Our
Conference Theme
The
concept of “active learning” has guided efforts at improving
university teaching for over three decades. During that time, new
tools and technical advances have greatly expanded the means we can
use to attain this common goal. These include training teachers more
fully in “active teaching,” making the classroom more inclusive,
and taking better advantage of tech tools such as “clickers”
that record class responses and “flipping” large classes
from being the site of imparting information to being the place where
that information is debated and analyzed.
In addition, research into student misconceptions and greater awareness
of the advantages of activities such as group work have helped to
foster new, broader definitions of learning.
Our choice of theme for this year’s 38th International Conference
on Improving University Teaching reflects the need to take stock of
our progress to date and to identify barriers that continue to slow
our advance along the road towards realizing the promise of active
learning. In the future, new discoveries may play a less important
role in promoting active learning than will expanding the adoption
of what we already know. Thus the conference will also take a look
at the role of teaching centers in disseminating current best practices.
Six sub-themes underlie the overall topic:
• The Inclusive Classroom
• Increasing Student Involvement
• Advances in Instructional Technology
• "Active
Teaching"
• Effective Teaching Centers
• New Research on Learning Outcomes
The Improving University Teaching Conference is a self-supporting,
non- profit organization under U.S. law. For additional information
or questions about the conference, kindly contact iutconference@gmail.com