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- FLO MicroCourse: AI-Resilient Assessment Design Sprint [April 27 - May 1, 2026]
- 2026 Dalhousie Conference on University Teaching and Learning [Deadline: May 01, 2026]
- Cfp: 2026 SoTL Symposium [Deadline: May 04, 2026]
- 2026 Graduate Students in Teaching Conference [May 05-06, 2026]
- Teaching with AI: May 5, 2026 [May 05-14, 2026]
- Brave Conversations: Revisiting and Rethinking "Risk" in SoTL [May 07, 2026]
- 2026 Teaching and Learning Innovations Conference [Deadline: May 08, 2026]
- 3rd Annual Thompson-Okanagan Teaching and Learning Conference [May 13-14, 2026]
- Supporting vs. Doing Student Work: Experiments with Offline AI In the Classroom [May 14, 2026]
- Panel Discussion: Research Ethics and SoTL [May 15, 2026]
- SoTL Canada Journal Club: Developing a SoTL Identity [May 19, 2026]
- FLO MicroCourse: Write your Teaching Philosophy Statement [May 19-26, 2026]
- Teaching with AI: May 19, 2026 [May 19-28, 2026]
- 2026 Annual STLHE/SAPES Conference [Deadline: May 25, 2026]
- Cfp: Graduate Students/Post-docs Teaching in Higher Education Conference [Deadline: May 25, 2026]
- ETUG Spring 2026 Workshop: Collaboration, Co-creation, and Creativity in EdTech [May 28-29, 2026]
- Teaching with AI: June 1, 2026 [June 01-10, 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
Peer Language Exchange Program
Grant program: Teaching and Learning Development Grant (TLDG)
Grant recipient: Billie Ng, Department of World Languages and Literatures
Project team: Claudia Hein, Noriko Omae, Monica Escudero, World Languages and Literatures, and Kelsi Wright, research assistant
Timeframe: September 2014 to August 2015
Funding: $3,800
Course addressed: Students in Chinese, German, Japanese, and Spanish courses will be part of the Peer Language Exchange Program.
Final Report: View Billie Ng's final report (PDF)
Description: The 51ÉçÇøºÚÁÏcampus is becoming increasingly more multilingual and multicultural. International students are an invaluable asset to SFU. One way to further benefit from the presence of international students is to help them connect to the 51ÉçÇøºÚÁÏcommunity by creating a Peer Language Exchange Program. Students learning an additional language usually lack an authentic language environment to practice in. Meeting with fluent speakers of the target language would not only help the students learn the language, it would also provide a more holistic understanding of the target culture.
This Program will create opportunities for English as an Additional Language (EAL) students to meet and exchange with students learning a foreign language. The Program aims to: (1) facilitate meaningful language and cultural exchange, (2) connect participants across ethnic and linguistic backgrounds, (3) foster open-mindedness and reduce prejudice, (4) enhance participants’ intercultural awareness, and (5) help realize SFU’s goals of engaging the world.
Student participating in the program will be paired up for an on-campus (or online) meeting for 40 minutes every week for 10 weeks. Instructors of the target foreign language will provide an outline for the weekly conversation (e.g. vocabulary, sentences and discussion topics). The first 20 minutes will be in the target foreign language. The second 20 minutes will be in English on the same topic. Participants will be asked to fill out a questionnaire after each meeting to provide feedback on the Peer Language Exchange Program.
Findings of this project will be used to extend the project into more languages. This program will help students connect, build a more engaging 51ÉçÇøºÚÁÏcommunity, and provide a meaningful university experience for students.
Questions addressed:
- Does this project enrich the 51ÉçÇøºÚÁÏexperience of EAL students and students of language courses? Does this project help LTI students improve their listening and speaking skills in a foreign language? Does it help EAL students and Canadian students learn more about each other’s culture? Does it help students connect to the 51ÉçÇøºÚÁÏcommunity?
- What are the best organizing/implementation practices for this program? What works and what should be avoided in future implementations?
- What can instructors learn from this project? What does this project tell us about language learning? Should it be a regular component of LTI courses? Would it change how LTI courses are taught? How can the authenticity of these conversations be used for language pedagogy?
Knowledge sharing: The project will be shared at monthly LTI meetings and end-of-semester seminars. Other dissemination will include workshops, conferences and with language education colleagues outside SFU.
Ng, B. (2015, December). From Blackboard Collaborate to Google Hangout to language tandem: Creating authentic experiences to enhance language learning. Presentation at the International Society for Chinese Language Teaching 12th International Conference: Theories and Practices, Shanghai, CN.
Keywords: Language learning, online materials, video, animation, online quizzes, online exercises, individualized learning, independent learning, questionnaires, course retention, Blended learning, flipped classrooms, Mandarin Chinese, technology, language instruction.