Excellence in Teaching Day 2026

Excellence in Teaching Day brings faculty from across BC together with nationally-recognized scholars to discuss timely questions about teaching and learning. This year Excellence in Teaching Day will be held the morning of Monday, May 4. Registration will open in March.

Embodied, Situated, Social: Thinkink in the AI Era

Thinking 鈥斕齦earning 鈥斕齢as never occurred uniquely in our brains, isolated from the rest of our senses and experiences. Annie Murphy Paul鈥檚 draws on a variety of research fields to argue that thinking has always drawn on 鈥渆xtra-neural resources,鈥 such as our bodies, surroundings, and relationships.听

Of course, technology has long functioned as an extra-neural resource to support thinking and learning: pens and other writing instruments serve to extend our memory; data visualization software makes it easier for us to recognize patterns and relationships we might have otherwise missed. At the same time, concerns abound about the ways technology may be impeding our thinking, shortening attention spans, and diminishing human connection.

The explosion of AI has only heightened our sense of the stakes of technology鈥檚 impact on how we think and learn (and learn to think). When does AI act as an accommodation to extend our mind, to support human creativity and insight? And when does AI compromise engagement with other necessary extraneural resources, like the natural world and interpersonal relationships? We hope you鈥檒l join us on May 4th to delve into these and related questions.

Keynote Speaker: Annie Murphy Paul

Annie Murphy Paul

As we strive to deepen our understanding of the impact of AI on student learning, the CTE is excited to announce that will be joining us for Excellence in Teaching Day to speak about her work in .听An internationally-recognized science writer, Paul is a frequent contributor to NPR鈥檚 鈥淗idden Brain鈥 podcast and is currently a fellow in the New America鈥檚 Learning Sciences Exchange.

ETD Reading Group

In anticipation of Annie Murphy Paul鈥檚 Excellence in Teaching Day keynote lecture, the CTE is organizing two opportunities 鈥 one on Zoom and one over lunch in O'Neill 250 鈥 to discuss excerpts from (2021). We鈥檒l spend time considering Paul鈥檚 overarching argument about the need to draw on 鈥渆xtra-neural鈥 resources to support thinking and learning, and the benefits and limitations of imitation when thinking with experts.听

All BC instructors, grad students, and instructional staff are welcome to join the conversation, and the first 25 people who register will receive a free copy of The Extended Mind.

Past Programs

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