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- Modeling Undergraduates’ Selection of Course Modality
- Transformative Effects of Community-Engaged Research from the Faculty of Education
- New faculty research profiles
- Learning analytics for self-regulated learning: Frameworks, methods & future work
- Educating Ourselves in the Life of the Land – An SFU Biologist’s Journey
- Ten Faculty Members at Faculty of Education Awarded the SFU/SSHRC Institutional Grants
- Immersive Scientific Storytelling Through Virtual Reality
- Framing Friends of Simon: Building Community Partnership through a Film Project
- Researching with and not on Participants, Emergence and a Great Start to a Possible’s Slow Fuse 2020 Series
- Imagining a Posthuman Education with Dr. Nathalie Sinclair & Dr. Petra Mikulan
- An Inquiry into Interdisciplinary Collaboration
- A Modestly Immodest Proposal for Teacher Education and/or a Fantastic Proposal for Teacher Education?
- Writing and Research: Let the Research Hub Be Part of Your Graduate Journey
- SFU Educational Review Journal Reaches New Heights: Symposium, Editorial Board and DOAJ
- From the Lab to the Classroom: Team Behind Dialectical Map Encourages Critical Thinking Across Disciplines
- Reflections on an Exploration of Narrative Inquiry in a Public Seminar with Dr. Gary Barkhuizen
- Jacqueline Barreiro on Storytelling, Pedagogy, and Post Humanism
- Fanfare Review of Dr. Yaroslav Senyshyn's concerto CD with the Czech National Symphony Orchestra
- Exciting Collaboration on Evaluation as a Means of Community-Based Research and Engagement
- From a Grassroots Pilot Project to a Province-Wide Success: The Story behind YMCA’s Y Mind Program
- Digital Story Creation with Scribjab: An Innovative Interactive Display
- SFU Educational Review Journal Features Impressive Line-up of Publications
- Theater & Teaching - Possible's Slow Fuse Dialogue Series #2 with Kevin O’Neill
- Seminar with Dr. Michelle Pidgeon on Indigenous Education at the From the Ground Up Scholarship Series
- A Provocative Inaugural Session for the Possible's Slow Fuse Dialogue Series
- Q&A with Dr. Paula MacDowell on creating augmented reality (AR) experiences with students
- A Scientist and a Dancer Met in a Classroom…
- Learning Environments Research: Context Matters
- Writing New Chapters in Research and Teaching Journeys
- Mental Health Services Research: Working With/In Communities for Reconciliation–A Case of Rwanda
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- Faculty of Education
Virtual Grant Workshop for FoE Graduate Students (Part I and II)
In collaboration with the Education Graduate Student Association, all participants are invited to an online social check-in chat with other fellow graduate students. Get to know your EGSA, other grads, and let's avoid isolation and make a connection!
Part I - Writing A Winning Grant Proposal
August 5, 2020, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
Presentor:
Dr. Cindy Xin, Director of Research
Guest Speakers:
- Dr. Lucy Lemare, Associate Dean, Graduate Studies in Education
- Stephanie Santoso, SFU Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies
Facilitator:
Dr. Poh Tan, Research Assistant
Part II - Guided peer review of draft proposals
August 26, 2020, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
- Kathleen Forrester, SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship recipient
- Carolina Bergonzini, SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship recipient
- Steven Zhao, CGSD award recipient
- Natalie Frandsen, CGSD award recipient
Facilitator:
Dr. Poh Tan, Research Assistant
The Possible's Slow Fuse
The Possible’s Slow Fuse is a scholarly dialogue series organized by the Research Hub of the Faculty of Education and the Centre for Imagination in Research, Culture & Education (CIRCE). Our 2020 series offers four stimulating discussions about the nature and role of imagination in research and education, facilitated by scholars from diverse fields in education - arts, indigeneity, technology, teacher education, mathematics, and aesthetics. We invite you to bring your ideas and questions, and share and celebrate learning and discovery together.
Mathematising Social Issues to Imagine a Different World
Can mathematics be used to imagine alternative approaches to problematic social issues? Dr. Sean Chorney propose that mathematising aspects of our social world can help us not only identify hidden problems, but also formulate alternative conceptions of their causes and possible solutions. This talk will report on my study of teaching high school mathematics classes on the topic of gerrymandering, as a demonstration of how mathematics can raise awareness and imagination.
Dr. Sean Chorney
September 30, 2020 | 1:30-3:00 p.m.
Watch Dr. Chorney's Presentation Online
The Vital Role of Indigenous Imagination in Transformative Reconciliation
Central to transformative reconciliation and Indigenous resurgence is a revaluation of Indigenous knowledge traditions in Canadian society, and especially in our education systems. This impels us to ask: How do Indigenous knowledge holders hold knowledge? And how is that process embodied and enacted within Indigenous education? Images play a key role in the participatory pedagogies through which Indigenous knowledge systems grow and flourish, especially as they inform and guide the work of making or poesis. Artists are a vital part of those systems, because the images with which they work, and which they give concrete form, are packed with knowledge. Reconciliation and resurgence can thus be seen as profoundly imaginative and artistic educational processes whose reach extends to our most everyday interactions and material realities.
“Imagination has a place because imagination IS a place, and because everything is connected to everything else, the encounter with imagination is a living communication within a sentient landscape." (Dan Longboat & Joe Sheridan)
“Images are compressed complexities” (David Hunt).
"All the objects used in everyday life, including the simplest and most ordinary ones, are, so to speak, crystallized imagination.” (Lev Vygotsky)
Dr. Vicki Kelly
March 4, 2020 | 1:30-3:00 p.m.
EDB 7610, Education Building
SFU Burnaby Campus
Reimagining Research as Performance
Dr. Fels is a Profession in Arts Education in the Faculty of Education, SFU. Her research focuses on performative inquiry, arts for social change, arts as learning, performative writing, and arts-based research.
Saliha Bava, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor at Mercy College, New York, USA. Dr. Bava is a researcher of play and relational processes. She researches how individuals improvise with each other within educational, training, or work contexts.
They are currently co-investigators in a research project that explores how community is created through shared experiences of creative play, improvisation, and collaboration.
Dr. Lynn Fels & Saliha Bava
February 6, 2020 | 1:30-3:00 p.m.
Room 5080, SFU Surrey Campus
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