPT and AI in Developing Course Materials
Presented by: Caitlin Kirby, MSU Enhanced Digital Learning Initiative & Min Zhang, MSU Enhanced Digital Learning Initiative
Description: An overview of how ChatGPT and other large language models work. Hear ideas for how ChatGPT can be used in developing curriculum plans, various types of assessments, and rubrics for instructors to work with in their courses. This includes discussion on how students might use ChatGPT and ethical considerations. Other AI tools that instructors might consider using will also be discussed.
11:00 A.M. - Qualtrics: Experience Management for Higher Education
Presented by: Lara Davis, Qualtrics, Josh Sine, Qualtrics - VP of Higher Education Strategy, Steve Sartori, Qualtrics - AVP Higher Education Enterprise Accounts & Lara Davis, Qualtrics - Enterprise Account Executive
Description: A discussion of strategies and best practices for accelerating student retention, reducing faculty workload through automation, designing education experiences that deliver, and capturing and improving the student experiences that drive retention.
1:00 P.M. - Making Space for Makerspaces in the Classroom
Presented by: Isaac Record, MSU Lyman Briggs College
Description: This discussion is for anyone interested in assignments in which students make something, from a sculpture or a podcast to a model or a board game. We will talk through some of the challenges around this kind of assignment, including how to welcome students into an unfamiliar space that may include intimidating equipment like 3D printers, how to scaffold assignments for students with little experience, and how to assess assignments that involve skills well outside the central learning objectives for a course.
2:15 P.M. - Crowdmark: How to Grade Faster with Richer Feedback using Crowdmark
Presented by: Virginia Woodall, Crowdmark
Description: Crowdmark is a grading and assessment solution that enables educators to grade paper-based and digital exams and assignments 3X faster than traditional workflows. Instructors can give richer, more formative feedback by leaving comments, annotations, links, and points directly on the student answer. This supports students' understanding of errors while reducing regrade requests. Join us for this informational session for an intro and demo of Crowdmark.
3:30 P.M. - iClicker: Classroom Engagement Enhanced Via Technology
Presented by: David Maltby, iClicker
Description: Become more familiar with iClicker, a tool for student engagement, formative assessment, attendance, quizzing, and polling. Recently launching new mobile-device usage options, question types, and D2L Brightspace integrations, this demo will cover the basics of the iClicker Cloud instructor software and the iClicker student mobile app. Participants will experience iClicker as a student and learn how it can improve performance in a spectrum of situations.
Wednesday, June 7th
8:30 A.M. - Use Brief Explainer Animations and Podcast Episodes to Cultivate Inclusive Practices in IAH Courses
Presented by: Stokes Schwartz, MSU Center for Integrative Studies in the Arts and Humanities (IAH)
Description: Learn how to facilitate digital and face-to-face collaborative activities while teaching inclusive principles. Collaborative learning builds on the idea that learning is a social activity, which takes place when learners interact with their social environment. The approach is a general expression for group learning in which students share the workload equitably as they progress towards intended learning outcomes.
9:45 A.M. - Creating a Connected Classroom with MSU Commons
Presented by: Larissa Babak, MSU Humanities Commons, College of Arts & Letters
Description: MSU Commons is a multipurpose platform where users can develop a digital profile, join collaborative groups, build WordPress websites, and add materials to an open access repository. MSU Commons is available to all current faculty, staff, and students, as well as retired faculty and staff. With many different functionalities built into the platform, MSU Commons is an ideal place for developing an online, scholarly presence. In this session, participants will learn how MSU Commons can be used within courses at MSU.
11:00 A.M. - Spartan 365 Overview
Presented by: Laura Nagy, MSU IT Training
Description: This class will introduce learners to the suite of software collaboration tools that will help users store data, collaborate, and work efficiently. Spartan 365 has powerful tools that allows users to get more done with Microsoft apps like OneDrive, Forms, OneNote, Teams, and Outlook.
1:00 P.M. - Piazza: Collaborative Learning with Piazza Q&A
Presented by: TJ Kidd, Piazza Technologies
Description: A demo and overview of Piazza to create learning environments that allows students to collaborate with their peers and instructors any time, especially in virtual classes. Wiki-style formatting enables collaboration, anonymous posting encourages participation, and detailed statistics help track student engagement.
2:15 P.M. - Turnitin: Advance Academic Integrity & Innovate Assessments
Presented by: Megan DeArmit, Turnitin
Description: Instructors are spending more time grading and less time providing actionable feedback and use assessment insights on student learning to improve teaching. Without this valuable time and flexibility, student outcomes are at risk. Learn how Turnitin can make informed decisions about originality in submitted student work through our new AI writing detection feature in Turnitin Feedback Studio. And how Gradescope can be used by both administrators and faculty to deliver assessments with pedagogical flexibility, better insights, and fairness.
3:30 P.M. - PackBack: Revitalizing Classroom Discussion: Leveraging AI Technology for Active Learning
Presented by: Amanda Wickham, PackBack & Kathryn Stegman, PackBack
Description: Facilitating discussion (online or in-person) doesn’t have to be complicated, time-consuming, or difficult to grade. Using Packback Questions within classroom can build community and facilitate deeper learning. Packback Questions is an online discussion forum that integrates directly into D2L. Students receive real-time feedback from instructional AI; which coaches students to ask high-quality, open-ended questions and encourages actual discussion. Attendees of this workshop will see live examples of Packback communities and how it is course agnostic and successfully supports all modalities and course sizes.
Thursday, June 8th
8:30 A.M. - ELI Review - Focusing on Review & Revision in the Era of AI Writing
Presented by: Bill Hart-Davidson, MSU College of Arts and Letters
Description: With more AI applications making drafting fast and easy, it is more important than ever that we prepare students to be good reviewers and revisers. Eli Review provides a service that makes practice in criterion-referenced review and revision planning easy to set up and integrate into a course. Facilitate in person, hybrid, hyflex, and online courses that are synchronous and asynchronous. Help students develop two of the most valuable leadership skills in any discipline or career: the ability to give great feedback and the ability to use feedback to make improvements.
9:45 A.M. - Let’s Talk About CATME Smarter Teamwork
Presented by: Andrea Bierema, MSU Center for Integrative Studies in General Science and Department of Integrative Biology
Description: CATME is a program used to create teams and evaluate team members. This session will consist of a presentation about how I have used CATME for several years in face-to-face and online sections comprised of 100 to 200 students. I will discuss how I create teams, have students practice rating team members, evaluate their peers, and most recently, metacognitively reflect on their own teamwork skills. Instructions for students and grading rubrics will be provided. An open discussion will include attendees describing how they use or would like to use CATME.
11:00 A.M. - Collaborative Tools to Support Language Classroom Development and Community Involvement
Presented by: Dustin De Felice, MSU English Language Center & Debra M. Hardison, MSU Department of Linguistics, Languages, and Cultures
Description: We run a teaching practicum each year that attracts students, scholars, and community members to participate in a six-week program focused on the development of oral communication skills for adult nonnative speakers. While this program was in-person for years, we were forced to turn this experience into an online, synchronous modality in 2020. Over the last few spring semesters, we have had to run an all-virtual experience where we tried to replicate the in-person experience from registration to classes through a variety of tools. We will highlight the current structure, provide the pros and cons for the various tools, and discuss the possible directions for future iterations.
1:00 P.M. - Zoom: Driving Student Engagement in Zoom Classes
Presented by: Elysha Gellerman, Zoom & Janice Adamonis, Customer Success Manager with Zoom's Higher Education team
Description: This session will review best practices for driving student engagement and increasing retention in a virtual class setting. Tools reviewed will include, but not be limited to polls, breakout sessions, virtual backgrounds, spotlighting, and transcription. This session will be didactic and participants will leave the session with the ability to confidently conduct these functions as needed.
2:15 P.M. - Assessment Using LON-CAPA
Presented by: Stuart Raeburn, MSU Department of Physics & Astronomy
Description: The LON-CAPA Course Management System (CMS) features a powerful and flexible assessment engine. It can be used to deliver individualized homework, quizzes, and exams, either online or offline, as PDFs for printing, or for use with bubblesheets (which can be scanned by the MSU Scoring Office, and then uploaded into LON-CAPA for grading). Creation of assessment items using some of the 46 available templates will be demonstrated. Set-up of a deep linked LON-CAPA assessment for access from within a D2L course will also be shown.
3:30 P.M. - DigitalDesk Learning Suite: A Comprehensive Approach to Class Management
Presented by: Robert Gomm, DigitalDesk, Inc
Description: Learn to manage all aspects of class management in a unified platform:
Grading instruments to include paper/pencil and online exams andassignments.
Monitor student success in real-time.
Integrated remote proctoring.
Collaboration integration with Zoom and instant messaging
Friday, June 9th
9:45 A.M. - MSU’s Immersive Visualization Ecosystem
Presented by: Denice Blair, MSU Museum, Shannon Schmoll, MSU Abrams Planetarium, Amanda Tickner, MSU Libraries & Carrie Wicker, MSU Museum
Description: This presentation showcases MSU's “ecosystem” of immersive visualization technologies for applications in teaching, learning, and research. This ecosystem includes the Abrams Planetarium Sky Theater, MSU Libraries Digital Scholarship Lab’s 360 Room, and the MSU Museum’s Science on a Sphere. These technologies are rich in possibility for multi-media engagement and custom content creation by members of the MSU community. Learn about using the displays, content creation processes, and how the displays are suited for different types of visual representation. Explore practical examples of how the technologies are used by people on campus for research, teaching, and artistic work. You will be inspired to think about how one or all of these technologies can support your work.
11:00 A.M. - TechSmith: Camtasia & Snagit for Education
Presented by: Casey Seiter, Techsmith
Description: Join for a walkthrough of both Snagit and Camtasia. Casey will conduct a live demo showcasing start to finish production of still image and video production using the TechSmith suite of tools.
1:00 P.M. - Respondus: Protect the Integrity of Brightspace Quizzes with LockDown Browser + Respondus Monitor
Presented by: Arie Sowers, Respondus, Rebecca Schkade, Trainer, Respondus & Stephanie Ploof, Senior Account Manager, Respondus
Description: LockDown Browser is a custom browser that prevents digital cheating during an online exam. Respondus Monitor is a companion product for LockDown Browser that deters cheating when students take online exams in non-proctored environments. Students use their own computers with a standard webcam to record assessment sessions. Learn how to use these tools to protect exam integrity and confirm student identity.
Posted by:
Aaron Michael Fedewa

Posted on: Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation
NAVIGATING CONTEXT
Educator of Impact: Alicia Jenner
Alicia Jenner:
Within the landscape of higher education, Alicia Jenner stands out as a beacon of innovation and empathy. As a key member of Michigan State University’s Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation [CTLI], Alicia is dedicated to making education more accessible and equitable for all learners.
Alicia’s path to educational leadership wasn’t linear. Growing up in Marquette and graduating from Northern Michigan University, she initially aspired to become a speech pathologist. However, a conversation with a former professor at Northern Michigan University introduced her to the field of instructional design.
“I knew I liked working with people and making connections,” Alicia reflects. This insight, combined with her extensive knowledge of educational practices, directed her towards her current career path.
After earning her master’s degree in Curriculum and Instructional Technology, Alicia’s career took her to Iowa State University. There, she played an essential role in preparing engineering faculty to teach online and to embrace online education, an experience that broadened her understanding of the ‘scale of ability’ with technology among faculty and students alike.
Now at CTLI, Alicia leads projects that are reshaping the landscape of online and continuing education. As the project lead for online.msu.edu, she’s at the forefront of building digital infrastructure that serves both for-credit and non-credit programming. .
“In everything we do at the CTLI, it’s a team effort,” Alicia emphasizes. “We all bring our own areas of expertise to advance initiatives.” Her work spans from analyzing enrollment and financial data to tackling retention and recruitment challenges, all with the goal of making online education at MSU more equitable. She has built and rebuilt online.msu.edu twice and is currently working on its third update, focusing on community engagement and developing a centralized registration system for non-credit programs to make lifelong learning more accessible.
Alicia’s commitment to equity extends beyond the university walls. Her involvement with UPCEA [the Online and Professional Education Association] allows her to collaborate with professionals across multiple regions in North America, discussing emerging trends and challenges in the field.
True to her passion for education, Alicia is currently pursuing a Doctorate of Education in Leadership for Education Equity in Higher Education from the University of Colorado Denver. Balancing her studies with her full-time work at CTLI, Alicia embodies the spirit of lifelong learning that she champions for others.
“If I have an opportunity to get out of my little bubble, I will always take it,” Alicia says, reflecting on her constant desire to learn and grow.
As Alicia continues her journey in educational leadership, her focus remains clear: to create more accessible learning opportunities for all. Her work aligns closely with the MSU 2030 Strategic Plan, particularly in recruiting and supporting the success of a more diverse student body in Graduate and Professional programs.
Through her dedication, empathy, and innovative spirit, Alicia Jenner truly embodies what it means to be an Educator of Impact, continuously working to break down barriers and open doors in the world of higher education.
Within the landscape of higher education, Alicia Jenner stands out as a beacon of innovation and empathy. As a key member of Michigan State University’s Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation [CTLI], Alicia is dedicated to making education more accessible and equitable for all learners.
Alicia’s path to educational leadership wasn’t linear. Growing up in Marquette and graduating from Northern Michigan University, she initially aspired to become a speech pathologist. However, a conversation with a former professor at Northern Michigan University introduced her to the field of instructional design.
“I knew I liked working with people and making connections,” Alicia reflects. This insight, combined with her extensive knowledge of educational practices, directed her towards her current career path.
After earning her master’s degree in Curriculum and Instructional Technology, Alicia’s career took her to Iowa State University. There, she played an essential role in preparing engineering faculty to teach online and to embrace online education, an experience that broadened her understanding of the ‘scale of ability’ with technology among faculty and students alike.
Now at CTLI, Alicia leads projects that are reshaping the landscape of online and continuing education. As the project lead for online.msu.edu, she’s at the forefront of building digital infrastructure that serves both for-credit and non-credit programming. .
“In everything we do at the CTLI, it’s a team effort,” Alicia emphasizes. “We all bring our own areas of expertise to advance initiatives.” Her work spans from analyzing enrollment and financial data to tackling retention and recruitment challenges, all with the goal of making online education at MSU more equitable. She has built and rebuilt online.msu.edu twice and is currently working on its third update, focusing on community engagement and developing a centralized registration system for non-credit programs to make lifelong learning more accessible.
Alicia’s commitment to equity extends beyond the university walls. Her involvement with UPCEA [the Online and Professional Education Association] allows her to collaborate with professionals across multiple regions in North America, discussing emerging trends and challenges in the field.
True to her passion for education, Alicia is currently pursuing a Doctorate of Education in Leadership for Education Equity in Higher Education from the University of Colorado Denver. Balancing her studies with her full-time work at CTLI, Alicia embodies the spirit of lifelong learning that she champions for others.
“If I have an opportunity to get out of my little bubble, I will always take it,” Alicia says, reflecting on her constant desire to learn and grow.
As Alicia continues her journey in educational leadership, her focus remains clear: to create more accessible learning opportunities for all. Her work aligns closely with the MSU 2030 Strategic Plan, particularly in recruiting and supporting the success of a more diverse student body in Graduate and Professional programs.
Through her dedication, empathy, and innovative spirit, Alicia Jenner truly embodies what it means to be an Educator of Impact, continuously working to break down barriers and open doors in the world of higher education.
Authored by:
Cara Mack

Posted on: Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation

Educator of Impact: Alicia Jenner
Alicia Jenner:
Within the landscape of higher education, Alicia Jen...
Within the landscape of higher education, Alicia Jen...
Authored by:
NAVIGATING CONTEXT
Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024
Posted on: #iteachmsu
ASSESSING LEARNING
A Quick Guide to Transparent Grading
Overview:
Transparent grading involves clarifying and sharing grading criteria, processes, and feedback with students. This approach ensures that students understand how their work is assessed and how they can meet the expectations set for their assignments.
Key Aspects:
Clear Criteria and Standards: Develop and share detailed rubrics and grading criteria to guide students.
Open Communication: Discuss grading policies and provide ongoing, transparent feedback.
Student Involvement: Include students in creating or refining grading criteria to enhance their understanding.
Consistent Application: Apply grading standards consistently to maintain fairness and equity.
Feedback Focus: Provide specific, actionable feedback that helps students improve their performance.
Transparency in Grade Calculation: Clearly explain how final grades are derived from assignment scores and criteria.
Accessible Information: Make grading criteria and feedback easily accessible through LMS or course materials.
Benefits:
Enhanced Understanding: Students gain clarity on expectations and reduce confusion about their grades.
Improved Performance: Detailed guidelines and feedback help students focus on areas for improvement.
Increased Trust: Builds trust between students and instructors by making the grading process transparent and fair.
Greater Accountability: Ensures that grading practices are consistent and equitable.
Implementation Tips:
Provide detailed rubrics for major assignments and share them early in the course (check out this AI-powered Rubric Generator as a starting point).
Regularly review grading criteria with students and encourage them to ask questions.
Use examples to demonstrate different levels of performance according to the rubric.
Offer feedback on assignments promptly and discuss it with students during office hours.
Resources:
Five Innovative Grading Strategies (iteach article)
Transparent Assignment Design (iteach article)
Transparent Assignment Design (CTLI Quick Guide)
Transparent Assignment Design (CTLI workshop slides)
A Student-Centered Approach to Grading (CTLI workshop slides)
CTLI- Student Centered Grading Resouces
Fair Assignments: Designing Transparent Assignments via the Grading Criteria (iteach article)
TILT Higher Ed Examples and Resources
Transparent grading involves clarifying and sharing grading criteria, processes, and feedback with students. This approach ensures that students understand how their work is assessed and how they can meet the expectations set for their assignments.
Key Aspects:
Clear Criteria and Standards: Develop and share detailed rubrics and grading criteria to guide students.
Open Communication: Discuss grading policies and provide ongoing, transparent feedback.
Student Involvement: Include students in creating or refining grading criteria to enhance their understanding.
Consistent Application: Apply grading standards consistently to maintain fairness and equity.
Feedback Focus: Provide specific, actionable feedback that helps students improve their performance.
Transparency in Grade Calculation: Clearly explain how final grades are derived from assignment scores and criteria.
Accessible Information: Make grading criteria and feedback easily accessible through LMS or course materials.
Benefits:
Enhanced Understanding: Students gain clarity on expectations and reduce confusion about their grades.
Improved Performance: Detailed guidelines and feedback help students focus on areas for improvement.
Increased Trust: Builds trust between students and instructors by making the grading process transparent and fair.
Greater Accountability: Ensures that grading practices are consistent and equitable.
Implementation Tips:
Provide detailed rubrics for major assignments and share them early in the course (check out this AI-powered Rubric Generator as a starting point).
Regularly review grading criteria with students and encourage them to ask questions.
Use examples to demonstrate different levels of performance according to the rubric.
Offer feedback on assignments promptly and discuss it with students during office hours.
Resources:
Five Innovative Grading Strategies (iteach article)
Transparent Assignment Design (iteach article)
Transparent Assignment Design (CTLI Quick Guide)
Transparent Assignment Design (CTLI workshop slides)
A Student-Centered Approach to Grading (CTLI workshop slides)
CTLI- Student Centered Grading Resouces
Fair Assignments: Designing Transparent Assignments via the Grading Criteria (iteach article)
TILT Higher Ed Examples and Resources
Authored by:
Monica L. Mills

Posted on: #iteachmsu

A Quick Guide to Transparent Grading
Overview:
Transparent grading involves clarifying and sharing grad...
Transparent grading involves clarifying and sharing grad...
Authored by:
ASSESSING LEARNING
Thursday, Aug 22, 2024
Posted on: IT - Educational Technology
New: Educational Technology Events Calendar
Educational Technology has partnered with the MSU Library and the Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation (CTLI) to use their calendar system for our upcoming events. This will provide the MSU community with a more seamless registration experience when registering for Ed Tech workshops and sessions. Going forward, we will be listing Instructional Technology and Development workshops on the event calendar linked below.Check out the new Educational Technology Events Calendar and register today!
Posted by:
Lindsay Tigue
Posted on: Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation
JUSTICE AND BELONGING
New Professional Development Opportunities for Educators
This summer, the Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation is launching two asynchronous courses for educators: Inclusive Pedagogy and Welcome to Teaching. These two courses represent early offerings in what will be an expansive suite of self-paced, asynchronous educator development programming that will roll out throughout the 2025-2026 academic year.
Inclusive Pedagogy CTLI Course
This self-paced course is designed for MSU educators—broadly defined to include not only faculty and instructors, but also advisors, librarians, teaching assistants, instructional designers, coaches, Extension educators, and anyone involved in teaching, learning, or student success. In this course, you’ll explore the foundations of inclusive pedagogy and how it can be applied in your unique context. You’ll engage with videos, readings, reflections, and activities across seven modules, each building toward practical strategies for creating more inclusive educational spaces. The course is now available for self-enroll and offered in D2L.
Welcome to Teaching CTLI Course [Forthcoming in early Fall 2025]
Discover the foundations of effective teaching at MSU through this self-paced online course designed for educators across roles and disciplines. Through CTLI-curated content, you’ll examine key principles of quality instruction, learn practical strategies for creating equitable and engaging learning environments, and build your understanding of pedagogy and instructional design within the context of Michigan State University—all on your own schedule. Whether you're new to teaching or looking to refresh your practice, this course offers a meaningful entry point to MSU’s commitment to teaching and learning for student success.
Inclusive Pedagogy CTLI Course
This self-paced course is designed for MSU educators—broadly defined to include not only faculty and instructors, but also advisors, librarians, teaching assistants, instructional designers, coaches, Extension educators, and anyone involved in teaching, learning, or student success. In this course, you’ll explore the foundations of inclusive pedagogy and how it can be applied in your unique context. You’ll engage with videos, readings, reflections, and activities across seven modules, each building toward practical strategies for creating more inclusive educational spaces. The course is now available for self-enroll and offered in D2L.
Welcome to Teaching CTLI Course [Forthcoming in early Fall 2025]
Discover the foundations of effective teaching at MSU through this self-paced online course designed for educators across roles and disciplines. Through CTLI-curated content, you’ll examine key principles of quality instruction, learn practical strategies for creating equitable and engaging learning environments, and build your understanding of pedagogy and instructional design within the context of Michigan State University—all on your own schedule. Whether you're new to teaching or looking to refresh your practice, this course offers a meaningful entry point to MSU’s commitment to teaching and learning for student success.
Posted by:
Bethany Meadows

Posted on: Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation

New Professional Development Opportunities for Educators
This summer, the Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation is lau...
Posted by:
JUSTICE AND BELONGING
Monday, Jul 14, 2025
Posted on: Spring Conference on Teaching & Learning
PEDAGOGICAL DESIGN
Designing Against the Hidden Labors of Adult Learning
Title: Designing Against the Hidden Labors of Adult LearningPresenters: Makena Neal (CTLI); Benjamin D. Espinoza (Roberts Wesleyan College)Originally presented on May 11th, 2023Description:This session aims to expand upon the work published in "The Hidden Labors of Adult Learning: Emotional, Gendered, and the Intersection" (Neal & Espinoza, 2022) by describing the ways gendered labor- in addition to emotional labor- can show up in learning environments and examine how these expected and performed labors can impact adult learning; especially for women-identifying, black and brown, and other historically marginalized groups. Together, we'll collectively ideate ways we can more intentionally design learning experiences to combat the pervasiveness of this labor.Neal, M., & Espinoza, B. D. (2023). The Hidden Labors of Adult Learning: Emotional, Gendered, and the Intersection. Adult Learning, 34(2), 91–100. https://doi.org/10.1177/10451595211051079Original article available via the MSU Library's Sage Publishing access at: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10451595211051079
Click here to view on MediaSpace
Click here to view on MediaSpace
Authored by:
Makena Neal & Ben Espinoza

Posted on: Spring Conference on Teaching & Learning

Designing Against the Hidden Labors of Adult Learning
Title: Designing Against the Hidden Labors of Adult LearningPresent...
Authored by:
PEDAGOGICAL DESIGN
Friday, Jul 14, 2023
Posted on: #iteachmsu
PEDAGOGICAL DESIGN
Congratulations 2024 AT&T Award Winners!
2024 AT&T Awards for Excellence in Teaching with Technology
This awards program, generously funded by AT&T, recognizes outstanding contributions to the use and development of information technology for teaching and learning in courses at Michigan State University. These educators are recognized as campus leaders in contributing to student success through technology integration and enhancement in their courses.The Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation would like to extend joyful congratulations and deep gratitude for the three educators selected this year. They expemplify not only great uses of technology to enhance teaching and learning, but also commitments to the success of learners, engagement in MSU communities, and their own lifelong learning. Learn more about each of the award recipients and their pedagogical contributions by clicking their names below and checking out their nomination videos. Brittany Dillman, College of Education's MAET & MALXD Graduate Certificate Program Director & CTLI Affiliate!Isaac Record, Lyman Briggs College Associate Teaching Professor in Science and SocietyKristy Kellom, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources' School of Planning, Design and Construction Instructor in Interior DesignIndividual MSU faculty, instructors, teaching assistants and staff, or teams of faculty and staff, are eligible to submit practices that use technology to enhance their teaching. Nominations are peer-reviewed by a committee of faculty and staff, which gives due regard to MSU’s commitment to diversity and accessibility, as well as the university’s commitment to outstanding instruction and effective design and technology integration.Michigan State University’s AT&T Excellence in Teaching with Technology Award benefits the winners by conferring peer reviewed recognition. The competition also benefits the larger MSU community because it highlights inspiring and innovative approaches to blended and fully online learning. The disciplinary expertise of applicants and judges reflect the diversity of majors and colleges at MSU.Information on the awards, nomination review rubric, and an archive of past winners can be accessed on the MSU AT&T Awards webpage (link opens in new window).
This awards program, generously funded by AT&T, recognizes outstanding contributions to the use and development of information technology for teaching and learning in courses at Michigan State University. These educators are recognized as campus leaders in contributing to student success through technology integration and enhancement in their courses.The Center for Teaching and Learning Innovation would like to extend joyful congratulations and deep gratitude for the three educators selected this year. They expemplify not only great uses of technology to enhance teaching and learning, but also commitments to the success of learners, engagement in MSU communities, and their own lifelong learning. Learn more about each of the award recipients and their pedagogical contributions by clicking their names below and checking out their nomination videos. Brittany Dillman, College of Education's MAET & MALXD Graduate Certificate Program Director & CTLI Affiliate!Isaac Record, Lyman Briggs College Associate Teaching Professor in Science and SocietyKristy Kellom, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources' School of Planning, Design and Construction Instructor in Interior DesignIndividual MSU faculty, instructors, teaching assistants and staff, or teams of faculty and staff, are eligible to submit practices that use technology to enhance their teaching. Nominations are peer-reviewed by a committee of faculty and staff, which gives due regard to MSU’s commitment to diversity and accessibility, as well as the university’s commitment to outstanding instruction and effective design and technology integration.Michigan State University’s AT&T Excellence in Teaching with Technology Award benefits the winners by conferring peer reviewed recognition. The competition also benefits the larger MSU community because it highlights inspiring and innovative approaches to blended and fully online learning. The disciplinary expertise of applicants and judges reflect the diversity of majors and colleges at MSU.Information on the awards, nomination review rubric, and an archive of past winners can be accessed on the MSU AT&T Awards webpage (link opens in new window).
Posted by:
Makena Neal

Posted on: #iteachmsu

Congratulations 2024 AT&T Award Winners!
2024 AT&T Awards for Excellence in Teaching with Technology
Thi...
Thi...
Posted by:
PEDAGOGICAL DESIGN
Tuesday, Mar 19, 2024