New Faculty Programs

The Center for Teaching Excellence places a particular emphasis on supporting faculty in their first years at Boston College. In addition to hosting programs created specifically for new faculty, the CTE welcomes new instructors in all of its faculty-specific and campus-wide programs.

New Faculty Teaching Orientation

In partnership with the Provost鈥檚 Office, the CTE hosts an afternoon of teaching-focused conversations as part of New Faculty Orientation each August. This year鈥檚 Teaching Orientation will be held on Wednesday, August 13 from 12:00 - 4:15 in . Box lunches will be available starting at 11:30.

Schedule Overview

11:30 - 12:00: (Optional) Box lunches available聽

12:00 - 1:20: Opening Discussion: Cultivating Inclusive Classrooms

1:30 - 1:50: Presentation on 集美麻豆Students (Institutional Research & Planning)

1:50 - 2:50: Student Panel

3:00 - 4:15: Faculty Panel

Accommodations Requests

The Center for Teaching Excellence is committed to providing equal access to its events and programs. Individuals with disabilities who anticipate needing accommodations or who have questions about physical access may contact centerforteaching@bc.edu.听


New Faculty Seminars

New Faculty Seminars on Teaching are gatherings where faculty in their early years at 集美麻豆can get to know each other across disciplines and discuss the fundamentals of teaching with colleagues. We gather at noon for lunch and informal conversation, followed by a seminar on a topic based on input from this year鈥檚 new faculty. These seminars are hybrid; please indicate when you register if you would like to participate in person or on Zoom.

Fall 2025

Cultivating Trust to Promote Learning

Tuesday, September 23, 12:00 - 1:30

Trust is invaluable in a learning environment, whether you鈥檙e hoping students will be willing to get questions wrong in public, work effectively in small groups on extended projects, or engage in conversations where the stakes might be high and personal for students. During this conversation, we鈥檒l consider some of the contextual factors that can make it difficult to foster trust with and between students and identify聽ways to demonstrate and earn trust in course design and facilitation.

Academic Integrity in the Gen AI Era

Wednesday, October 29, 12:00 - 1:30

Generative AI 鈥 like many technologies before it 鈥 can incentivize taking shortcuts that stymie deeper learning. As the technology develops, many faculty find themselves iterating on assignments to encourage students to skip the shortcuts and iterating on the kinds of conversations they鈥檙e having with students about if, when, why, and how they use AI. During this session, we鈥檒l talk about the challenges and opportunities that arise at the intersection of academic integrity and Gen AI.

Spring 2026

Designing for Desirable Difficulties

Thursday, February 12, 12:00 - 1:30

Writing in , Kevin Gannon has pointed out that faculty seek to design cognitively rigorous courses, where students are asked to question assumptions, give close attention to complex material, and push their skills past their previous threshold. Students, meanwhile, describe rigorous courses primarily in logistical terms (e.g. courses with strict policies or significant reading loads). During this conversation, we鈥檒l spend time considering where you want to focus your students' energy and effort 鈥 and what can be streamlined to reduce the risk of distraction.听

Offering Motivating Feedback

Wednesday, March 11, 12:00 - 1:30

Many faculty spend significant time crafting feedback to students on their work聽 鈥斅燼nd are sometimes disappointed when it seems like students haven鈥檛 taken the feedback into account in their subsequent work. During this conversation, we鈥檒l spend some time talking about habits of effective communication and structures that can encourage students to act on and integrate feedback.


Past Conversations

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