About the Event
Creating and selecting educational resources that centre equity requires intention and planning. Without this foresight, there is a risk of perpetuating biases and harm in both the field of study and society at large. This includes the potential for inaccessible content, offensive language, harmful stereotypes, and the undue promotion of dominant cultural norms, knowledge, and identities.
In this two-hour workshop, we will explore some harms that can be perpetuated through educational materials as well as frameworks that can help us resist that harm. We will then work together to develop an equity framework you can apply to your work.
Note: This workshop will include breakout rooms to allow for small group discussion and collaborative brainstorming. Anyone not comfortable with breakout rooms will be given the option to work on their own.
Register Now!
This session will not be recorded.
About the Facilitator
Josie Gray (she/her) is an advisor on the Open Education team at BCcampus, where she develops and implements projects, learning events, and initiatives that advance open education practices in the B.C. post-secondary system. Since 2016, Josie has been deeply involved in learning and instructing on accessibility best practices within open educational resources (OER). She has a Master of Design in Inclusive Design from OCAD University.
About the Event
Generative AI (GenAI) is transforming how students learn and produce work, raising urgent questions about how we design meaningful and fair assessments. This interactive workshop explores alternative approaches that move beyond simply “catching” AI use, instead focusing on fostering critical, authentic, and reflective learning.
We’ll revisit the three purposes of assessment (of, for, and as learning) to examine how each is disrupted and reimagined by GenAI. Participants will explore practical frameworks as potential guides for creating meaningful assessments. We’ll conclude by crowdsourcing alternative assessment ideas that meaningfully and equitably integrate GenAI.
By the end of this session, participants will be able to:
- Differentiate between assessment of, for, and as learning, in the context of GenAI
- Explore different frameworks to evaluate and redesign assessment tasks
- Generate alternative assessment ideas relevant to their own teaching contexts
We encourage you to bring an example of an assessment from your course you may wish to refine or redesign. The first 90 minutes will be a structured workshop and will be followed by an optional 30-minute session dedicated to reviewing participants’ assessment examples and providing feedback.
Register Now!
This workshop will not be recorded.
About the Facilitators
Your FLO facilitators for this session will be Dr. Gwen Nguyen and Dr. Helena Prins, both advisors on the BCcampus Learning + Teaching team.