This Week for Grad Students: Applications open for 2025-26 CTL Fellowships

by | Mar 5, 2025 | Announcements

Apply Now for 2025-26 CTL Fellowships

Application period now open!

The CTL is accepting applications through March 17 for the 2025-26 cohorts in three of our graduate student fellowships:

These opportunities entail stipends for successful participation. They are available to doctoral students in years 2-7 of their program as of Fall 2025, as well as MFA students in years 2-3. Information about each program follows. We are also happy to answer questions about these fellowships in Office Hours.

Apply to be a 2025-26 Lead Teaching Fellow

The LTF program is a professional development opportunity for doctoral and MFA students who are committed to promoting pedagogical practices and conversations among graduate students. LTFs participate in a series of meetings at the CTL, organize teaching-related workshops in their home departments, and act as liaisons between their peers and the CTL.

Apply to be a 2025-26 Teaching Assessment Fellow

TAFs work closely with the Center for Teaching and Learning, faculty, and each other during the academic year to support and assess teaching initiatives. This fellowship is designed for graduate students who have particular interest in learning about methodologies and strategies for assessing course redesign efforts.

Apply to be a 2025-26 CIRTL Fellow

CIRTL Fellows serve as an instrumental link between the Center for the Integration of Research, Teaching and Learning (CIRTL) network and the Columbia community. CIRTL Fellows leverage CIRTL Network resources to support evidence-based, inclusive teaching and mentorship practices in Columbia’s STEM communities.

⭐️ Resource Spotlight ⭐️

In this episode of CTL’s Dead Ideas in Teaching and Learning podcast, former Lead Teaching Fellow Aleksandra Jakubczak (Department of History) shares reflections on her journey to become a more informed and confident instructor. Listen to find out what changed in her teaching, and hear how her engagement with the Teaching Development Program changed her conception of pedagogy and its place in her career.

Access resource: Teaching Development at Its Best: A Graduate Student Reflects

Graduate student-led programs at CTL

Graduate students in CTL fellowships run workshops, learning communities, and services with CTL’s support. All these offerings count towards track completion in the Teaching Development Program

Practice Teaching

Facilitated by CTL Teaching Consultants

Even if you do not currently have an instructional role at Columbia, you can still get individualized, supportive feedback on your teaching! CTL Practice Teaching sessions are led by Teaching Consultants, who convene a small group of graduate students to rehearse teaching approaches and get direct feedback from each other. Participants receive a confidential report from the Teaching Consultant afterwards, noting insights that arose during the session.

Date: Tuesday, March 11
Time: 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Location: 212 Butler Library
Register: Register here

CTLgrads Learning Community

Look I Made You Some Content: Assigning and Evaluating Creative Assignments

Designed and run by Senior Lead Teaching Fellows Miriam Nielsen (Earth and Environmental Science) and Grant Woods (Music)

Breaking away from the classic exam or essay can be fun! And it doesn’t necessarily mean more work for the instructor or TAs. This learning community will focus on how to design assessments that invite and value student creativity. We’ll discuss what works, what doesn’t, how to connect students with available resources, and construct rubrics for evaluation. As part of this learning community, participants will have the opportunity to design their own creative assignments, and collaborate with other attendees to strategize methods of assessing those assignments.

Date: Thursday March 27 (Part 1) and Thursday April 3 (Part 2)
Time: 1:10 PM – 2:25 PM
Location: 212 Butler Library
Register: Register for Part 1Register for Part 2

CTLgrads Journal Club

Online discussions designed and facilitated by CIRTL Fellows

Are you interested in creating an inclusive educational climate for all STEM learners? This informal discussion community is an opportunity to discuss resources and research on teaching and learning with fellow grad students and postdocs across the CIRTL Network. These sessions are designed by a Columbia graduate student to help you consider how you can use findings in education research–in your field and beyond–to inform your own teaching practices.

Date: Thursday March 27
Time: 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM
Location: Online
Register: Register for March 27 session

Date: Thursday April 11
Time: 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Location: Online
Register: Register for April 11 session

Graduate student-led events in departments

2024-25 Lead Teaching Fellows are running workshops and discussions in their departments all around Columbia. These are generally advertised locally. Below are upcoming events that are open to participants beyond the LTF’s home department.

LTF events also count towards track completion in the Teaching Development Program

Bridging the Gap: Science Communication Essentials

Join this event to enhance your science communication skills. Learn how to simplify complex ideas, engage diverse audiences, and make your research more accessible. The session is perfect for anyone eager to improve their ability to share science (and other topics!) effectively. Students and post-docs from any field are welcome!

This workshop is led by Lead Teaching Fellow Kylee Dresbach-Hill (Nutritional and Metabolic Biology). It is on the CUIMC campus and open to all graduate students.

Date: Tuesday, March 4
Time: 6:00 PM
Location: 322 Hammer Health Sciences Library
Register: RSVP here

Incorporating Coding and Open Science Principles into Engineering Education

This initiative focuses on equipping engineering students with computational skills and fostering an open science mindset to address modern challenges in fluid mechanics, dynamics, engineering mechanics, and continuum mechanics. Come ready to explore new possibilities and enhance your research techniques—lunch is on us!

This workshop is led by Lead Teaching Fellow Pawan Chandiramani (Civil Engineering & Engineering Mechanics). It is open to PhD and Masters students in engineering.

Date: Friday, March 7
Time: 12:00-1:00 PM
Location: CBIPS Studio, 706 Mudd
Register: RSVP here by Tuesday March 4. 

Absent. Again? Accompanying students and navigating administrative challenges in the event of repeated absences

This event’s aim is to provide students with information about the tools and resources they have access to in the event of repeated absences from students. How to keep students from falling behind? How to make sure their progress can still be assessed fairly? How to communicate with students so that they feel supported?

We will discuss how to use hybrid teaching and asynchronous teaching effectively to support students who cannot come to class. But we will also learn from the perspective of ODS officers as well as the Berick Center for Student advising on what the best course of action is on the part of instructors when facing the challenge of repeated absences.

This workshop is led by Lead Teaching Fellow Eponine Senay (French and Romance Languages). It is open to all graduate student instructors.

Date: Wednesday, March 12
Time: 5:00 PM
Location: 521 Philosophy 
Register: RSVP here

Pedagogical Techniques in the Social Sciences

Do you feel like you end up going back to the same techniques over and over again in your social science classes? Do you wish you had more techniques in your back pocket and knew when and what they worked for? This session is designed to be an overview of LOTS of different pedagogical techniques to use in the classroom, the pros and cons of these techniques, and how to combine different techniques. This session is not intended to be a deep dive on any one individual technique, but will provide participants with resources to go deeper after the session.

This workshop is led by Lead Teaching Fellow Anna Garner (Political Science). It is geared towards TAs in social science but open to all interested graduate students.

Date: Thursday, March 13
Time: 2:30 PM
Location: IAB 707
Register: RSVP here

In Your Own Words: Disaggregate Instruction in STEM Higher Education

Science is more than a way of knowing—it’s also a language. In STEM education, concepts (e.g., gravity) are often bundled with technical language (e.g., free-fall, acceleration, vectors), which can overwhelm students—especially those from underrepresented cultural backgrounds. In Science in the City: Culturally Relevant STEM Education, Bryan A. Brown argues that transmitting science ideas separately from specialized language—the practice of disaggregate instruction—can improve learning outcomes.

In this workshop, we’ll explore the applications and limits of disaggregate instruction in university STEM classrooms. We’ll consider the role of language in accelerating science learning, and we’ll discuss practical teaching tactics to make science teaching more accessible without compromising accuracy.

This workshop is led by Lead Teaching Fellow Sean Li (Physics). The workshop will focus on STEM higher education, though all Columbia community members are welcome. 

Date: Wednesday, March 26
Time: 2:00 – 3:30 PM
Location: Center for Theoretical Physics, 8th Floor Pupin Hall
Register: RSVP here.

The CTL is here to help!

Office Hours

Drop by CTL’s Office Hours for graduate students to consult with us about any aspect of teaching, CTL fellowships and other offerings, job market preparation, or making progress in the Teaching Development Program. Learn more about Office Hours.

Consultations

Graduate students can now request consultations to get support for their teaching and learning needs. The CTL provides consultations on a range of topics, including syllabus design, creating and refining a teaching statement, integrating instructional technologies into class activities, and presentation practices. Learn more and request a consultation.