51社区黑料

Skip to content Skip to main navigation

Master of Education

MEd in Curriculum & Instruction: Contemplative Inquiry & Approaches in Education

This MEd in Contemplative Inquiry is a 2-year cohort program for educators focusing on holistic and transformational pedgagogy. Learn how to fill the growing hunger for contemplative perspectives and practices in educational institutions, communities and the world at large.

Delivery Method and Location: Blended, online and in-person at 51社区黑料Vancouver campus
Applications Open: October 1, 2026
Applications Close: February 26, 2027
Next Start Date: September 2027
Estimated Tuition Fee: $2,192.57 per term

PROGRAM OVERVIEW

This program is ideal for:

Educators, leaders, service-providers and decision-makers in both public and private settings who are seeking deeper levels of inquiry and transformation to apply contemplative theory and practices in their respective institutions.

Note: This program is intended for working professionals who are working within their profession throughout the program, therefore may not be suitable for international applicants.

See resources for international students

Program Structure

  • 2-year program held over six consecutive terms
  • Six 5-unit courses plus a comprehensive examination
  • Cohort-based model
  • Blended delivery combining in-person (51社区黑料Harbour Centre), Zoom-supported, and asynchronous, Canvas-based classes
  • Classes meet 5-6 weekends per term (check schedule for each course)

Intake Schedule

Next Start Term
Fall 2027

Program Design

Designed with working professionals in mind, this two-year degree program offers the opportunity to obtain an academically rigorous and practice-focused master's degree. Our cohort-based model allows students to work collaboratively through the program and coursework together (18-24 students).

Aimed to fill the growing hunger for contemplative perspectives and practices, this program builds the foundational human capacity for thinking expansively, clearly, complexly and creatively, which requires us to be emotionally available and engaged, as well as, non-reactive, mentally centred and attunded, somatically grounded, relational, and in alignment with what is emerging. 

Goals of the Program

  • Cultivate contemplative dispositions that support wise, grounded and compassionate professional practice
  • Develop resilient, sustainable and ethically attuned leaders and educators for a rapidly changing world
  • Build the community-minded and ecologically attuned relational capacity through integrating all dimensions of our beings: somatic, aesthetic, emotional, intellectual, relational, moral and spiritual.

Program Philosophy

Humanity is facing troubled times, as witnessed by increased polarization and division that are exploding into various forms of violence. Collectively, we are facing unprecedented ecological, geopolitical and environmental crises. On campuses throughout North America, and closer to home, student anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues are increasingly prevalent. The academic fields of contemplative inquiry and somatic studies, which highlight holistic approaches to education, are responding to these troubled times by showing how we can accomplish presence of mind, promote healing, and embrace the physical, intellectual, emotional, social, spiritual, and ecological dimensions of wellness. We at 51社区黑料are at the forefront of such efforts.  

Our Master in Education program in Contemplative Inquiry is about building the foundational capacity and ability for exemplary professional conduct; leadership infused with wisdom, discernment, focus, and perspective; and inquiry that has depth and is holistically grounded in all parts of our being. What is this foundational capacity and how is it built? The short but precise answer: through cultivating contemplative disposition and practice.

A longer answer: from contemporary neurobiological and psychological research literature, from advances in educational theory, research, and practice, as well as from studies in leadership and organizational management, evidence is clear that, for us to do our work well, meaningfully, effectively, and without succumbing to debilitating stress, it is crucial to have the capacity to stay centered, balanced, grounded, attuned to self and others, and capable of wise decision-making.  Today鈥檚 professionals must have not only technical competence, but also, most importantly, skills in relationality and attunement. As well, they must have a deep and enduring capacity for vulnerability and compassion, and the capacity to not only be in the thick of things but also to 鈥済o to the balcony鈥 and take in the broader perspective, integrating resulting understanding and insight into nurturing body, mind, heart and spirit.

Our program builds such capacity through dialogic cohort community building, individual and collective cultivation of contemplative dispositions and skills, and enactment-based knowledge building in educational subject matters ranging over curriculum design and programming, pedagogy, educational philosophy, assessment, leadership, embodiment, Indigenous knowledge, arts-based inquiry and ecological ethics.

B.C. K-12 Educators: You may be eligible for a TQS category upgrade upon successful completion of the program.

COURSES

Students complete:

EDUC 833-5: SOCIAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY IN EDUCATION

An in-depth study of the ethical foundations of education. Areas in education where ethical questions arise are identified and elucidated. Classical and modern moral positions are examined for their adequacy as theories of moral justification. The topics include the value of education, freedom and equality, and moral and values education.

We aim at applying contemplative ways of knowing, learning, and teaching in participants鈥 professional work and personal life. We focus on development of a learning community of practice, especially from contemplative and transformational learning perspectives and practice approaches. We emphasize integration of all dimensions of being human: that is, body-mind-heart-鈥渟pirit鈥-etc.

We will inquire into the nature of the contemporary world characterized by multiplicity and complexity of worldviews/paradigms and associated challenges. As well, we inquire into the aims, scope and possibilities of moral agency and examine models, tools and resources, including contemplative ones, for transformation of the moral self. 

EDUC 823-5 Curriculum and Instruction in an Individual Teaching Speciality

An intensive examination of developments in a curriculum area selected by the student. In addition the course will deal with major philosophical and historical factors that influence the present state and future directions of curriculum and instruction.

This course is designed to explore: the historical, cultural, and philosophical roots of the major worldviews; the various theoretical orientations to curriculum; the different positions regarding pedagogy; and other influences on our understandings of what contemplative practice is, the role of the contemplative, and our perspectives on contemplative education. From within these various cultural and epistemological perspectives we will focus on how cultural orientations to contemplative practice, and the role of the contemplative educator impact communities of practice and education. We survey how differing perspectives and understandings have arisen in relation to contemplative practice and how these directly impact our approaches to contemplative education.  

We will explore conceptions of curriculum, current concerns, and look at diverse approaches to pedagogical practice in light of these overarching themes. The course includes Indigenous worldviews, ways of being, and educational perspectives and practices. The student as contemplative/educator will be encouraged to bring together theory and practice as well as personal knowledge in relation to their own understandings of education, contemplation and their particular contemplative practice. As teacher/researchers they will be encouraged to explore an in-depth arts-based inquiry within their teaching specialty and/or research interest.  

EDUC 816-5: Developing Educational Programs and Practices for Diverse Educational Settings

Investigates theories and issues associated with developing educational programs and practices in various educational contexts. Addresses the development of new programs and their implementation in schools and other educational settings.

Effective educational programs are designed. In this course, we will explore how theory and research can contribute to the design of programs that are meaningful and promote transformative contemplative learning.

As this is a time of rapid civilizational change and upheaval, we might feel a moral activation to serve well. If we are designing educational programs, regardless of the setting or audience, how might we design and implement them to serve others well, to embrace and to offer the possibilities of what Aristotle referred to as eudaimonia (human flourishing)? This is the question that might motivate our collective inquiries during this course. All the classical contemplative traditions are inspired, motivated, and guided by a set of moral principles that aim to promote eudaimonia, happiness, well-being, enlightenment, peace and equanimity, kindness and compassion.

How might we design educational programs that are aligned with these moral goals and, as well, embody principles and practices that represent the best of educational theory and research?

EDUC 843-5: Embodiment and Curriculum Inquiry

The scholarship on embodiment and its implications for the body as a site for knowledge and its relationship to contemporary curriculum inquiry will be studied with specific emphasis on the area of performative and narrative inquiry and arts education. Central to this course will be the investigation of embodiment from both a philosophical perspective and a literary/poetic perspective. Equivalent Courses: EDUC712

We explore philosophical, contemplative, and literary/poetic perspectives along a visceral perspective rooted in movement, dance, walking and physicality in a variety of forms, and even our limitations.

Particular attention will be given to the relationship between philosophies of the body and their relevance to us as researchers, educators, artists, and human beings. The mind-body dualism will be examined and its impact on how research is enacted, and how we enter the practice of teaching and reflect on our practice. The notion of 鈥渂odily attending鈥 will be developed both for reflexivity, moving, writing, and pedagogy. A major question will concern how an informed understanding of embodiment can have pragmatic influence on the way we experience knowledge and articulate knowledge and its importance for bodily mindfulness.

EDUC 820-5: Current Issues in Curriculum and Pedagogy

Focuses on educational issues, trends and practices which impact teaching and learning in schools and other educational settings.

As in all the courses, the instructors bring a contemplative perspective to the course material. We live in complicated times: increased connectivity, fragmentation, abundance, marginalization, violence, fear, the sacred, one world and divided worlds, threats, marvels, risks, hope, wonder! It is becoming apparent that education itself is subject to these new social, economic, political and cultural influences, pressures and realities and hence, even its purposes are being challenged.

This course is intended to recognize some of these realities and to explore and reflect on how contemplative practice may help us to align with educational values, curricular goals and pedagogical approaches that advance equity, social justice and the well-being of all. Grounding ourselves in such questions as 鈥榃hat is curriculum?鈥, 鈥榃ho is it for?鈥, 鈥榃hat values does it represent?鈥 and 鈥榃hat will it accomplish?鈥, we will examine the social, cultural, political, and economic connections related to curriculum in our times. We will identify and explore key influences that shape contemporary practices, and consider issues such as the connections between curriculum and power, identity, knowledge, culture and language. We will also investigate the practice of selected pedagogical approaches in the light of shifting, and often competing discourses on learning and teaching.

Our work together will be informed by evolving understandings and experience of contemplative practice, both collective and individual, seeking to apply these practices to real world issues in the classroom and community. How may these curricular and pedagogical approaches be enhanced, enriched, and transformed, even, by contemplative practice? What contribution can contemplative education make to our multiple communities and their well-being?

EDUC 904-5: FIELDWORK III

EDUC 904 usually serves as the concluding course of this program. In that scheduling context, the inter-related aims of the course, the 4Cs, are to Consolidate (students鈥 cumulative understandings); Connect (students with each other, the guest speakers, the authors, and with themselves), Collaborate (students work together on areas of mutual scholarly interest), and Continue (extending and embedding the transformative effect of the program into students鈥 professional and personal lives beyond the program).

A fifth C will be added, namely, to Contemplate the diversity of contemplative practices and their potential role in students鈥 holistic growth, be that intellectual, professional, spiritual, emotional or cultural development, or in the subtle but dynamic fusion between these aspects of being human. This could include an elucidation of what the concept of 鈥渃ontemplative education鈥 means to students at this point in their learning journey. Students may also choose to explore the relationships between conventional 3rd person, 1st person and 2nd person ways of knowing (objective, subjective and inter-subjective).

Students will also have an opportunity to further their understanding of major research methodologies and an opportunity to further develop their academic writing. Students will be expected to continue to document their lived experiences via their respective portfolios and will also engage in continued critical exploration of major educational ideas germane to the program.

All of this will be viewed through the contemplative pedagogical and philosophic lens that represents and reflects the program鈥檚 theoretical framework. This includes the ongoing development of students鈥 contemplative capacity, deepening students鈥 understanding of the pivotal relationship between objective, subjective and inter-subjective forms of learning, and continuing to cultivate the 鈥渃ontainer鈥, that is, a holistic, learning and development environment wherein relationships, intellectual curiosity, embodied knowledge and trust are highly honoured and consciously practiced.

EDUC 883-5: MED COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION

The examination is graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.

One of the fundamental aims of our program is the cultivation of a learning community. We believe that the cohort structure provides the conditions for a 鈥渢ransformational cauldron鈥 to develop and grow. This type of learning environment best facilitates what we hope to accomplish together, namely, our collective and individual holistic and contemplative growth. This includes growth in the intellectual, ethical, social, emotional, psychological, existential, embodied, and (for those who speak this language) 鈥渟piritual鈥 dimensions.

During the entire program, students will create and develop a portfolio (digital and/or non-digital) that serves both as a reflective space and an opportunity to integrate their learning. The comprehensive examination consists of a presentation of that material for faculty and fellow students.

At the conclusion of MEd coursework, in the same semester that the last course is taking place, the cohort of MEd students host a capstone event as a community gathering, that is, a symposium, in which we practice intersubjectivity as we reflect, share, and celebrate our two-year learning journey. We boldly say in our program that 鈥渞elationship is a teacher.鈥 The course work is assessed the formal terminology of 鈥淪atisfactory/Unsatisfactory.鈥 The grading is done by the participating faculty members. Additionally, fellow students and faculty provide oral feedback at the time of the presentation.

Program courses and order of delivery subject to change.

Voices of the Program

Fionna Chong, 2016 Graduate

Denise Finlay, 2016 Graduate

Allen Yee, 2019 Graduate

FACULTY

This program is taught by instructors who themselves are ongoing learners and practitioners of various forms of contemplative inquiry and practice, and we endeavor to model what we espouse.

UPCOMING INFORMATION SESSIONS

Previous Information Sessions

QUESTIONS?