- About
- Events
- Inquiry Support
- Workshops & Programs
- SoTL 101: Introduction to SoTL and Teaching + Learning Inquiry
- SoTL 102: Formulating an Inquiry Project
- SoTL Thoughts
- Coffee + Conversation
- Tools for Inquiry: Conducting Inquiry Using CES
- Amundsen Fellowship Program
- Decolonial Teaching + Learning Seminar Series
- Decolonizing and Indigenizing Curricula
- Disrupting Colonialism through Teaching Program
- Exploring Well-being in Learning Environments: An Integrated Seminar Series + Grants Program
- Inquiring into Your Multilingual Classroom: An Integrated Seminar Series + Grants Program
- New Ways of Teaching, New Ways of Learning: Supporting Learning in Online Environments
- Open Education Grant Pilot Program
- Teaching and Learning Development Grant Program
- Project Archive
- Amundsen Fellowship Program
- Disrupting Colonialism through Teaching Program
- Exploring Well-being in Learning Environments Program
- Inquiring into Your Multilingual Classroom Projects
- New Ways of Teaching, New Ways of Learning
- Teaching and Learning Development Grant Program
- Scholarship of Teaching + Learning Projects
- Conferences & Calls for Proposals
- Teaching with AI: May 19, 2026 [May 19-28, 2026]
- ETUG Spring 2026 Workshop: Collaboration, Co-creation, and Creativity in EdTech [May 28-29, 2026]
- SFU Library: Scholarly Digital Project Program [Deadline: June 1, 2026]
- Teaching with AI: June 1, 2026 [June 01-10, 2026]
- EDUCAUSE Symposium: New Approaches to Assessment Design for AI-Enabled Learning [June 9 and 11, 2026]
- FLO Workshop: GenAI and the Indigenous 5Rs Framework [June 16, 2026]
- Cfp: 2026 Global Students as Partners Roundtable [Deadline: June 29, 2026]
- Graduate Students/Post-docs Teaching in Higher Education Conference [August 07, 2026]
- 2026 DPI Conference [August 18-20, 2026]
- 2026 Global Students as Partners Roundtable [October 01-02, 2026]
- 2026 SoTL Symposium Conference [October 22-24, 2026]
- For Research Personnel
- News + Stories
- AI as learning coach: project explores ChatGPT integration beyond plagiarism concerns
- Investigating the motivations and perceptions of undergraduate students using AI for assignments
- Faculty teaching confidence soars through peer observation program
- Research proves role plays work: evidence-based approach transforms history and labour studies teaching
- Welcome Kaitlyn Watson!
- Authentic learning transforms large epidemiology course: students find personal meaning in public health research
- Developing AI-resistant teaching through story-centered approach
An Evaluation of the Flipped Classroom Model in a Master’s Level Environmental and Occupational Health Course - Part 2
Grant program: Teaching and Learning Development Grant (TLDG)
Grant recipient: Tim Takaro, Faculty of Health Sciences
Project team: Barb Berry and Lisa O'Neill, Teaching and Learning Centre, Lindsay Galway and Jordan Brubacher, research assistants
Timeframe: July 2014 to January 2015
Funding: $5,000
Course addressed: HSCI 845 – Environmental and Occupational Health
Final report: View Tim Takaro's final report (PDF)
Description: Drawing on lessons from the first phase (Phase 1), we have identified specific aspects of the course to adapt with the goal of further improving the course and contributing to our understanding of specific design elements of the flipped classroom that foster learning, leadership, and problem solving capacity in environmental health teaching and learning. We will implement specific changes to modules delivered early in the course (identified by students as those modules that could be improved), create a set of practices that work together to foster ownership of learning, leadership, and problem solving capacity by refining a previously used flipped classroom model. We will examine the impacts on learning, learning outcomes, and student leadership and engagement.
Questions addressed:
- Do the proposed interventions (i.e. specific changes to three modules) improve student perceptions of the course and enhance self-assessed knowledge?
- Do specific interventions (i.e. specific changes to three modules, CANVAS redesign and improved in-class activities) foster learning, leadership, and problem solving capacity
Knowledge sharing: We would like to facilitate a workshop on the topic of blended learning opportunities in FHS. The results and lessons learned from the project would be a case study and an important part of this workshop. We hope to disseminate the results at SFU's annual Symposium on Teaching and Learning. We also hope to present this work as a poster at a public health-themed conference to share these results to the public health community.
Galway, L. P., Berry, B., & Takaro. T. (2015). Student perceptions and lessons learned from flipping a Masters level public health course. Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology, 41(2),1-16. doi: 10.21432/T2T90J
Galway L.P, Corbett K, Takaro T.K, Tairyan K, & Frank E. (2014). Integration of online and flipped classroom instructional models in public health higher education. BMC Medical Education, 14:181.
Takaro T. (2015, May). Health policy and climate change in British Columbia: An uncertain climate for migration and settlement. Presentation at the Canadian Public Health Association Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC.
Takaro, T., Galway, L., Ste-Marie, N., & Berry, B. (2014, May). An evaluation of the flipped classroom model in a Master’s level environmental and occupational health course. Poster session presented at the Symposium on Teaching and Learning: Provocative Pedagogy, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC.