Open Classes

Open Classes

Available Open Classes

October 24-28

Room 1328 – Stephen Brown

Advanced Data Analysis (for the lovers of statistics)

Tuesday/Thursday 8:00AM – 9:20AM

Room 811 – Wes Maciejewski

A fun exploration of math intended to inform and inspire future elementary teachers

Monday/Wednesday/Friday 10:00 – 10:50 & 1:00PM – 1:50PM

Room 2906 – Jeff Wigelsworth

A 2nd year survey of American history from Jamestown to the end of the Civil War. During the 24-28 we should be into the Jeffersonian era.

Tuesday/Thursday 2:00PM – 3:20PM

Room 2901B – Jeff Wigelsworth

1st year survey of Greece and Rome, politics, social, and religious history. During 24-28 October we should be around the Punic Wars and start of Roman imperial ambitions.

Tuesday/Thursday 12:30PM – 1:50PM

Room 2505 – Eduard Baidaus

Explore world history from the fall of Constantinople in 1453 to the French Revolution in 1789. Examine and interpret the impact of religious warfare, changing intellectual, state and social structures, witchcraft, European colonial exploration, and the emerging Atlantic world.

Wednesday 10:00AM – 11:20AM

Room 2601 – Dave Martin

Discussion around embedding mathematics into our subjects.

Tuesday/Thursday 12:30PM – 1:50PM

Open Classes

Make teaching visible! A great way to develop as an educator in post-secondary is to observe others teaching. This is your chance to open your door to your colleagues and observe open classrooms in support of ongoing, lifelong teaching development.

Volunteer to Open Your Virtual Class

Volunteer to Open Your Virtual Class

Register Now

At certain times throughout the year, RDP faculty members get the opportunity to volunteer to open their classes to their colleagues. This allows RDP faculty members to get a glimpse into what their colleagues are doing in their classrooms.

What Are Open Classes?
The idea behind Open Classes is that we are all a community of learners and we can learn from each other. Faculty across the College have volunteered to open their classrooms throughout the year for you to observe how they teach, engage their students, and manage their classroom.
Who are Open Classes For?
Open Classes are for everyone! Whether you are new to teaching or have taught for five, fifteen, or twenty-five years, there is always something to learn. Observing other faculty teaching provides you with the opportunity to expand and grow your teaching practice.
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If you are interested in observing an open classroom, connect with a faculty member from the “Roster of RDP Faculty with Open Classes” information below. All it takes is an email and they will open their doors.

Open Classes AreOpen Classes Are Not
  • informal and casual
  • developmental
  • for the benefit of the Visiting Instructor (though benefits may be found for the Home Instructor too)
  • reflective
  • collaborative
  • formal
  • evaluative
  • a form of Peer Observation as laid out in the Faculty Performance Policy
  • a Mentoring relationship between the Visiting Instructor and the Home Instructor

For the Home Instructor: it is simply opening your classroom door to other faculty so they can learn from their peers in order to develop their own teaching practice.

For the Visiting Instructor: it is simply entering another classroom to learn from what other faculty do in their classes. This creates a culture of sharing around teaching which is open and collaborative.

Open Classes at RDP are governed by several Guiding Principles related to ethical and professional conduct between faculty members. These Guiding Principles have been adapted from several sources and are in agreement with those found in the FARDC Guidelines for Ethical Practice (on the FARDC website under “Collective Agreement”)

  1. Trust: “Observers [Visiting Instructors] need to maintain a sensitive awareness of the potential for vulnerability that inevitably accompanies any observation of teaching” (Wajnryb, 1992, 19).
  2. Confidentiality: The Open Class process is undertaken within a system of confidentiality to respect the Home Instructor and her/his students welcoming you into their classroom. Discussion of the observation should remain between the two faculty members (the Visiting Instructor and the Home Instructor) and be held as confidential. Any written reflection should be anonymized.
  3. Respect: As one faculty member observing another in an unfamiliar teaching context, respect is an important principle. We must respect the diversity of content, experiences, and approaches that we will encounter.
  4. Exploring and Advancing Knowledge: The Open Class process is undertaken in an honest attempt to explore various teaching practices and advance one’s personal knowledge of teaching practices. There should be no judgement involved in the observations; the Visiting Instructors should take away thoughts and ideas for the evolution of their personal teaching practice.
  5. Context and Limitations of Observations: When observing a class, it is important to remember that you are there to observe the teaching practices of the instructor and not to judge the content of the course. You may observe courses that are outside your disciplinary area and that involve topics and discussions which could be seen as controversial. As a Visiting Instructor, you are there for a snapshot of class time and do not have the context of past classes, future classes, overall course outcomes, or disciplinary expertise to judge the appropriateness of course content. Home Instructors are opening their classes to you; if you have questions about the context or content of the course, seek out the Home Instructor directly for clarification.
 

Visiting Instructor

(Observing a Class)

Home Instructor

(Open Class)

Benefit
  • The Visiting Instructor benefits from seeing other faculty teach.
  • The Home Instructor supports her/his faculty colleagues in exploring their teaching practice through observations.
Autonomy
  • The Visiting Instructor has autonomy in how he/she will use the Observation to develop their practice and abides by the ethical and confidential guidelines listed above.
  • Control belongs to the Home Instructor. The Home Instructor sets boundaries on the observation, may allow or disallow observations at any time. The Home Instructor may choose to enter into a dialogue with the Visiting Instructor to whatever extent is manageable and desirable.
Self-Reflective and Non-Evaluative
  • The Visiting Instructor gains insight into teaching and uses those insights to reflect and develop her/his own teaching practice.
  • The Visiting Instructor may write a personal reflection on the key take-aways from the Observation (e.g. what are things observed that could be adapted or incorporated into one’s own teaching practice?)
  • The Home Instructor may also reflect on his/her teaching through this process.
  • The Home Instructor may choose to enter into dialogue about teaching practices with the Visiting Instructor as a result of the Observation.
Developmental
  • Observations are a developmental process wherein the Visiting Instructor benefits from seeing colleagues teach in a variety of settings to develop his/her own practice for the benefit of themselves and their learners
  • The developmental aspect is intended to benefit the Visiting Instructor.
  • The Home Instructor may also find benefit in this process as she/he may reflect on her/his teaching as a result of being observed (the act of observation changes the observed).
Dialogic
  • Talking about teaching promotes reflection on one’s practice; although a discussion is not a formal component of the Observation, discussions between the Visiting Instructor and Home Instructor may take place
  • The Home Instructor is under no obligation to have a meeting with the Visiting Instructor but may wish to answer questions or share thoughts following the Observation. The Home Instructor can offer to meet or discuss the Observation.

Adapted from York St. John University’s Peer Observation of Learning and Teaching (POLT) Guidelines

There is no expectation of a follow-up for this process, though this is up to the discretion and choice of the Home and Visiting Instructors.

As you observe, you might ask yourself the following questions and use them to write a short reflection for your own benefit:

  1. What did you observe in the class that was different or similar to your own teaching approach?
  2. What have you learned from watching your colleague teach?
  3. What themes emerge about your own teaching practice?
  4. What will you continue to do and what might you adapt or change based on the observation?
  5. Have any of your thoughts or beliefs changed as a result of this observation?
  6. Did you take anything from the observation that you think will make your own teaching more effective?
  7. Did you observe anything that you will apply to your own teaching in the future?

We encourage faculty to observe as many classes as they can, both within and outside their disciplines, beyond Two Weeks of Open Classes!

The following faculty at RDP are pleased to open their classes to their RDP Faculty colleagues. If you are interested in observing a class at anytime during the year, please contact a faculty member below by email, introduce yourself, and inquire about observing a class. Some of them teach in both an online and face-to-face environment so you may also be able to observe an online class session or a face-to-face session.

If you would like to add your name to the list, please contact the CTL. This list is open to all faculty at RDP so we welcome you to add your name at any time.

School of Arts and Sciences

  • Carrie DennettAnthropology, Sociology, Justice Studies Instructor
    • Human Culture (past and present)
    • Social Institutions and Contemporary Social Issues
    • Criminal Justice System (Introductory)
    • Email: Carrie.Dennett@rdpolytech.ca
  • Eduard BaidausHistory Instructor
  • Stéphane PerreaultHistory Instructor
    • Face-to-face instruction
    • Historical narrative and analysis
    • Group activities for document analysis and summaries of knowledge
    • Indigenous voices on history (particularly Canadian)
    • Email: Stephane.Perreault@rdpolytech.ca

School of Creative Arts

  • Megan BylsmaArt & Animation History Instructor
    • Flipping and un-flipping the classroom
    • Gamification
    • Group work
    • Labs
    • One evening class with 20+ students, another evening class with 100+ students
    • Reacting to the Past (RTTP) curriculum through Live Action Role Playing and reaction to historical events
    • Email: Megan.Bylsma@rdpolytech.ca

Donald School of Business

  • Jason EngelBusiness Instructor
    • Personal Finance
    • Integration of active learning and adaptive learning through Publisher content
    • Email: Jason.Engel@rdpolytech.ca

School of Education

  • Shauna GarrowAcademic Upgrading
  • Shawna SchnickEducational Assistant Program

School of Health Sciences

  • Kristen GulbransenBachelor of Science, Nursing
  • Candi RaudebaughOccupational Therapist & Physiotherapist Instructor
  • Rob WeddellKinesiology Instructor

School of Trades and Technology

  • Bill PetrosenkoHeavy Equipment Technicians

Brookfield, S.D. 1995. Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher. Jossey-Bass, San Fransisco, CA.

Wajnryb, Ruth. 1992. Classroom Observation Tasks: A Resource Book for Language Teachers and Trainers. Cambridge University Press.

Open Chair Project at Trent University