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You have found Georgetown University’s Teaching, Learning & Innovation Summer Institute, hosted by the Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship. This is a private event that is only open to faculty and staff at Georgetown University. To return to the TLISI website please click here
Type: In Person Session clear filter
Tuesday, May 20
 

9:30am EDT

AI & Research: Lit Reviews
Tuesday May 20, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
This session explores how generative AI can enhance the research process, especially during the literature review phase. Participants will learn strategies for using AI tools to gather sources, summarize findings, trace citations, and accelerate academic synthesis while maintaining academic and ethical integrity.
Speakers
avatar for Melissa Jones

Melissa Jones

English & Humanities Librarian, Georgetown University
Tuesday May 20, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Film Screening Room Second Floor of Healey Family Student Center

9:30am EDT

It’s going to come up…”: Designing your course with space for dialogue, difference, and discomfort
Tuesday May 20, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Join us for a structured, highly interactive discussion focused on designing your course when you know that difficult discussions and divergent perspectives will come up - either because it's related to content and certainly when it's not! Specifically, the conversations will explore:

  • Strategies to design our class time to balance content we must cover with naturally emerging relevant/potentially challenging discussions
  • Strategies to design our classrooms as supportive space for constructive dialogue
  • How to find the balance of hearing from those who wish to participate without alienating members of the community
  • How to use our positions as authorities, experts, and leaders in the classroom to create trust and encourage knowledge-sharing and connection
Learn and practice with peers as we walk through hypothetical (based on real occurrences at GU) scenarios and how to navigate them
Speakers
avatar for Joselyn Schultz Lewis

Joselyn Schultz Lewis

Director of Inclusive Pedagogy, Georgetown University
DR

Doireann Renzi

Assistant Director of Faculty Initiatives, Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship
Tuesday May 20, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Herman Room in Healey Family Student Center

9:30am EDT

Navigating Complexity: The Journey Framework for Constructive Systems Change
Tuesday May 20, 2025 9:30am - 12:00pm EDT
NOTE: this is a double-length session
In a world where technological and societal change is outpacing human ability to adapt, the traditional models of education no longer meet our needs. The gap between the rapid pace of change and people’s cognitive, emotional, and physiological ability to process it has created a crisis of meaning and action. Education must evolve to support society in navigating this transformation.

The Journey Framework, developed at Georgetown’s Red House with a global consortium of experts, offers a new approach to addressing this gap by blending science, systems thinking, and humanistic problem-solving in the age of AI.

In this session, Red House Senior Fellows Dr. Mays Imad, Kate Woodsome, and Research and Program Associate Kendall Bryant will introduce The Journey Framework, an ecological methodology built on more than 50 years of research and practice in trauma and community psychology. This framework equips educators, students, and changemakers with tools to understand and engage with interconnected crises — such as climate change, misinformation, political polarization, and mental health challenges — on an intellectual and embodied level. We recognize that these are not abstract concepts, but are challenges affecting the wellbeing of students and educators in real time.

The Journey Framework fosters new ways of understanding the relationships between people and the communities and systems around them. This interrelated systems approach allows students and educators to identify and forecast the ripple effects of policies and practices, empowering them to spot opportunities for healthy, constructive transformation on a personal, communal, and societal level.

The workshop explores three core principles:
  1. Science of Trauma, Healing, and Resilience: Understanding how trauma shapes our nervous systems and impacts our ability to engage with systemic challenges.
  2. The Journey Framework: Connecting the science and sociology of trauma and healing to practical tools for critical thinking, problem solving, and transformation.
  3. Systems Change: Helping educators and students engage with complex problems from a multi-dimensional lens to support meaningful individual, communal, and systemic transformation in service of collective wellbeing.
Through hands-on activities and group discussions, participants will explore how to apply the methodology to their own contexts. Attendees will leave with the Journey Framework workbook, actionable tools and community for navigating complexity and making change from a more grounded, resourced state.
Tuesday May 20, 2025 9:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Social Room in Healey Family Student Center

11:00am EDT

AI & Research: Data Analysis
Tuesday May 20, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
An overview and hands-on practice of the best use cases of multimodal LLMs for data sets: working with spreadsheet formulas, performing data analysis tasks, and creating graphs. The session includes a discussion of potential use cases CNDLS can support, such as running models locally, AI limitations, workarounds, and ethical considerations.
Tuesday May 20, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Herman Room in Healey Family Student Center

11:00am EDT

Who’s Marginalized? Secular, Ignatian, and Islamic Values at GU-Q
Tuesday May 20, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Secular higher education attempts to articulate a moral and educational universalism, with critics variously claiming its neutrality as specious or incapable of nurturing critical elements of human flourishing. A different set of worries concern Catholic universities and the degree to which they are or can or should be Catholic. Similar worries exist concerning how to deploy or cultivate an authentically Islamic education that can “address the epistemic alienation and psychological dislocation afflicting many Muslims” while also “serving the fundamental needs of all.”  These debates give rise to specific concerns about transplanting US universities to non-democratic nations, with critics proclaiming the inevitabilities of either a neo-colonial destabilization of local autonomy or authoritarian corruption and dilution of liberal higher education.

Georgetown University in Qatar straddles these tensions, and its classrooms are frontline territory. Given its unique and even enviable hyper-pluralism, most or all of those in our classrooms, including faculty, experience some level of genuine marginalization—sometimes on account of those sharing the room.

Using this specific context as our starting point, this roundtable will discuss how we not only navigate but leverage these tensions in order to enhance student education. Specifically, participants will:
  • Wrestle with how we can teach about and in the face of universal though often asymmetric marginalization
  • Promote classroom techniques that take advantage of this dynamic
  • Consider means of enhancing students’ and our own ability to hear and recognize and respond with care to one another’s experiences
Speakers
avatar for Jamie Olsen

Jamie Olsen

Associate Director for Pedagogy and Innovation, GU-Q, Georgetown University
Tuesday May 20, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Film Screening Room Second Floor of Healey Family Student Center

12:15pm EDT

Lunchtime Plenary: The Role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Education
Tuesday May 20, 2025 12:15pm - 1:45pm EDT
This conversation, sponsored by two initiatives from the Provost's Office, the Georgetown Dialogues Initiative and the Initiative on Pedagogical Uses of AI, will discuss the implications of AI in academic settings, with panelists from Georgetown who bring perspectives that range from advocacy to skepticism. The conversation will consider such questions as:
  • How does AI reshape the learning experience and the social contract of the classroom?
  • What are the ethical considerations in AI-driven educational tools?
  • How can we balance technological advancements with human-centered learning principles?
Speakers
Tuesday May 20, 2025 12:15pm - 1:45pm EDT
Great Room in Healey Family Student Center

2:00pm EDT

An Introduction to Listening from the Heart
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Listening from the Heart is a dialogue education program developed to foster empathy and understanding in polarized communities. Created by the Parents Circle Families Forum (PCFF) in collaboration with Georgetown, this impactful program uses recorded testimonies from bereaved Israelis and Palestinians along with a structured Facilitator's Guide to bridge divides and encourage meaningful dialogue. Learn about its origins and discover ways to incorporate these powerful tools for empathy, healing, and reconciliation in your own work.  
Speakers
KH

Kim Huisman

Learning Design Specialist, CNDLS
avatar for Susannah McGowan

Susannah McGowan

Director of Curriculum Transformation Initiatives, Georgetown University
To schedule time to chat, please go here: https://cozycal.com/coaches/susannah-mcgowanSusannah McGowan is the Director of Curriculum Transformation Initiatives at The Red House at Georgetown University. She also serve as an advisory fellow of the John N. Gardner Institute for Excellence in Undergraduate Education, a non-profit organization dedicated to improving equity... Read More →
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Social Room in Healey Family Student Center

2:00pm EDT

Fostering Belonging in the Online Classroom
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
In March of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic forced institutions of higher education to rapidly pivot to emergency online instruction. Five years after this experience, questions about the role and impact of online learning persist, amplified by the growing demand by students for online educational opportunities. This session departs from the assumption that through design choices centered on inclusive, engaging pedagogy, the online classroom has the capacity to meet - and in many cases surpass - the liberatory impact of in-person education. In addition to practical tools and strategies, this session will offer several provocations intended to encourage us to reconsider the relationship between higher education and online learning modalities.
Speakers
MO

Michelle Ohnona

Assistant Professor of the Practice and Faculty Director for Liberal Studies
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Herman Room in Healey Family Student Center

2:00pm EDT

How GU Faculty are Integrating AI in the Classroom
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Georgetown faculty across disciplines are exploring practical, thoughtful ways to integrate generative AI into their teaching. This session highlights current classroom strategies, assignment design, and faculty reflections on student learning, academic integrity, and evolving pedagogical goals. Join us to hear examples, ask questions, and consider how AI might support your own teaching practice.
Moderators
avatar for Molly Chehak

Molly Chehak

Director of Digital Learning Pedagogy, CNDLS, Georgetown University
Speakers
avatar for Jeanine Turner

Jeanine Turner

Professor and Director, Communication, Culture & Technology Program
Professor Turner is a Professor and Director of the Communication, Culture, and Technology Program and holds a joint appointment in the business school as the Annette N. Shelby Endowed Chair in Business and Leadership Communication. Over the past twenty years at Georgetown, her research... Read More →
GA

Ghayda Ali

Ghayda’s Ph. D. is in Sociolinguistic and Translation: English-Arabic-English. She is Associate Teaching Professor in the Department of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Georgetown University. Her research interests lean heavily towards Critical News Discourse Analysis of Arabic print... Read More →
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Film Screening Room Second Floor of Healey Family Student Center

3:30pm EDT

Round Table Conversations
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Please join us for a number of lively round table sessions on teaching topics generated through participant interest.
Speakers
avatar for Mindy McWilliams

Mindy McWilliams

Senior Associate Director for Assessment and Programs, CNDLS, Georgetown University
KH

Kim Huisman

Learning Design Specialist, CNDLS
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Social Room in Healey Family Student Center

3:30pm EDT

Teaching STEM Courses: Balancing Content and Engagement
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Join a panel of Georgetown faculty for an engaging discussion on strategies to foster student engagement in content- and skills-intensive courses—such as applied sciences, mathematics, statistics, and other hands-on disciplines where students are expected to leave with a concrete set of capabilities. These courses present unique challenges: how do we balance delivering foundational content, ensuring time for applied practice, and still create opportunities for students to engage meaningfully with the material? Our panelists will share approaches that have worked in their classrooms, address persistent barriers, and reflect on what makes engagement possible—even in the most content-heavy teaching environments.
Speakers
MC

MC Chan

Georgetown University
DR

Doireann Renzi

Assistant Director of Faculty Initiatives, Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Herman Room in Healey Family Student Center

3:30pm EDT

Walking Tour of New Healy Wellbeing Space
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Please join Carol Day, Director of Health Education Services, for a walking tour of a newly renovated Wellness space on the lower level of Healy Hall. Meet for the tour at the TLISI Registration Desk, which will then depart for Healy Hall together.
Speakers
CD

Carol Day

Dir. Health Education Services; Adj. Asst. Prof. School of Health, Georgetown University
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
TLISI Registration Desk
 
Wednesday, May 21
 

9:30am EDT

Faculty Development & Peer Learning for Inclusive Teaching
Wednesday May 21, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Many LEAP units have turned to faculty development, pedagogy circles, and communities of practice as key strategies for sustaining inclusive teaching. This panel will highlight examples of these peer learning models in action—what they’ve made possible, how they’ve been sustained, and what other units can learn from them.

Panelists will share concrete strategies for supporting faculty in developing inclusive, responsive teaching practices, and reflect on the value of cross-disciplinary collaboration, shared facilitation, and trust-building among peers. The conversation will explore how faculty-led communities can create space for reflection, experimentation, and long-term cultural change in the classroom and beyond.

Designed for anyone looking to support inclusive teaching within their unit or program, this session will offer practical insight and inspiration for building sustainable peer learning models that fit your own context.
Moderators
avatar for Caitlin Gunn

Caitlin Gunn

Senior Educational Developer, Georgetown University
Speakers
Wednesday May 21, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Film Screening Room Second Floor of Healey Family Student Center

9:30am EDT

Religious Diversity in the Classroom
Wednesday May 21, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Our students hail from a wide variety of cultural, spiritual, and religious/non-religious backgrounds, and an inclusive classroom needs to actively welcome and make a home for that diversity. In this panel, we’ll talk about the ways in which a learning environment can be, depending on the actions of the instructor, alienating or truly inclusive for students of all religious identities. You’ll also get the chance to wrestle with challenging hypothetical scenarios and generate solutions for your own current or future courses.
Speakers
avatar for David Ebenbach

David Ebenbach

Georgetown University
Wednesday May 21, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Herman Room in Healey Family Student Center

9:30am EDT

In Your Shoes: Theory and Practice
Wednesday May 21, 2025 9:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Note: This is a double session
In this (double) session lead members of the In Your Shoes team of The Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics will share insights from their research situating IYS in the larger context of arts and transformational learning. The team will then lead participants through a brief IYS process, followed by a discussion of the ways to engage IYS programs and leverage IYS practices to enhance classroom climate and promote learning outcomes.
Speakers
avatar for Zhuqing Ding

Zhuqing Ding

Assistant Director for Online Programs, Georgetown University
Wednesday May 21, 2025 9:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Social Room in Healey Family Student Center

11:00am EDT

Developing your AI Policy and Syllabus Statement
Wednesday May 21, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
As generative AI becomes more present in academic work, clear and thoughtful syllabus language is essential. This session offers guidance on developing course policies that reflect your teaching goals, disciplinary context, and expectations for student use of AI. We’ll review sample statements, discuss key considerations, and engage in a hands-on activity—adapted from Harvard’s AI Pedagogy Project—to help you draft or refine your own policy.
Speakers
avatar for Molly Chehak

Molly Chehak

Director of Digital Learning Pedagogy, CNDLS, Georgetown University
Wednesday May 21, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Film Screening Room Second Floor of Healey Family Student Center

11:00am EDT

Engelhard Presents: Building and Providing a Fidget Box for your Students as an Act of Care and Well-being
Wednesday May 21, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
In this session, we will be discussing the value of a fidget box, as a tool that can help all your students learn and focus in the classroom, and as a tool that demonstrates your commitment to care of the whole student, and ensuring their well-being. After the short discussion, attendees will have a chance to begin to build their own fidget boxes, choosing what they want in their boxes as a beginning point in designing boxes that they and their students would find useful. Attendees will be able to take home this fidget box and use them in their classes.
Speakers
MC

MC Chan

Georgetown University
Wednesday May 21, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Herman Room in Healey Family Student Center

12:15pm EDT

Lunchtime Plenary: The Role of Georgetown in a Shifting Global Landscape: A Conversation with GU Leaders about the State of Higher Education
Wednesday May 21, 2025 12:15pm - 1:45pm EDT
This plenary conversation among Georgetown leaders will address the shifting dynamics and demands being put on higher education, and how Georgetown is drawing on its values and community to navigate these challenges.
Speakers
SC

Soyica Colbert

Interim Provost, Georgetown University
PA

Paul Almeida

Dean and William R. Berkley Chair, McDonough School of Business
DD

Debora Dole

Vice Dean for Academic and Faculty Affairs, School of Nursing
Wednesday May 21, 2025 12:15pm - 1:45pm EDT
Great Room in Healey Family Student Center

2:00pm EDT

Cross-School Conversations: Inclusive Pedagogy in Health Education
Wednesday May 21, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
With Georgetown’s School of Medicine, School of Health, and School of Nursing all engaged in LEAP, this panel brings faculty together to discuss shared challenges and creative strategies in advancing inclusive pedagogy across health education.

Panelists will explore how inclusive teaching practices are being embedded into health curricula to foster belonging, support diverse learners, and prepare students for equity-minded clinical and community work. From revisiting case studies to reshaping assessment, the conversation will highlight innovations that aim to make health education more responsive, rigorous, and humane.

This session will also surface cross-school insights into faculty development models that have been most effective—offering ideas for how to support educators navigating complex content, institutional pressures, and the urgent need for anti-oppressive practice in the health professions.
Moderators
avatar for Caitlin Gunn

Caitlin Gunn

Senior Educational Developer, Georgetown University
Speakers
avatar for Sarah Kureshi

Sarah Kureshi

Vice Chair of Education, Dept of Family Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine
Sarah Kureshi, MD, MPH is Associate Professor Vice Chair of Education in the Department of Family Medicine at Georgetown University Medical Center and MedStar Georgetown University Hospital. She is a graduate of University of Central Florida (BS, Biology), Mayo Clinic College of Medicine... Read More →
Wednesday May 21, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Film Screening Room Second Floor of Healey Family Student Center

2:00pm EDT

From Trip to Transformation: Embedding Immersion Pedagogy into the Curriculum for Justice-Oriented Learning
Wednesday May 21, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Immersion experiences, when intentionally designed and thoughtfully integrated, can be powerful vehicles for transformative learning, justice-centered reflection, and curricular innovation. In this session, a team of faculty, staff, and student participants from the Center for Social Justice’s immersion experiences will share how immersion pedagogy has been embedded into undergraduate courses and co-curricular programming through the Alternative Breaks Program (ABP) and Magis Kino Border Immersion experiences. Grounded in a five-phase immersion pedagogy model—preparation, encounter, reflection, connection, and action—this session explores how faculty have partnered with CSJ to align immersions with course outcomes, institutional learning goals, and commitments to community accountability. Through recent examples, participants will learn how justice-focused experiential learning can be meaningfully scaffolded in classrooms and student programs.Participants will come away with a clear understanding of a replicable framework for immersion pedagogy and how it can be applied in curricular settings. They will also explore practical tools for deepening student reflection, strengthening the connection between immersive experiences and academic content, and fostering long-term community engagement.

Following a brief panel, participants will engage in small-group activities to imagine and begin designing a future immersion experience informed by this model.
Speakers
KH

Kim Huisman

Learning Design Specialist, CNDLS
LW

Lois Wessel

Professor
Wednesday May 21, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Herman Room in Healey Family Student Center

2:00pm EDT

Practicing Dialogue Across Difference
Wednesday May 21, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
We invite you to explore innovative approaches to dialogue facilitation in higher education. Professor Skendaj will present his model for training trainers in relationship-building dialogue facilitation. Participants will engage in an interactive session, including a demonstration dialogue, to learn how to design and implement peer-facilitated dialogue approaches that enhance critical thinking, active listening, and collaborative learning across complex and potentially challenging academic discussions.
Speakers
Wednesday May 21, 2025 2:00pm - 3:15pm EDT
Social Room in Healey Family Student Center

3:30pm EDT

Outdoor and Place-Based Teaching at Georgetown: Going Beyond “Can We Have Class Outside Today?”
Wednesday May 21, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
In the 2024-2025 academic year, the Red House initiated an outdoor teaching pilot by transforming their Baker Family Terrace into an outdoor classroom. This pilot explored the reciprocal relationship between learning processes and the learning environment. In this session hosted outdoors on the Baker Family Terrace, participants will experience some of the place-based teaching approaches employed in outdoor classes on the Baker Family Terrace and learn about the techniques, activities, and best practices faculty have implemented to connect the local environment to their pedagogies. After sharing additional examples from place-based and outdoor learning from other Georgetown colleagues, facilitators will also share findings from a Red House report entitled “Context Matters: A Fall 2024 Case Study on Place-Based Teaching.” We hope that participants leave this session engaging the question of “can we have class outside today?” as an opportunity to reframe academic content in context for transformative learning.
Speakers
avatar for Peris Lopez

Peris Lopez

Student, Georgetown University - Red House & The Hub
NM

Noah Martin

Designer, Georgetown University
avatar for Ijeoma Njaka

Ijeoma Njaka

Senior Learning Design for Transformational & Inclusive Initiatives, Georgetown University
Wednesday May 21, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Baker Family Terrace The Red House: 1237 37th St. NW Washington, D.C. 20007

3:30pm EDT

Teaching Critical AI Literacy in Writing Classes
Wednesday May 21, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
In this panel, writing program faculty share the collective "Principles of Teaching Critical AI Literacy" that we have developed and implemented in Writing and Culture seminars. In particular, we share survey data about AI use among first-year students and detail practical activities and assignments to engage students in critically and ethically using AI to generate ideas, analyze audiences, and conduct research for writing. We also share our efforts to bring more student voices the AI conversation in higher education by developing a collaborative class project across multiple sections in which students created original multimedia web content about AI use in writing, learning, and creative arts.
Speakers
JP

J Palmeri

Professor of English and Director of the Writing Program, Georgetown University
Wednesday May 21, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Social Room in Healey Family Student Center
 
Thursday, May 22
 

10:30am EDT

Capitol Campus Event and Tour
Thursday May 22, 2025 10:30am - 3:00pm EDT
To introduce faculty to the potential of immersive learning within the city, a special event is planned for Thursday, May 22nd. A bus from the main campus will transport participants downtown for a showcase on teaching in this unique setting at the heart of the city, followed by lunch and a campus tour. Faculty will hear from a panel of colleagues who have successfully taught at the Capitol Campus, learn about practical considerations like parking and nearby amenities, and explore how the city itself can be a rich teaching resource.

This special event will feature the Capitol Applied Learning Labs (the CALL) and offer a tour of the Capitol Campus. For those who desire, bus transportation will be provided from the Main Campus and back at the end of the day. Light morning refeshments and lunch will be included.

Further details will be provided to participants who sign-up for this event.

Thursday May 22, 2025 10:30am - 3:00pm EDT
 
Teaching, Learning & Innovation Summer Institute
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