McMaster wins international award for teaching excellence
The university is a pioneer of problem-based learning and was one of the first Canadian institutions to open a teaching and learning centre.
It’s official: McMaster University ranks as one of the top teaching universities in the world. The university in Hamilton, Ontario, is this year’s winner of the Global Teaching Excellence Award. The international prize is administered by Advance HE, a not-for-profit organization in the U.K. jointly owned by GuildHE and Universities UK, and is sponsored by Times Higher Education.
This was the second year the award was handed out and McMaster stood out among 17 finalists from across the globe, including the University of Birmingham in the U.K., Spain’s University of Deusto, the University of Johannesburg and the University of Wollongong in Australia. Vancouver Island University was the only other Canadian institution to make the shortlist.
Judges praised McMaster for “the strength of its vision and plan for achieving teaching excellence and the provision of evidence that is embedded institution-wide.” According to McMaster president Patrick Deane, the university has “worked very hard at teaching and learning issues” while building up its international research portfolio. He adds, “Mac is known around the world as the place that gave birth to problem-based learning … and [has] a long history of pedagogical innovation.”
The president notes that the win came largely due to the work of McMaster’s Paul R. MacPherson Institute for Leadership, Innovation and Excellence in Teaching, which started out as one of the first centres on a Canadian campus to focus specifically on the practice of teaching and learning.
Dr. Deane and Arshad Ahmad, vice-provost of teaching and learning, accepted the award on behalf of the university at a ceremony in Edinburgh on July 18.
Share
Most popular
- 01
- 02
- 03
- 04
- 05
Featured Jobs
- Politics and Public Administration - Assistant Professor (Public Policy)Toronto Metropolitan University
- Economics - Associate/Full Professor of TeachingThe University of British Columbia
- Vice-President Research & Scientific EngagementMS Canada
- Public Policy - JW McConnell Visiting ScholarMcGill University
- Fashion - Instructional Assistant/Associate Professor (Creative & Cultural Industries)Chapman University - Wilkinson College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences
More from News
-
Headlines for December 6, 2024
CBC NewsQuebec adopts bill to restrict international student enrolmentUniversities, opposition worry about Bill 74 undermining academic autonomy. CTV NewsUWindsor lands amongst top research universities in CanadaThe University of Windsor has been named one of the top research universities...
-
Headlines for December 5, 2024
City NewsOttawa outlines $2B in spending for artificial intelligence computing powerThe federal government says it will spend up to $1 billion to build public computing infrastructure for the Canadian artificial intelligence sector, part of a $2 billion...
-
Headlines for December 4, 2024
CNW NewsFederal government establishes council to deliver Canada's first National Infrastructure AssessmentSean Fraser, Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada, announced the new Canadian Infrastructure Council, an expert advisory body that will deliver the country's first-ever National...
-
New life for Dimensions
A little over a year after the program was quietly shut down, it has been quietly revived.
More from Campus news
-
New zine developed by OCAD U students helps artists perfect the art of tabling
‘The goal was to create something both practical and visually engaging,’ says one of the creators.
-
Touchdown for a designed-in-Montreal helmet
How two École de technologie supérieure researchers played a key role in developing a new helmet prototype.
-
A 7,600 kilometre expedition in the name of academic research
Quebec adventurers spent months crossing Canada from north to south while participating in three research projects.
-
This religion professor has become the media’s go-to expert on radicalization
Queen's University terrorism researcher Amarnath Amarasingam is no stranger to intersectoral strife.
More from Articles
-
Take part in UA’s gender equity survey
Help promote strategies towards meaningful change.
-
Engaging the public in sidewalk astronomy
The #popscope project energizes public spaces through experiential, free-choice learning.
-
Quebec universities concerned about losing their autonomy
Ottawa has tightened the belt on international student admissions in Canada. Now Quebec wants to implement further changes, but universities are worried the Legault government might go too far.
-
McGill researchers help advance genetic research through a video game
Borderlands Science, a mini-game within the popular Borderlands 3 video game is putting a new spin on citizen science.
Post a comment
University Affairs moderates all comments according to the following guidelines. If approved, comments generally appear within one business day. We may republish particularly insightful remarks in our print edition or elsewhere.