June 29, 2024
Education News Canada

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY
Biology professor Paul Grogan wins top teaching award

May 8, 2023


Paul Grogan, a professor in the Department of Biology, is the 2023 recipient of the Chancellor A. Charles Baillie Teaching Award. (Supplied Photo)

Throughout his career at Queen's University, Paul Grogan, a professor in the Department of Biology, has received numerous teaching awards from students, his fellow faculty members, and at the university level.

Now, Dr. Grogan is the 2023 recipient of the university's top teaching award - the Chancellor A. Charles Baillie Teaching Award - which recognizes undergraduate, graduate, or professional teaching that has had an outstanding influence on the quality of student learning at Queen's. 

"I'm literally thrilled! It's a huge honour and it makes me think of all those who have contributed directly and indirectly - it takes a village,'" Dr. Grogan says. "My family (passed and present), my academic colleagues and friends, my course program associates and graduate teaching assistants, the instructional staff at the Centre for Teaching and Learning, and the Queen's administration - all these people have in one way or another contributed to what I teach, and how I teach. And there's one last all-important group - the students. Their enthusiasm and curiosity over the past 20-plus years have truly inspired me along this journey."

Dedication to students

During his time at Queen's Dr. Grogan has won or been nominated for a number of teaching awards, including receiving the Biology Department Student Council Award of Excellence in Teaching in 2010-11 and 2021-22 and has been nominated multiple times for the Frank Knox Excellence in Teaching Award and Barnes Teaching Award. He is also a two-time recipient of the Biology Excellence in Teaching Award in 2012-13 and 2021-22, voted upon by other faculty members.

"Paul Grogan's teaching practices, along with his ability to encourage and inspire others to be excellent teachers, make him an ideal recipient of the Chancellor A. Charles Baillie Teaching Award," says John Pierce, former Vice-Provost (Teaching and Learning) and chair of the 2023 Chancellor A. Charles Baillie Teaching Award Adjudication Committee. "He has shown dedication to his students through innovative pedagogy, commitment to his department by providing educational leadership to his peers, and engagement in the support for curriculum development at Queen's."

In the classroom and lecture hall, Dr. Grogan sees himself as a facilitator - providing guidance rather than lectures to classes; advising rather than supervising thesis students. His goal, he adds, is to facilitate deep learning - to develop each student's potential for subsequent independent learning. To achieve this he engages students with a broad question or problem, focuses the theme down into a central foundational concept or mechanism, and then guides them to explore the implications of that concept or mechanism in a broader context, including making links to bigger real world' environmental and life issues.

"As I have noted several times in our annual/biannual reports, Dr. Grogan is the most reflective faculty member that we have, always seeking ways to improve his teaching and student experiences, incrementally and consistently," says Brian Cumming, professor and head of the Department of Biology, in his nomination letter for his colleague, adding that Dr. Grogan uses innovation as a teaching practice and continues to educate himself in new ways of teaching.

"For example, Dr. Grogan was utilizing learning outcomes before they were required, encouraging active learning through problem-solving and breakout groups, and more uniquely using contemplative practices in upper-year courses," Dr. Cumming says.

Promoting progressive teaching practices

During this past academic year Dr. Grogan created a guidance document on Teaching practices to help promote Indigenization - Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, Accessibility, and Anti-Racism (I-EDAA)' to raise awareness and promote progressive teaching practices. The document provides guidance and resources, for the Department of Biology and can help all teachers integrate I-EDAA practices into the curriculum.

Describing himself as someone who is naturally shy and introverted, Dr. Grogan deals with the potential obstacle by being consciously aware that everyone in attendance is a fellow human being deserving the very best he can offer. This awareness, he explains, is his primary source of inspiration.

"I genuinely consider my professorial position as one of enormous privilege, and therefore that it confers on me a profound responsibility to continue striving to advance the quality and depth of the learning experiences I offer," he says "For me at this stage in my life, people and relationships are what matter most - and I've recently realised that teaching is a natural extension of that philosophy. The Chancellor A. Charles Baillie Teaching Award is a huge boost to my confidence and energy, and I hope for many more years on this wonderful journey."

For more information

Queen's University
99 University Avenue
Kingston Ontario
Canada K7L 3N6
www.queensu.ca


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