- 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
- Beedie
- EDUC
- Education: Charles Bingham
- Education: Lynn Fels
- Education: David Kaufman
- Education: Patrice Keats
- Education: Carolyn Mamchur
- Education: Margaret MacDonald
- Education: John Nesbit
- Education: Sepideh Fotovatian
- Education: Susan Barber
- Education: Mich猫le Schmidt
- Education: Natalia Gajdamaschko
- Education: Carolyn Mamchur
- Education: Kieran Egan
- Education: Susan Barber
- Education: David Zandvliet
- Education: Lannie Kanevsky
- Education: Paula Howarth
- Education: Heesoon Bai
- Education: Dolores van der Wey
- Education: Joel Heng Hartse
- Education: Carolyn Mamchur
- Education: Dolores van der Wey
- Education: Charles Bingham
- Education: Sean Chorney
- Education: Elizabeth Marshall
- Education: Pooja Dharamshi
- Education: Susan Barber
- Education: David Zandvliet
- Education: Heesoon Bai
- Education: Stephen Smith
- Education: Rina Zazkis
- Education: Roumi Ilieva
- Education: Gillian Judson
- Education: Angel Lin
- FAS
- Engineering Science: Glenn Chapman
- Engineering Science: Atousa Hajshirmohammadi
- Computing Science: Ted Kirkpatrick
- Engineering Science: Carolyn Sparrey
- Computing Science: Diana Cukierman
- Engineering Science: Carolyn Sparrey
- Engineering Science: Ivan Baji膰
- Engineering Science: Michael Sjoerdsma
- Engineering Science: Fabio Campi
- Engineering Science: Atousa Hajshirmohammadi
- Mechatronic Systems Engineering: Krishna Vijayaraghavan
- Computing Science: Cynthia Xie
- Computing Science: Cynthia Xie
- Engineering Science: Krishna Vijayaraghavan
- Engineering Science: Maureen Hindy
- Computing Science: Angela Lim
- Engineering Science: Atousa Hajshirmohammadi
- Mechatronic Systems Engineering: Carolyn Sparrey
- Sustainable Energy Engineering: Taco Niet
- Computing Science: Ouldooz Baghban Karimi
- Sustainable Energy Engineering: Taco Niet
- Sustainable Energy Engineering: Vivian Neal
- Computing Science: Janice Regan
- Computing Science: Diana Cukierman
- FHS
- Health Sciences: Mark Lechner
- Health Sciences: Laurie Goldsmith
- Health Sciences: Tim Takaro
- Health Sciences: Tim Takaro
- Health Sciences: Maya Gislason
- Health Sciences: Nienke van Houten
- Health Sciences: Denise Zabkiewicz
- Health Sciences: Mark Lechner
- Health Sciences: Maya Gislason
- Health Sciences: Tun Myint
- Health Sciences: Paola Ardiles
- Health Sciences: Diego Silva
- Health Sciences: Ruth Lavergne
- Health Sciences: Tun Myint
- Health Sciences: Nienke van Houten
- Health Sciences: Shira Goldenberg
- Health Sciences: Susan Erikson
- Health Sciences: Paola Ardiles
- Health Sciences: Angela Kaida
- Library
- Scholarship of Teaching + Learning Projects
- Conferences & Calls for Proposals
- Teaching with AI: April 7, 2026 [April 07-16, 2026]
- Cfp: 2026 DPI Conference [Deadline: April 13, 2026]
- 2026 UCalgary Conference on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching [Deadline: April 19, 2026]
- BCCampus: Introduction to Offline GenAI [April 20, 2026]
- Teaching with AI: April 20, 2026 [April 20-29, 2026]
- FLO MicroCourse: AI-Resilient Assessment Design Sprint [April 27 - May 1, 2026]
- Faculty Experiences with Open Pedagogy and Social Justice [April 30, 2026]
- Cfp: 2026 SoTL Symposium [Deadline: May 4, 2026]
- Teaching with AI: May 5, 2026 [May 05-14, 2026]
- 3rd Annual Thompson-Okanagan Teaching and Learning Conference [May 13-14, 2026]
- SoTL Canada Journal Club: Developing a SoTL Identity [May 19, 2026]
- Teaching with AI: May 19, 2026 [May 19-28, 2026]
- 2026 Annual STLHE/SAPES 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]
- 2026 DPI Conference [August 18-20, 2026]
- 2026 SoTL Symposium Conference [October 22-24, 2026]
- For Research Personnel
- News + Stories
Exploring Student Learning in Anthropological Ethnographic Methods
Grant program: Teaching and Learning Development Grant (TLDG)
Grant recipients: Adrienne Burk and Dara Culhane, Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Timeframe: May 2011 to April 2012
Funding: $3,050
Final report: View Adrienne Burk and Dara Culhane's final report (PDF)
From the final report: Read how Adrienne and Dara applied project findings to their teaching practice in different ways and how "most students partook [in] less conventional assignments, with some spectacular results." Read more >>
Description: This project will focus on the self-reported learning experiences of students in four anthropology courses in terms of motivation, critical analysis, and confidence beyond the classroom (see 鈥淨uestions addressed鈥 below). The investigation is important for both pedagogical and discipline-specific reasons. First, pedagogically, there is discussion and debate about the possibility that 鈥渕illennial鈥 students think and learn in ways that go far beyond the opportunities offered by conventional essay-writing and seminar experiences. Second, anthropology graduates increasingly work in culturally and socially diverse environments including multi-disciplinary teams in national and international NGOs; in conflict, post-conflict, and disaster-relief projects; in urban neighbourhoods; and in collaborative and community-based partnerships. These challenging situations require the teaching of new methods that incorporate not only conventional observation-, interview-, and text-based practices, but also the cultivation of an 鈥渁nthropological sensibility鈥 that involves learning about one鈥檚 own theoretical, physical, cerebral, affective, imagined, and informal responses in contexts of ambiguity, spontaneity, and contested and partial understandings. Integral to this methods training is the necessity to address new and challenging debates about conducting research that is ethically responsible in both community-appropriate ways and in ways that accommodate institutionally approved informed-consent protocols for human research subjects. The researchers have been addressing these concerns in courses, discussions, and publications for several years. This project will undertake a rigorous and systematic investigation of students鈥 learning in relation to these efforts in order to improve both the students鈥 experiences and the instructors鈥 teaching.
During the project, the researchers will maintain weekly teaching journals to record their pedagogical intentions, reflexive observations, and evidence of student participation in, and responses to, the courses. They will also meet each week for discussion. One ethnographically trained graduate RA will work directly with consenting students, conducting observations and qualitative interviews at various points during and after the course, summarizing field notes, completing preliminary data analysis, and so on. She will join the researchers to complete the data analysis.
Questions addressed:
- How do students self-report their experience of learning in the project courses?
- Which (of a selection of) pedagogical activities appear to be related to (a) students鈥 self-reported motivation to participate in the courses? (b) evidence of critical analysis of course themes in course assignments? (c) evidence of students鈥 self-reported confidence in engagement with worlds beyond 天美mv天美 (this may include both students鈥 words and actions, such as in taking up assignment options that deal with non-academic audiences and projects, etc.)?
Knowledge sharing: The researchers will present a report to, and lead a discussion for, the community organized around 天美mv天美鈥檚 Institute for the Study of Teaching and Learning in the Disciplines.
Burk, A., (2011, November). Are We in This Together? Exploring Student Learning in Anthropological Ethnographic Methods. Paper presented at the Centennial Symposium on Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, November 10-12, 2011, Mount Royal University, Banff, AB.
Burk, A. (2012, May). You can make a place for it: Student projects in public space. Paper presented at the Canadian Anthropology Society Conference: The Unexpected | L鈥橧nattendu, Edmonton, AB.