Original Lilly Conference on College Teaching “Evidence-Based Teaching and Learning”

Announcements

Registration is now open; Early Bird discount ends on October 15


42nd Annual Original Lilly Conference:November 16-18, 2023!


Important Dates

CONFERENCE

Preconference workshops:
November 16, 2023
Conference Dates:
November 16-18, 2023

PROPOSALS

Proposal Submission Opens:
March 2023
Proposal Submission Closes:
June 30, 2023

REGISTRATION

Registration Opens:
May 31, 2023
Early Bird Registration Closes:
October 15, 2023
Registration is limited to 600 people at this time.


Our 2023 Plenary speakers!

Paul Hanstedt,

 author, Creating Wicked Students: Designing Courses for a Complex World; Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Innovation, University of Minnesota Rochester

Teresa Nance,

Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion; Communication, Villanova University

John Warner,

Co-Principal, Eyler Warner & Associates; author, Why They Can’t Write: Killing the Five-Paragraph Essay and Other Necessities and The Writer’s Practice: Building Confidence in Your Nonfiction Writing


Miami University’s Land Acknowledgment

Miami University is located within the traditional homelands of the Myaamia and Shawnee people, who along with other indigenous groups ceded these lands to the United States in the first Treaty of Greenville in 1795. The Miami people, whose name our university carries, were forcibly removed from these homelands in 1846.

In 1972, a relationship between Miami University and the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma began and evolved into a reciprocal partnership, including the creation of the Myaamia Center at Miami University in 2001. The work of the Myaamia Center serves the Miami Tribe community and is dedicated to the revitalization of Miami language and culture and to restoring that knowledge to the Myaamia people.

Miami University and the Miami Tribe are proud of this work and of the more than 140 Myaamia students who have attended Miami since 1991 through the Myaamia Heritage Award Program.