The Faculty Development Digest highlights events and resources that may be of interest to faculty and other educators on campus. The Digest will be posted on the Faculty Resources site periodically throughout the year. If you have an item that you would like to suggest for inclusion in a future issue, please send the details to Director of Faculty Development Lisa Whitenack at lwhitena@allegheny.edu. To access previous issues, use the links in the Recent Posts box or on this page.
From the Director of Faculty Development
Spring ERI: Please remember that the Spring Educators Resource Institute is on May 11, 2026. In case you somehow missed it in the many excited announcements, we will have James Lang running two excellent workshops in the morning (and we’ll have some of his books available!). The afternoon schedule is still in progress. In the meantime, please RSVP here by May 1 so that we can start planning for food and so forth.
Monthly Update on Oracle: New to the directions for faculty travel funding and ASC-funded travel funding for this month: using multiple budget lines in a single expense report (e.g. splitting travel between faculty travel funds and startup) and an extra piece about needing to make sure the reimbursement amount you’re requesting doesn’t exceed what you have available in funding. Remember, I am keeping this as a living document and adding information as it becomes available. This summer, I will be working with ITS on a similar document for grant spending.
Reimbursement & travel advance deadlines: All expense reports must be processed by June 19 to close out the fiscal year. My advice is to aim for the week prior if possible, in case you need to submit an ITS WebHelp job ticket. If you received a cash advance, those need to be resolved by June 5 (see Oracle directions for how to do that).
Allegheny Awesome: If you have a cool pedagogical thing that you’re doing and would like to share, please email me! If you’ve seen a colleague doing something awesome in the classroom or while advising that people should know about, please let me know! If you’ve discovered the key to staying productive in your scholarship while juggling all of the things, send me an email! From there, I will follow up with folks and work with them to write a paragraph or two for a future Faculty Development Digest.
Updates from the Library
Out of the Vault: Merrick Archives student intern Pressley Stevens will present an Out of the Vault showcase on the history of Playshop Theatre on Thurs. April 16 from 4-5 pm. The presentation will explore early Allegheny drama clubs Duzer Du and Klee-o-Kleet and demonstrate how these student clubs evolved into what we know today as Playshop Theater. Pressley will also discuss modern productions, as well as the Student Experimental Theatre and the United States Institute for Theatre Technology.
From the Center for Career and Professional Development
CCPD newsletter: The Center for Career & Professional Development reminds you to peruse their most recent email update to faculty & staff about student opportunities — if any of the opportunities there seem right for a student you know, recommend it to the student and help them connect with the CCPD!
From the Office of Student and Community Development
Save the date: The Office of Student and Community Development, with support from the Stackpole Hall Foundation, is pleased to announce that Dr. Thema Bryant will speak on campus on April 23, 2026, at 4:00 p.m. in the Tillotson Room of the Tippie Alumni Center. Dr. Bryant is a former President of the American Psychological Association and a recognized leader in advancing the field of psychology and advocating for mental health equity. Dr. Bryant’s work may be of interest to classes across a wide range of disciplines. There is a limited opportunity for her to speak with or engage in a class session. While this visit occurs near the end of the semester, faculty interested in collaborating are encouraged to contact Dom Turner, Associate Dean of Student and Community Development, for more details at dturner@allegheny.edu or ext. 2723. More information about Dr. Bryant’s work can be found here.
Readings, Slides, and Guides
Critical thinking about AI: This short article by Dr. Safieh Moghaddam in Faculty Focus outlines a few different easy classroom activities that focus on critical thinking about GenAI outputs. (You may need to login to see it, but accounts are free!).
Instructor talk: This new open-access article by Jackson et al. in CBE-Life Sciences Education addresses non-content instructor talk (things we say that are not about the topic we’re teaching) and how this affects student belonging in intro bio courses. However, this is widely applicable beyond STEM.
Summer reading: Benjamin Pacini in Inside Higher Ed has put together a book list for the evidence-based professor. The list includes recommendations about the science of learning (including a book by James Lang, who will be here in May!) and student motivation.
What do you do in the first few minutes of class?: Dr. Norine Wild writes in Faculty Focus that the first few moments of class “set the tone for learning, shape student-faculty relationships, and influence engagement and motivation.” Dr. Wild gives you some steps to design your strategy for a more intentional start to class.
Sometimes stress is just stress: Jessie Gold writes in Inside Higher Ed about working with students to understand that stress is sometimes both normal and a part of adulting, while still validating their feelings.
Upcoming Opportunities
GLCA webinar: The Grading Redesign I Kept Putting Off (And What Finally Made It Possible): Lew Ludwig (Dennison University) will give this webinar on Thursday, April 9. Lew writes: “This semester, my 200-level course — mostly non-majors in economics, data analytics, and computer science — are demonstrating a depth of understanding I haven’t seen in fifteen years of teaching. The difference isn’t a new textbook or a smaller class; it’s standards-based grading, with students demonstrating what they know through entirely in-class, AI-free assessments. It’s a redesign I’ve wanted to attempt for years but never had the bandwidth to execute. Since generative AI first arrived in our classrooms, I’ve argued that alternative grading would be our most productive path forward — not to catch cheaters, but to refocus on what students actually know. This semester I finally put that conviction to the test, using AI itself to help with the planning overhead that had kept me on the sidelines. You will leave with a practical framework for using AI as a course-design partner and, perhaps more importantly, permission to try a grading redesign you’ve been putting off”. Register HERE for the event on April 9, 2026 at Noon EDT. A link and calendar invite will be sent the day before the event. Can’t join us live? Sign up anyway – the recorded session will be emailed to all registrants.
Teaching about AI & Ethics: CREATE is hosting a conversation about teaching about AI & ethics on April 15, 6:30-7:30 pm in the CREATE lab. Please RSVP at this link by April 1 so that we can plan for dessert and the amount of space we will need. If you have any questions, please contact Lisa Whitenack.
Spring ERI: Don’t forget that the spring Educators Resource Institute (ERI) will be taking place on Monday, May 11. This is a departure from previous years for a great reason! In case you missed it, we will be having Dr. James Lang run our morning sessions. We will also have copies of his books available.
Teaching Professor Conference: Faculty Focus will be running its annual Teaching Professor Conference from June 5-7 in St. Louis. You can learn more about this conference here.
Fulbright-IMC Krems Visiting Professor Award: This distinguished award offers scholars from the United States the opportunity to engage in both teaching and research at IMC Krems University of Applied Sciences, an internationally oriented higher education institution in Austria. The program is designed to promote academic exchange, strengthen international collaboration, and further enhance the long-standing ties between Austria and the United States. For further information regarding the award, eligibility requirements, and the application process, please refer to the Fulbright Austria website: Fulbright-IMC Krems Visiting Professor. Applications are due on September 15, 2026.
June 11 – July 8, 2025 | 23 webinars on different days and times
Online via Zoom |
Who can benefit: | Scholars, postgraduate students, refresh/strengthen research skills
Course benefits | Online Access to Recordings, Slides, Resources
Digital Participation Certificates ** for participants who attend full sessions