Critical Conversations in CEL: Bridging Theory and Practice II - Turning the Classroom Inside Out: Insights from Co-Learning and Transformative Justice in CEL

Event Type:
Workshop/Seminar
Unit
CCP
Date/Time
Thu Mar 12, 2026 at 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Description

This event is open to all.  

If you have a UTORid, please click the blue "Register with UTORid" button in the registration box to the right (on desktop) or at the bottom (on mobile). If you are external to the University of Toronto, you will need to sign in to the EVE platform in order to register. In the registration box to the right (on desktop) or at the bottom (on mobile), please click "signed in". If you do not already have an EVE account, you can choose to set up an account by signing in with your Google or Facebook account. You can also set up a new account by clicking ‘Sign up’ to set up an account using your name and email, and choosing a password.  


Please reach out to info.ccp@utoronto.ca if you encounter any issues with registering. 

Guests in Conversation: 

  • Aditi Mehta, PhD, Assistant Professor, Teaching Stream, Urban Studies Program, Department of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto 
  • Phil Goodman, PhD, Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Toronto Mississauga 
  • Rachel Fayter, PhD, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, Carleton University

Co-learning is a model of community-engaged learning in which students and non-students learn together in a shared, typically off-campus setting. 

Our three guests are co-learning scholar-practitioners whose work bridges community and university spaces with deep commitments to social justice. Each has used co-learning as an aspirational transformative practice that centres incarcerated, criminalized and otherwise marginalized collaborators in ways that upend hierarchies in university teaching, learning and research. Together they will dialogue with each other and the audience about care, accountability and process in CEL as they address the following questions:  

  • What are the possibilities and limits of co-learning as a model in CEL? What does transformation mean in co-learning pedagogy? How do values and commitments shape process and outcome in co-learning? 
  • Why do co-learning approaches in CEL often centre transformative justice?  What can co-learning and/as transformative justice offer CEL more broadly? What are the implications of this framing?
  • What practices can we implement as CEL educators across CEL models more broadly, to advance justice and transformation?  

To ground and extend this dialogue, our speakers have selected some recommended readings which we encourage participants to engage with in preparation for our collective conversation.

Additional Information

AI-generated closed captioning in English will be available at this event. We strive to create accessible event spaces that suit the needs of all attendees. Are there any accessibility considerations we can address for you in advance of the session? Please email Adrienne Glasgow Harte at a.glasgowharte@utoronto.ca.

Registration Window
Mon Aug 25, 2025 at 9:00 AM to Thu Mar 12, 2026 at 10:30 AM
Attendee Types
Everyone

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