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Burnside 511

  • Location:
  • Capacity: 38 students, plus a 12-seat seminar room with a mobile wall
  • Type: Active learning classroom

Alignment with principles for designing Teaching and Learning Spaces

Academic challenge

Promote individual, active engagement with content.

Layout

Work surfaces for notebooks, laptops, and textbooks: large, shared tables.

Acoustics: Design includes acoustic panels to mitigates distraction from outside and inside noise sources.

Furniture

Adjustable height computer monitors for optimal comfort.

Technologies

Access to infrastructure: desktop computers (1:1 student-computer ratio) and power for student laptops, networked printing. Access to resources: LMS, internet, software.

Lighting & colour

Appropriate overhead and natural lighting for individual work.

Photograph of a classroom in Burnside Hall 511
General view of the classroom.


Learning with peers

Promote active engagement with one another.

Layout

Promote face-to-face communication: hourglass-shaped tables encourage students to communicate with one another in groups of 3 or 6. Individuals can move about easily.

Acoustics: Sound zones support multiple simultaneous conversations among students.

Furniture

Flexible seating (chairs on wheels).

Technologies

Shared workspaces (writable walls, screen-sharing).

Lighting & colour

Sufficient lighting for group work.

View of instructor's desk.


Experiences with faculty

Promote interaction and communication.

Layout

Easy access to all students: Instructor can easily move around room and can circulate from table to table.

Acoustics: Sound zones support multiple simultaneous conversations.

Furniture

Smaller podium does not interfere with sightlines or interaction. Mobile chairs support different teaching strategies (e.g., group work in various sizes, student presentations, etc.)

Technologies

Dual-source projection and multiple classroom technology sources (Smartboard, document camera, instructor computer) and multiple screens permit simultaneous display of different learning materials.

Lighting & colour

Different lighting patterns to support multiple types of teaching tasks.

BURN 511 before renovation.


Contributions to the campus environment

This room is designed to integrate with surrounding spaces; the classroom opens onto a break-out space (Burnside 512) and the Geographic Information Commons (GIC), which provides abundant space and the technological resources for students to work individually or in small groups. This room is designed for all populations using the space: well-lit, with a standardized room control panel that simplifies instructors’ use of equipment in classrooms across campus. University standards were applied, including improved ventilation and sustainable building practices. IT is consistent with teaching and learning needs, and durable furniture contributes to sustainability efforts. Both physical and virtual affordances help maximize High Impact Practices (HIPs) for student learning within and beyond this classroom.


ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ University is on land which has served and continues to serve as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. Teaching and Learning Services acknowledges and thanks the diverse Indigenous peoples whose footsteps mark this territory on which peoples of the world now gather. This land acknowledgement is shared as a starting point to provide context for further learning and action.

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