The University of Windsor GATA Network Team, led by Betsy Keating, Melanie Santarossa, and Candace Nast, created resources to support graduate and undergraduate teaching assistants (TAs), including a teaching and learning handbook. They promoted the handbook through 500 calls for contributors and received 25 total responses, with contributions from 15 TAs and 10 faculty members across Arts & Social Sciences, the Centre for Teaching & Learning, Leddy Library, and Sciences. The team also used social media platforms like a blog, Twitter, and Facebook to promote TA resources but faced roadblocks in effectively measuring the impact of their work.
3. What is it?
What How did
roadblocks we
did we promote
face? THE GATA it?
TEACHING AND
LEARNING
HANDBOOK
4. 500 Calls for
Contributors • Arts & Social
Sciences
25 Total • Centre for Teaching
Responses & Learning
• Leddy Library
• Sciences
15 GAs 10 Faculty
Introduction:who we arediffs between GA/TA at UwindsorBusiness cards on tables
The Network:what it is supposed to be/visionthree part approach,promotionroadblocksclimate at UWindsor
Handbook:finding contributorsgetting them to contribute#s asked, #s received, departments?
contributor exampleswhat it will look like in its final form/distribution
Social Media:Our aim for the digital communities we are creatingother CTL’sScreenshots and description: Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, BlogGATAs get connected to other CLTs across N. Americastudent contributions
traffic & statsin progress possibilities
The Network:what it is supposed to be/visionthree part approach,promotionroadblocksclimate at UWindsor