Center for Teaching, Learning and Research CENTER FOR TEACHING, LEARNING & RESEARCH

Fulbright Info Session


Fulbright provides a year of funding for 2022-2023 for activities including graduate study, independent research, and English teaching assistant positions. Join Fulbright program staff and Dean Lisa Gates to learn about the Fulbright scholarship program, the application process, and updates for next year. We’ll have a large group session with a breakout room discussion with Dean Gates for Middlebury students and alumni about Middlebury’s application process. Middlebury’s preliminary application deadline is April 15.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

UK and Irish Fellowships Info Session

Have you considered applying to graduate school in the UK or Ireland? Join Dean Lisa Gates for a discussion of how to apply for a UK-Irish scholarship and what makes an ideal candidate. The deadline for the UK-Irish nomination application is April 1, 2021.

Register here.

A Zoom link to join will be sent in your registration confirmation and in the reminder email the day before the event.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

Watson Fellowship Info Session

A Watson Fellowship provides funding for the 2022-2023 year for an international, multi-country independent, self-designed project. Preliminary applications are due 4/15/21. To find out more, join Dean Lisa Gates for a Zoom chat on
Tuesday, March 2 from 7-8 pm ET. You’ll learn more about what the Watson is and how to apply. See go.middlebury.edu/watson for more information about the Watson Fellowship and contact fellowships@middlebury.edu with questions.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

High Impact Pedagogies for Quality, Equity, and Student Engagement

In this workshop by Timothy Eatman, Dean of the Honors Living-Learning Community and Associate Professor of Urban Education in the College of Arts & Sciences at Rutgers University, participants will consider what new ways of knowing and being are called for in our current moment at Middlebury, in higher education, and in the world we are preparing our students to enter.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

Profound Learning and Full Participation: Utilizing High Impact Practices for Student Success

Pivoting on a full participation framework, Timothy Eatman, Dean of the Honors Living-Learning Community and Associate Professor of Urban Education in the College of Arts & Sciences at Rutgers University, will share the evidence-based research demonstrating a positive relationship between student participation in high-impact practices (HIPs) and improved student outcomes. These curricular and co-curricular practices support student engagement, advance curricular coherence, and generate equitable outcomes.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

Broadening the Conversation: Communicating to Non-Experts About Your Work

Guest speaker Joshua Tucker from New York University and co-author of The Washington Post’s Monkey Cage will lead us in a discussion on how we speak to a general audience about our research. Whether the topic is data science, climate change, policy, history, or art, it can seem difficult for those of us steeped in the details of a subject to present our work in ways that are accessible to non-experts. In this workshop we will hear from an expert on bridging the expert-non-expert gap and will be reminded of resources at Middlebury that can assist us in broadening the audience for our work.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

Designing Engaging Writing Assignments

This workshop, led by Catharine Wright, Associate Professor of Writing and Rhetoric/GSFS will focus on writing assignments that delve into big ideas, that invite students to explore new genres, and/or that help students develop specific skills, with emphasis on ways to design and scaffold assignments to support student success. Faculty from several programs and departments, including the Writing and Rhetoric Program, will each briefly showcase an assignment with attention to course context as well as to how students might transfer what they learn to other contexts.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

Universal Design for Learning: An Introduction

Kirsten Behling is the Associate Dean of Student Accessibility & Academic Resources at Tufts University and an adjunct professor in the Disability Services in Higher Education Graduate Certificate Program at Suffolk University. This session will introduce the concept of Universal Design for Learning as a tool to support that effort. It will start by acknowledging the hard work that faculty have already done, and encourage them to adopt just one more strategy to increase access for a wide variety of learners.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

Pandemic Teaching Excellence: Moving Forward with Lessons Learned

What have you learned from teaching during the pandemic thus far, and how will those lessons inform your teaching this winter and spring? In this session co-hosted by Jim Ralph and Michaela Kubacki, we will learn from one another. Our format will involve a rotating series of three 15-minute breakout group discussions on a number of topics. The session will conclude in a plenary fashion highlighting key takeaways from this teaching roulette. 

Click here to register for this event.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public

Teaching Public Humanities and Lab Classes

2021 Contemporary Liberal Arts Teaching Series: In this workshop by the Axinn Center for the Humanities’ Public Humanities Labs Initiative, faculty will discuss the Middlebury resources available to prepare and teach a public humanities lab or class this spring or in the future. Presentations and panelists include Marissa Brown from Brown University’s Center for Public Humanities and Cultural Heritage, The Vermont Folk Life Center, Rebekah Irwin for Special Collections, Kathy Morse for MiddData, Amy Collier for DLINQ, and Diane Munroe for Community Engagement.

Virtual Middlebury

Closed to the Public