Insiders and outsiders in the classroom

Webinar and workshop

Webinar April 8, 13:00-15:00

In this third and final theme in the series The international classroom we will focus on Insiders and outsiders in the classroom. At the webinar on the 8th of April you will hear three presentations on how students’ stories and experience can be an asset in building an effective and inclusive learning environment.

The webinar is open to the public. Registration (for webinar and follow-up workshop) is required and done here. A Zoom-link will be shared a few days before the event.

About the presenters


Rachel Forsyth (PhD in Physics, project leader at Lund University and former head of the University teaching Academy at Manchester Metropolitan University)

Sharing the classroom

During this international classroom series, presenters and participants have talked about the complexities of creating an effective learning environment with diverse learners. This short session introduces some materials developed to encourage discussion about the role of the teacher in reducing feelings of being inside or outside. The resources are based on research about student and staff attitudes to difference in the classroom. There will be two short activities: the first prompts thinking about how we can all adjust the way we talk about difference, and the second considers individual responses to students' stories about their learning. Access to a wider range of resources will be provided.
 

Therése Skoog (professor of Psychology at the University of Gothenburg)

Student life

This ongoing research project is about monitoring, documenting and drawing conclusions from how students experience their first five weeks as students. The students keep diaries about what they experience and learn about student life over a period of five weeks. The aim of this project is to work with the students to draw conclusions from the data generated (the students’ diary entries) and on how the structure and organisation of the Faculty and its departments – in a broad sense, the students’ learning environment – can be developed to support and promote the students’ mental health. 

 

Marta Kolankiewicz (PhD in Sociology and associate senior lecturer at the Department of Gender Studies at Lund University)

The Classroom as a contested space

The workshop The Classroom as a contested space has been created as a tool to attend to disruptive moments of tensions, uncomfortable silence and sometimes abrupt outbursts. The form of the workshop has been changing and developed over the years, as it has been presented and carried out in different settings. The main outcome of the workshop becomes an opportunity for rehearsing our future selves, as teachers or students as ways of reacting in these difficult moments in the classroom.

 

Workshop April 22, 13:00-15:00

The follow-up workshop is open to staff at Lund and Malmö Universities, and it is not required to have participated in the first two workshops to attend this one.

To register follow the link above. Participants are encouraged to bring their own teaching dilemmas and challenges. The method used for this workshop will be Reflective Teams. It is a structured method to receive and give appreciative and constructive feedback on dilemmas. It is also a method to practice active listening, and can be used with students (for example as a preparation for group work). Detailed instructions will be sent out to all registered participants before the workshop.

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