The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia Vancouver campus
Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology
  • Home
  • About
    • External Review
    • Annual Report
    • Publications
    • Vision, Mission, Values and Statements
    • Contact Us
    • Location
    • Features
    • Newsletters
      • Dialogues Newsletter
      • Events Newsletter
      • Edubytes Newsletter
  • What we do
    • Curriculum and Course Services
      • Course Development & Delivery
    • Professional Development
    • Technologies
  • Curriculum & Course Services
    • Course Development & Delivery
    • Program renewal
  • Learning Tech
  • Programs
    • All Our Programs
    • Open to Everyone
    • Faculty Programs
    • Graduate Student & TA Programs
    • Staff Programs
    • Indigenous Initiatives
    • Communities of Practice
  • Resources
  • Events
  • COVID-19 Safety Plan
Some CTLT services remain virtual or require advance booking. Please follow the links for more information.
  • Request teaching support or a consultation
  • Get learning technology support from the LT Hub
  • See strategies to support temporarily remote students
  • Visit the Keep Teaching website for help with online teaching
  • View upcoming online and in-person workshops and events
Home / 2015 / October / 30 / Liberating Structures Workshop

Liberating Structures Workshop

By Emi Sasagawa on October 30, 2015

Registration for the Liberating Structures Workshop is open. The three-day event will explore the powerful facilitation strategies that can be used in classrooms, everyday meetings, strategic planning sessions, workshops and presentations that help students, faculty and staff engage and work together.

Liberating Structures are small design shifts that move us gently away from more constraining “conventional structures” (e.g., lectures, open discussions, round robin updates, brainstorms) and toward sessions that quickly foster lively participation in groups of any size, making it possible to unleash and include everyone.

According to Keith McCandless, co-founder of Liberating Structures and the workshop’s facilitator, conventional structures are often too inhibiting or too loose and disorganized to engage people effectively and creatively. These structures frustrate and exclude as well as fail to provide the right environment for good ideas to emerge and develop.

In the workshop, participants will learn how to choose, facilitate, and sequence Liberating Structures for your individual facilitation challenges and contexts. Liberating Structures practices include social network webbing, designing storyboards, drawing together and engaging in appreciative interviews.

The workshop will be held from February 17 to 19 at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre.

Due to popular demand the Liberating Structures Workshop has been moved to a larger venue, able to accommodate 100 people. CTLT has extended the early bird rate deadline to December 1. The registration fee is $600 per person after December 1. The rate includes 2.5 days of active learning, meals, refreshments, a copy of the Liberating Structures book as well as design cards to keep.

Win free registration to Liberating Structures!

All UBC faculty members that register for Liberating Structures will be entered into a draw, where one lucky winner will win back their registration fee – a $600 value!

For information, visit the event page for the Liberating Structures Workshop.

Posted in CTLT Programs, Faculty and Staff, Feature Slider, Features, Professional Development
Tagged with liberating, lws, structures, workshop

  • Previous
  • Next
Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology
Vancouver Campus
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
214 – 1961 East Mall
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z1
Tel 604 827 0360
Fax 604 822 9826
Website ctlt.ubc.ca
Email ctlt.info@ubc.ca
Find us on
    
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility