Spring Kickoff

Annual Spring Kickoff

Dear 51³Ô¹ÏÍøFaculty,

We are excited to invite you to the CTE’s 2026 Spring Kickoff, one of our signature in-person events, scheduled for FRIDAY, January 16, 2026, from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in Moody Hall.

 

This year’s Spring Kickoff focuses on essential pedagogy topics, including:

  • Online Discussions in The Age of Chatbots with Justin Fisher (Philosophy)
  • A Taste of Active Learning: Transforming Lessons with Genially with Rodrigo Lopez (World Languages & Literatures)
  • From Surviving to Thriving: How Faculty Can Support Students Under Pressure with Mea Ahlberg (Economics)
  • The Instructor’s Evolving Role in the AI-Infused Higher Education with Mira Detcheva (World Languages & Literatures)
  • Fair & Flexible: Rethinking How We Measure Learning (And Learning Wins!) with Eva Oberdoester (Biology)
  • Meditative Exercises to Help Students’ Presence, Mental Health, Performance, and Success with Farnoosh Nouri (Counseling)
  • Beyond Participation: Rigor and Belonging in Student-Led Seminars with Justin Childress (MADI)

The event will feature fast-paced sessions designed for direct application in your teaching. You’ll have the opportunity to learn from SMU’s distinguished faculty, exchange experiences, and build a supportive professional network.

Event Highlights:

  • Enjoy a delicious breakfast and lunch provided to all attendees.
  • Participate in practical pedagogical workshops designed to spark ideas and strengthen teaching excellence.
  • Experience live music, discover our new Book Club selection, and connect with awesome professors!
  • Earn professional development credit toward the new 51³Ô¹ÏÍøpromotion guidelines.

This event is open to all 51³Ô¹ÏÍøfaculty. RSVP today to secure your spot. If your plans change, please email us at cte@smu.edu so we can adjust the food and refreshment orders accordingly.



2026 SPRING KICKOFF PROGRAM

 

Time

Session & Description

8:30am

Check-in & Breakfast

9am-9:15am

CTE Welcome
with Constantin C. Icleanu (CTE Director)

9:15am-9:45am

Online Discussion in the Age of Chatbots

with Justin Fisher (Philosophy) | Spring 2026 CTE Affiliate

Online discussion board assignments once served as a productive opportunity for students and professors to discuss course material outside the classroom.  Now discussion boards are often overrun with AI posts, and students feel ever-greater anxiety about expressing their own thoughts and confusions.  This presentation considers alternative ways of serving the same pedagogical purposes, including having students engage in individual discussion with a professor-created AI chatbot (demonstration included).  Many students have expressed preference for this sort of "discussion" assignment, because it provides responses immediately and with higher quality than what other students often post, and because it allows them to ask more questions without anxiety about what their peers might think.

9:45am-10:15am

A Taste of Active Learning: Transforming Lessors with Genially

with Rodrigo Lopez (World Languages & Literatures) | Spring 2026 CTE Affiliate


Discover how Genially can turn traditional lessons into interactive experiences. This session will showcase how to design engaging activities—like games, quizzes, and escape rooms—that boost participation, creativity, and meaningful learning in any classroom setting.

10:15am-10:45pm

From Surviving to Thriving: How Faculty Can Support Students Under Pressure

with Mea Ahlberg (Economics)


The presentation will focus on the growing stress students face as they navigate independence, academic demands, and life away from their family support systems. It will discuss the role faculty can play in recognizing signs of overwhelm, creating stability through small acts of connection, and offering practical tools that help students manage pressure more effectively. 

10:45am-11:15am

The Instructor's Evolving Role in AI-Infused Higher Education

with Mira Detcheva (World Languages & Literatures)


The session will explore the symbiotic relationship between the human instructor and AI, and how the presence of AI is slowly (or rather rapidly) changing the instructor's role in higher education. The session will focus on the benefits of AI to enhance learning across disciplines, and how we - the instructors - should adapt and learn to thrive alongside AI in academia. 

11:15am-11:45am

Fair & Flexible: Rethinking How We Measure Learning (And Learning Wins!)

with Eva Oberdoester (Biology)

 

Traditional assessments often emphasize conformity and rote memorization rather than genuine understanding. This interactive workshop explores how principles of andragogy (adult learning theory) can be applied to promote deeper comprehension and engagement. Participants will examine practical examples, including the use of case studies and structured in-class activities that grant students autonomy within a well-defined academic framework. By shifting the focus from earning grades to a shared learning community, students can move beyond memorizing information toward developing meaningful insights. This approach fosters lasting learning that extends beyond what is required for the next exam, encouraging critical thinking, collaboration, and a more authentic connection to course material.

11:45am-12:15pm

Lunch

12:15pm-12:45pm

Meditative Exercises to Help Student Presence, Mental Health, Performance, and Success

with Farnoosh Nouri (Counseling)

 

Session description to be added soon.

 12:45pm-1:15pm

Beyond Participation: Rigor and Belonging in Student-Led Seminars

with Justin Childress (MADI)

 

Student-run graduate seminars are framed as guided inquiry that develops judgment, leadership, and disciplinary voice. Session content centers on a compact model grounded in discussion theory and research practice: a five-category question taxonomy (clarify, synthesize, challenge, reframe, apply), rotating roles that support equitable participation, and building rhetorical confidence. Emphasis is on evidence-initiated claims, respectful challenge, and brief post-seminar notes that consolidate learning over time. Student outcomes can include sharper argumentation, more transparent citation habits, skill in framing problems and testing claims, and the capacity to revise positions publicly. The approach scales across design history/ethics (the area I've used this approach the most) and similar fields, enabling cohorts to build shared intellectual memory while practicing facilitation, rhetorical listening, and ethical reasoning.

 1:15pm-1:30pm

Wrap-Up
with Constantin C. Icleanu (CTE Director)

 

 

Past Programs & Resources


2025 SPRING KICKOFF PROGRAM

 

Time

Session & Description

8:30am

Check-in & Refreshments

9am-9:10am

CTE Welcome
Led by Constantin C. Icleanu (CTE Director)

9:10am-9:50am

Revamp Assignments & Assessments with ChatGPT:
The Future of Curriculum Design

Unleash the power of AI to reimagine how you design assignments and assessments. This workshop dives into practical strategies for using ChatGPT to streamline curriculum design. Explore creative ways to tailor assignments, create dynamic assessments, and enhance learning outcomes through AI-driven tools. Whether you're a tech novice or seasoned pro, you’ll walk away with fresh ideas to engage students and make your course content more impactful.
Led by Janice Lindstrom (Music Therapy) | Spring 2025 CTE Affiliate

10am-10:50am

Assignments That Teach Writing as Discovery
 |
We know that writing helps us discover what we think. How can we help students discover this truth experientially?
This workshop will explore techniques such as scaffolding assignments, aligning prompts with course objectives, and other strategies for inspiring critical and creative thinking.
Led by Crista DeLuzio (History), Peter Kupfer (Music), and Bruce Levy (English).

11:00am-11:50pm

How does generative AI change how students search for academic sources?

This workshop will discuss the impact of generative AI tools on the search process. Discover what tools students have access to through library databases as well as tools that might be helpful for more advanced faculty and graduate student researchers. Please have a research question in mind for the workshop exercises. Previous experience with generative AI is not needed.
Led by Megan Heuer and Julia Anderson (Libraries)

12:00pm-12:50pm

Wellbeing strategies in the classroom

This workshop will cover strategies that you can use in the classroom to support wellbeing and create a more positive classroom environment.
Led by Maria Del Pillar Melgarejo (World Languages & Literatures) | Spring 2025 CTE Affiliate with Michelle Glasby-Millington (Film & Media Arts)

12:50pm-1:15pm

Lunch

1:15pm-2pm

Practical Steps to Align Your Course with the 51³Ô¹ÏÍøCommon Curriculum

This presentation offers straightforward guidance to help faculty align their courses with the 51³Ô¹ÏÍøCommon Curriculum (CC). Topics include:Navigating CC Rubrics and Assessment Processes (Guidance on understanding CC rubrics and CC assessment collection processes); Creating Signature Assessments (Tips and examples for designing assignments that fulfill CC tag requirements);Using Scaffolding Techniques (Strategies to structure course materials and activities to enhance student learning). Whether you’re new to the Common Curriculum or looking to fine-tune your course, this session provides actionable ideas to meet CC expectations and support student success.
Led by Yan Cooksey (Institutional Planning and Assessment)

2pm-2:05pm

Wrap-Up
Led by Constantin C. Icleanu (CTE Director)