College Ed Talks

Pedagogical Support and Innovation, Vanier College (PSI)

A podcast about college teaching, learning, and student success, presented by Vanier College, Montréal, QC. The podcast is designed to give college educators a platform to share their classroom experiences, research, and practical strategies that foster student success and engagement. Episodes drop every 3 weeks during the fall and winter terms. The show is produced by Vanier's office of Pedagogical Support and Innovation (PSI, pronounced "sigh" as in the Greek letter Ψ).

Episodes

  1. S1E9 Reinvigorating the College Classroom through Creative Arts

    26 FEB

    S1E9 Reinvigorating the College Classroom through Creative Arts

    Episode Description  It’s not something you would expect to see in higher education: an art cart filled with paper and markers, being rolled into a Geography, or Sociology, or Liberal Arts classroom. However, it is a sight that has become more common at Vanier College. Since fall 2024, Colleen Ayoup, a teacher in Communication, Media, and Studio Arts, has been helping faculty integrate the creative arts into their teaching.  Join us as Colleen shares three practical activities, including blackout poetry and student-created card games, that have helped change classroom dynamics. She explains how these activities help slow students down and promote deeper reflection on learning.  Because of their tactile nature, they are a useful example of embodied learning, providing a needed break from digital distractions.  Finally, by focusing on process over product, they give students a chance to develop their agency while getting into the creative zone.  About our Guest  Colleen Ayoup is a Montreal-based educator who has been teaching in Vanier College’s Communications, Media, and Studio Arts (CMSA) program since 2013. Her commitment to experiential pedagogy is shaped by her own learning experiences, her observations as an educator, and the interviews she conducted with high school learners and teachers for her MFA in Documentary Media—Wired to Learn—at Toronto Metropolitan University.  Her approach is also shaped by her earlier work in the media arts sector, including her time at the National Film Board of Canada, where she collaborated with media artists and active citizens on projects that amplified diverse voices and encouraged dialogue around social change.  Colleen’s most recent certification in therapeutic arts further strengthens her belief in the cognitive benefits of creative expression and its powerful impact on learning, well-being, and interdisciplinary thinking. She also holds a BA in Psychology and a BFA in Film Production from Concordia University.

    34 min
  2. 4 FEB

    S1E8 A Mindful Approach to Teaching with Tech

    Description What happens when an early adopter of ed tech steps back from its use in favour of pre-digital technologies? Erin Macleod, PhD, an English teacher at Vanier College, shares her mindful approach to tech use in the classroom. Drawing on 25 years of experience as a teacher, as well as her background in Communications, Erin describes her reasons for this shift: the distractions engendered by social media and smartphones and the need for alternative, embodied learning in an AI age. She discusses some of the creative activities and assessments she has designed to engage students, promote communal learning, and sharpen their critical thinking about course content, technology, and the role it plays in students’ lives.  About our Guest Erin MacLeod is a Montreal-based journalist, educator, cultural critic and international development professional whose writing and work spans music, identity, and postcolonial perspectives. Her journalism has appeared in major outlets including the New York Times, the Guardian, Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, and the Globe and Mail. She is also the Jury Foreperson for the Polaris Music Prize.  MacLeod's writing is distinguished by its depth and cultural insight. She has explored the socio-political dimensions of music, such as discussing soundsystem culture and inheritance for the New York Review of Books, discussing lyrical changes in the Canadian national anthem for NPR, and considering the television program Alone as a means of considering loneliness and social distancing. Her coverage includes live performances, like reviews of the Osheaga festival and Molchat Doma in Montreal for Northern Transmissions, and profiles of artists such as Hill Kourkoutis, the first woman nominated for a Juno Award in recording engineering, for CBC Music. ​MacLeod's work reflects a commitment to exploring the intersections of music, culture, and identity, offering readers nuanced perspectives on contemporary issues.  Beyond journalism, MacLeod is an academic with a PhD in Communications from McGill University and a Master's in English Literature from the University of Toronto. She teaches literature and liberal arts at Vanier College in Montreal. Her book, Visions of Zion: Ethiopians and Rastafari in the Search for the Promised Land (NYU Press, 2014), examines the intersections of race, migration, and cultural identity.​ She also is an international development consultant, working on monitoring, evaluation and learning practices with organizations such as Cuso International, Oxfam, the Equality Fund, Care International and WUSC.

    30 min
  3. 04/12/2025

    S1E7 Keeping It Real: Engaging College Students through Authentic Learning

    Join us for the final episode of this semester in which we discover how two college teachers successfully integrated foundational theory with authentic, hands-on experience. Dayna Morrow and April Hayward share how authentic learning activities are helping them increase student engagement, understanding, empathy, and critical thinking. Driven by the need to capture student attention and prepare them for the job market, they interwove practical activities such as virtual reality experiences that simulate visual impairments, physical role-playing, and community visits into their curriculum. We discuss the value of authentic learning activities in a digital age, and their value in developing essential skills like empathy, communication, and critical thinking. Plus, we discuss how these innovative strategies can be incorporated into any discipline. About our Guests April Hayward has been teaching at Vanier College since2016, teaches in the Special Education Techniques (SET) program. A proud Vaniergraduate from the same program (formerly Special Care Counselling), Aprilstarted her career as a specialized educator, working primarily with olderadults in day programs, long term care homes, and in-home respite programs. Shewent on to earn a Bachelor of Arts (majoring in Psychology and WorldReligions), followed by a Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) at McGill University. In2009, inspired by her work with older adults and their families and caregivers,along with her leadership and advocacy roles in community organizations, shewent back to school to complete her Master’s degree in Social Work. Her thesisfocused on end-of-life care conditions in long-term care homes. Her desire toteach comes from her passion for improving conditions and outcomes forvulnerable populations. She is inspired every day by creative and dedicatedstudents who, through the SET program, are making a difference in theircommunities. Outside of her work, April is a proud mom, amateur runner, foodenthusiast, and can usually be found immersed in a community project and talkingabout her dog.  Dayna Morrow is the Department Coordinator for Special Education Techniques (SET) and has been teaching at Vanier for 17 years. She’s worked as the SET internship coordinator and spent two years as a member of the Vanier Student Success Working Group while also volunteering on several college committees. Prior to, and throughout her time at Vanier, Dayna worked in health and social services in private, public and nonprofit organizations with older adults, families and youth. Dayna has degrees in Applied Human Sciences(Therapeutic Recreation) from Concordia University, and Education Counselling Psychology (Family Life Education) from McGill University. She is also a graduate from Special Education Techniques (formerly SCC) being a proud Vanier alumnus. Outside of Vanier, Dayna enjoys time spent with family, volunteering at the Board of a local community organization, taking long walks & paddleboarding at her cottage in the great outdoors.

    31 min
  4. 02/10/2025

    S1E4 Supporting the Development of Transversal Competencies: Part 2

    In Part 2 of our series on transversal competencies, Avery and Dayna share details about the many resources the Student Success Working Group (SSWG) has developed to support the development of transversal competencies and how Vanier teachers can access them. They offer practical ways that the resources can be used in-class, and share about a program that has implemented a transversal competency mentorship initiative. They also suggest manageable, incremental ways that teachers can use these resources to sprinkle in opportunities to develop transversal skills throughout a course.    ****Note: we had some technical issues during the recording or these two episodes (Part 1 and 2). The sound quality during sections of the interviews is less than ideal. We apologize for the inconvenience. Please know that the issue has since been resolved, so future episodes will have good, consistent sound quality.****  Our Guests Avery Rueb is the Dean of Academic Development andResearch at Vanier College, where he has been leading since 2024 after 12 yearsof teaching French. He launched the Skills4Life program at Vanierin Multimedia and Electrical Engineering Technology, as well as at Edu2 schoolin Montreal, to help students strengthen essential transversal competenciessuch as collaboration, time management, and networking. These initiatives,supported through agencies like Entente Canada-Québec and NovaScience,are designed to give students the durable skills they need to succeedacademically, personally, and professionally. Dayna Morrow is the Department Coordinator for Special EducationTechniques (SET) and has been teaching at Vanier for 17 years. She’s worked as theSET internship coordinator and spent two years as a member of the VanierStudent Success Working Group while also volunteering on several collegecommittees. Prior to, and throughout her time at Vanier, Dayna worked in healthand social services in private, public and nonprofit organizations with olderadults, families and youth. Dayna has degrees in Applied Human Sciences(Therapeutic Recreation) from Concordia University, and Education CounsellingPsychology (Family Life Education) from McGill University. She is also agraduate from Special Education Techniques (formerly SCC) being a proud Vanieralumnus. Outside of Vanier, Dayna enjoys time spent withfamily, volunteering at the Board of a local community organization, takinglong walks & paddleboarding at her cottage in the great outdoors.

    22 min
  5. 02/10/2025

    S1E3 Supporting the Development of Transversal Competencies: Part 1

    In Part I of this two-part series on transversal competencies, Avery Rueb and Dayna Morrow share with us about the work the Vanier’s Student Success Working Group (SSWG) did to support the development of these durable skills. They define what transversal competencies are, and explain why it is important to help our students attain them, not just to prepare them for the job market and university, but to help them become better college students and good citizens. They share the research done by the SSWG on transversal competencies and discuss how we can weave them into our CEGEP programs.  Part II is also available as of the publishing of this episode. ****Note: we had some technical issues during the recording or Part 1 and 2. The sound quality during parts of both interviews is not ideal. We apologize for the inconvenience. Please know that the issue has since been resolved, so future episodes will have good, consistent sound quality.****  Our Guests Avery Rueb is the Dean of Academic Development andResearch at Vanier College, where he has been leading since 2024 after 12 yearsof teaching French. He launched the Skills4Life program at Vanierin Multimedia and Electrical Engineering Technology, as well as at Edu2 schoolin Montreal, to help students strengthen essential transversal competenciessuch as collaboration, time management, and networking. These initiatives,supported through agencies like Entente Canada-Québec and NovaScience,are designed to give students the durable skills they need to succeedacademically, personally, and professionally. Dayna Morrow is the Department Coordinator for Special EducationTechniques (SET) and has been teaching at Vanier for 17 years. She’s worked as theSET internship coordinator and spent two years as a member of the VanierStudent Success Working Group while also volunteering on several collegecommittees. Prior to, and throughout her time at Vanier, Dayna worked in healthand social services in private, public and nonprofit organizations with olderadults, families and youth. Dayna has degrees in Applied Human Sciences(Therapeutic Recreation) from Concordia University, and Education CounsellingPsychology (Family Life Education) from McGill University. She is also agraduate from Special Education Techniques (formerly SCC) being a proud Vanieralumnus. Outside of Vanier, Dayna enjoys time spent withfamily, volunteering at the Board of a local community organization, takinglong walks & paddleboarding at her cottage in the great outdoors.

    25 min
  6. 30/09/2025

    S1E2 Introducing ECT: The English CEGEP Engaged Community of Teachers CoP

    Episode Description In this episode of Marianne and Max, the coordinators of the Engaged Community of Teachers (formerly Early Career Teachers), share about the community, how it got started, what support it offers teachers, and what resources it makes available. ECT is no longer merely a Vanier initiative, but as Marianne and Max explain, has grown to include teachers from John Abbott, Dawson, Champlain, and Heritage. While ECT used to focus on early career teachers, it has since expanded and now supports educators of all different levels of experience. Indeed, it is that variety that adds to ECT's richness. About our Guests Marianne Lynch has degrees in mathematics, literature, education and humanities, a decade of experience teaching high school math and science, and has been a teacher in Vanier’s English department since 2005. Her experiences with team-teaching, peer observation, mentorship, and accompaniment have led her to develop projects that encourage both students and teachers to exchange with and learn from one another. She is a SALTISE fellow and works closely with the pedagogical office (PSI) in support of new and early-career teachers (ECT), recently rebranded as the Engaged Community of Teachers. In her free time, you will find Marianne at the pool, on the soccer field, or writing the occasional sonnet. Max Salonine is a pedagogical counselor in PSI with an M.Ed. in Educational Psychology from McGill University. He has an extensive background in CEGEP education, having taught a variety of Social Science and Humanities courses for 10 years at Centennial College, particularly to students with learning difficulties. He has also taught Psychology in Vanier's Social Science program. As member of the PSI team, Max supports pedagogical animation initiatives including the ECT (Engaged Community of Teachers) group and local and Intercollegiate Ped Days (IPD). He also assists faculty in academic program support and development.

    20 min

About

A podcast about college teaching, learning, and student success, presented by Vanier College, Montréal, QC. The podcast is designed to give college educators a platform to share their classroom experiences, research, and practical strategies that foster student success and engagement. Episodes drop every 3 weeks during the fall and winter terms. The show is produced by Vanier's office of Pedagogical Support and Innovation (PSI, pronounced "sigh" as in the Greek letter Ψ).