Published June 4, 2015 This content is archived.
Proposals to bring the benefits of “learning together” back into the classroom and a digital tutorial to increase students’ readiness for the general chemistry course are among five ideas for promoting pedagogical innovation selected for funding by UB’s Center for Educational Innovation.
The five grants were chosen for their potential to receive external grants to improve education including student assessment, online learning, applications of instructional technologies and development of innovative learning techniques in a variety of academic areas.
“Our center is pleased to offer this seed grant program,” says Xiufeng Liu, director of the Center for Educational Innovation and professor in the Department of Learning and Instruction, Graduate School of Education.
“One signature and priority recommendation of Realizing UB 2020 is pedagogical excellence and innovation, and this seed grant program is one effort toward that goal.”
The five funded proposals were chosen from among 11 proposals from 34 faculty members representing eight schools and 15 departments throughout UB, according to Liu.
“Based on the review and recommendation of a panel and the availability of funds, we have decided to fund these five projects,” he says.
The Center for Educational Innovation is committed to supporting Realizing UB 2020 through integrated services, education, research and development related to university teaching, learning and assessment.
Created in July 2014 based on recommendations from the Realizing UB 2020 Curriculum and Assessment Task Force, the Center for Educational Innovation is the result of a merger of the Teaching & Learning Center (TLC) and the Office of Assessment.
The center serves as a nexus for campus-wide efforts to further elevate the scholarship of teaching and learning at the university. It also aims to enhance UB’s capacity to attract grants to support educational innovation.
Scott Weber, senior vice provost for academic affairs, endorsed these first-ever center seed grants as a fulfillment of the original intent for the center as described in the Realizing UB 2020 Curriculum and Assessment Task Force Report submitted in 2013.
“These projects are excellent examples of providing basic support for improving pedagogy,” Weber says. ‘They would then serve and support faculty members when they have an innovative, pedagogical idea and seek to see it developed and suitably disseminated for greater impact.”
These innovations ideally would spread across the university and motivate others to further new ideas, Weber adds.
“In the future, we anticipate this work would lead to innovative, cross-disciplinary work,” he says. “It would be a ‘bottom-up’ effort to support innovation. We hope these will serve as models for future proposals across the campus.”
The five projects selected for funding — each proposal receives up to $10,000 — are: