Spring 2026 CETL Workshops
January 6, 2026
CETL Workshop Schedule
The CETL hosts a variety of workshops and other learning activities throughout the year. Below you will find information about our upcoming sessions so you can add them to your calendar. Registration links for each event are included below; we appreciate you registering for any workshops you are interested in attending. Please reach out to us at CETL@chapman.edu if there is a topic you’d like to see covered in a future workshop, or if you’d like us to host a workshop for your program, school, or college specifically. Deans and other program leaders can submit a request for a workshop for their unit. We hope to see you at some of these sessions this term!
Those who register will receive a calendar invitation at least one week prior to the event. Dates, times, and locations are subject to change.
February Workshops
No Scores, Just Insights: Rethinking Peer Reviews of Teaching
Date & Time: Tuesday, February 17, 1:00-2:00pm
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum, 209A
Session Description:
CETL invites faculty to re-imagine peer review as a supportive, curiosity‑driven practice rather than an evaluative one. Together, we will unpack common misconceptions about peer review, explore a more expansive understanding of who counts as a “peer,” and clarify that growth—not judgment—should be the central focus. Participants will leave with practical strategies for getting the most out of classroom observations, facilitating reflective dialogue, and integrating peer observations into their ongoing professional development in teaching.
Presenters: CETL Team
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
From Curiosity to Contribution: Conducting and Publishing Education Research
Date & Time: Thursday, February 26, 12:00pm-1:00pm
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum 209A
Session Description:
Are you interested in exploring how classroom research can enhance your teaching and help advance best practices in higher education? Whether you’re new to education research or simply curious, this workshop will introduce you to the fundamentals of conducting research in your own classroom. Led by Chapman colleagues who actively publish in the field, this session will demystify educational research (the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning and Discipline-Based Educational Research) and help you take the first step toward developing your own.
Presenter: Dan Dries, Assistant Professor, Schmid College
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
March Workshops
Designing for Neurodiversity: Universal Design for Student Success
Date & Time: Wednesday, March 4, 3:00-4:30pm
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum, 209A
Session Description:
This session focuses on designing courses, materials, and assessments with neurodiversity in mind. Faculty will explore practical Universal Design for Learning strategies to support student success across courses and assignments. Faculty are encouraged to bring course materials or assignments to apply ideas during the session.
Presenter: Meghan Cosier, Professor, Attallah College; Executive Director, Thompson Policy Institute on Disability
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
Easy Grading with Claude AI
Date & Time: Monday, March 9, 2:30-4:00pm
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum, 201
Session Description:
This hands-on workshop demonstrates how Claude AI can transform your grading workflows. You will be able to set up AI grading assistants that will generate personalized feedback for your students’ assignments. Participants will practice setting up their own grading assistant by inputting rubrics, sample student work, and refining AI-generated feedback. We’ll address quality control, maintaining academic standards, and customizing feedback tone. Participants will leave with a working Claude Project template that can be immediately applied to your courses to cut down on grading time while maintaining personalized feedback for your students.
Presenter: Louis Bru, Assistant Professor, Schmid College & CETL Faculty Fellow
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
AI, Exposed: Identifying the Tasks in Your Syllabus that Can Be Done by LLMs
Date & Time: Monday, March 16, 11:00am-12:00pm
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum 209A
Session Description:
In this workshop, we will examine the academic and professional tasks students are asked to practice in your course and identify how well those tasks can be completed by LLMs. Participants will gain access to a tool that allows them to upload their syllabus, look at the detailed work activities that students will take away from the course, and see how exposed the activities they are teaching are to LLMs.
Presenters: Sarah Bana, Assistant Professor, Argyros College & CETL Faculty Associate
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
April Workshops
Designing for Neurodiversity: AI in Practice for Student Success
Date & Time: Wednesday, April 1, 3:00-4:30pm
Location: Orange Campus, Beckman Hall, Room 401
Session Description:
This hands-on, collaborative session invites faculty to explore AI tools that support teaching and student success. Participants will work with real examples, experiment with tools, and consider ethical and pedagogical implications for neurodiverse learners. Faculty should bring course materials or assignments to use during the working session.
Presenter: Meghan Cosier, Professor, Attallah College; Executive Director, Thompson Policy Institute on Disability
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
Authentic Assessments to Amplify Learning: 3D Printing and Other Manufacturing Tools Enable Students to Create and Problem-solve
Date & Time: Thursday, April 2, 10:00-11:00am
Location: Orange Campus, DCI Lab, Swenson Hall N102 (Keck Center for Science & Engineering, near entrance facing Walnut Ave)
Session Description:
Kinesthetic learning improves retention and enables development of problem-solving skills and creativity. In this session we will hear from faculty across the university about how they incorporated projects involving 3D printing and other additive and subtractive manufacturing methods into their courses and how students have benefited from them. We will tour the Makerspace facility at the Keck Center for Science & Engineering. Participants will also engage in discussions about how they might adopt some of these tools in their teaching.
Presenter: Manjari Murali, Assistant Professor, Crean College & CETL Faculty Fellow
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
Breaking Down Physics, Not Equipment: Simulations as a Teaching Tool
Date & Time: Thursday, April 9, 1:30-2:30pm
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum 209C
Session Description:
This workshop examines how online simulations, illustrated through the use of PhET tools in introductory physics labs at Chapman University, can strengthen student learning. Key learning principles underlying effective simulation use will be highlighted, and participants will consider applications within their own courses. The workshop offers practical examples and sparks adaptable ideas that extend beyond physics.
Presenter: Rodrigo Castillo Vasquez, Assistant Professor, Schmid College & CETL Faculty Associate
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
No Scores, Just Insights: Rethinking Peer Reviews of Teaching
Date & Time: Tuesday, April 14, 2:00-3:00pm
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum 209A
Session Description:
CETL invites faculty to re-imagine peer review as a supportive, curiosity‑driven practice rather than an evaluative one. Together, we will unpack common misconceptions about peer review, explore a more expansive understanding of who counts as a “peer,” and clarify that growth—not judgment—should be the central focus. Participants will leave with practical strategies for getting the most out of classroom observations, facilitating reflective dialogue, and integrating peer observations into their ongoing professional development in teaching.
Presenters: CETL Team
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop
Teaching AI Collaboration Through Iterative Logging
Date & Time: Thursday, April 16, 10:30am-11:30am
Location: Orange Campus, Argyros Forum 209C
Session Description:
In this workshop, faculty will experience AI as students do, using tools to solve a discipline-relevant problem while documenting their process—learning to critique outputs, identify ethical considerations, and recognize when domain expertise must override AI suggestions. We’ll then collaboratively begin to redesign assignments that make AI use transparent rather than hidden, teaching students professional-grade AI collaboration. Participants will develop “AI collaboration logs” requiring students to demonstrate critical evaluation
Presenter: Younes Mourchid, Director of Student Development, Tutoring & Learning Center
Part-time instructors are welcome to attend, but must get permission from their dean and the Office of the Provost prior to registering.
Click here to register for this workshop