Event Resources Archive
Click on the links below to access resources from previous TechDem Events:
AI For L&T Symposium – An Artificial Intelligence for Learning and Teaching Collective (AILTC) Event, November 2023
- An opportunity for UniSQ participants to discuss, share, question and explore AI for learning and teaching and professional practice.
Engage with Engageli – Meet the Champions Collaborative Webinar, 17 May 2022
- The focus of the webinar was on sharing our experiences with the tool Engagli being used/piloted in many courses over Semester 1
Engaging Learners: The USQ Toolkit, 24 March 2022
- This resource shares materials from the workshop with the Hang Chu University College of Communication, Malaysia.
JLU-Giessen-USQ International Collaborative Workshops, 3 March and 10 March 2022
- Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany and the University of Southern Queensland, Australia, collaborated virtually to share ideas and co-construct understandings of tools, pedagogies and support systems for hybrid learning.
Join the Conversation
Click on the links below to read posts from recent TechDem Events, or click here access the main Conversations Blog.
Dr Nici Sweaney from AI Her Way
We were very lucky to welcome Dr Nici Sweaney as guest speaker at our AI for Learning & Teaching Symposium in April. She is an Adoption Strategist, Consultant, Educator and Director of AI Her Way.
International collaboration and the four ‘pillars’ that influence and shape online learning at USQ
Recently USQ International invited TechDem leaders to put together a 3-hour workshop to share with the Hang Chu University College of Communication, Malaysia
Virtual, International Teaching: New Paths at Justus Liebig University Giessen
This conversation was provided by Juliane Sommer in support of the JLU-USQ collaborative workshops, March 2022.
You are invited! JLU-Giessen-USQ International Collaborative Workshops
Many years ago, as a student of history, I read, analysed and critiqued Blainey’s The Tyranny of Distance detailing how Australia’s future was shaped by geographical remoteness.