The 2023 Summer Conference hosted by the Teaching Academy of the Consortium of West Region Colleges of Veterinary Medicine is packed with exceptional opportunities and experiences. Outlined below are the details and schedule of the conference.
To download a digital copy of the conference program, click here!
Keynote Workshops
Cultivating Connections and Community!
Speakers: Benjamin Wiggins, PhD & Marie Holowaychuk, DVM, Dipl. ACVECC
Tuesday, July 18th 10:30 – 11:30 AM PST | Making classroom culture work for your learning goals Any collection of humans at work starts to develop a cultural framework. Within your classroom, especially in the largest classrooms, that culture either hinders or helps your efforts with students. Are they motivated? Are they oriented to the most important challenges? Are they maximizing what they can learn? Student-to-student and student-to-instructor relationships are often the deciding factors for these questions. We will discuss performance aspects of teaching that can help you to mold your culture both to a more effective learning environment as well as a better model for what veterinary workalike can be. Learning Objectives: Participants will be able to identify aspects of their course culture and start to develop a framework for conceptualizing their own individual pedagogical choices Participants will be introduced to, and directly practice, a few discrete teaching moves that can be used to improve classroom culture within the constraints of dense material |
| Workshop | Activating your classroom: Building an active learning format from your existing lecture materials Active learning is a loosely defined, but highly effective, set of teaching practices. By helping students to DO their science, not just hear about their science, active learning techniques can create a more equitable and effective classroom. Even with the preponderance of evidence indicating active teaching, many instructors find that changing from passive to active instruction to be a daunting design challenge. In this workshop, we’ll explore efficient methods for activating pieces of curriculum and generating better outcomes from courses without needing massive investments of time on the part of the students or instructors. Participants should have a course or topic that they teach in mind as we work examples of redesign and are encouraged to bring digital or hardcopy materials. Learning Objectives: Participants will leave with several efficient examples for redesign of a relatively passive unit of instruction Participants will make the first few steps towards that active redesign during the session. |
![]() Thursday, July 20th 8:30 – 9:30 AM PST | It’s Veterinary Practice, Not Perfect: Overcoming Perfectionism and Imposter Syndrome We are taught to believe “practice makes perfect” but the realities of veterinary practice are far from flawless. Perfectionism increases the risk of distress among veterinary team members and can exacerbate mental illnesses and compulsive behaviors. During this session, we will discuss what causes perfectionism and imposter syndrome and how they impact mental health and wellbeing. Attendees will come away with practical strategies for recognizing and recovering from perfectionism and imposter syndrome to support mental wellbeing long term. |
| Workshop: Thursday, July 20th 10:00 AM – 11:30 AM (PST) | Restoring Resilience with Self-Compassion Resilience is a person’s ability to withstand or recover from challenging life circumstances, which occur commonly among veterinary professionals. Research investigating veterinary student resilience has shown that self-compassion, the process of turning compassion inward, boosts resilience. During this interactive workshop, research and theory regarding self-compassion will be shared, supplemented by practical strategies and exercises for practicing self-compassion in everyday life. Attendees will come away understanding the importance of self-compassion and how to regularly practice it to foster resilience. |
![]() Tuesday, July 18th 11:45 – 12:30 pm PST | The Future of Veterinary Medical Education The future of veterinary medicine will be vastly different from the present. Driven primarily by technology, the rate of change across all sectors of society is increasing exponentially, leading to what some observers have called The Singularity: a point where progress is so rapid it outstrips humans’ ability to comprehend it. In order to prepare today’s students for this exponential future, veterinary medical education must shift from a system that is based on inputs such as the number of hours of instruction and measured by outcomes such as recall of knowledge to one that is time-variable and measured by achievement of pre-defined competencies. In short, there must be a change from instructor-centered teaching to student-centered learning. This change will promote a culture of lifelong learning where students take responsibility for their own education and are prepared to meet the challenges and opportunities of the future, whatever they might be. |
RTA Initiatives – Reports
Session Chair – Maria Fahie (WU)
RTA Initiative Workshops
Teaching Innovations
Session Co-Chairs: Thomas Marino, Ilana Halperin, Andrew West, Karen Boudreaux
Scholarship/Educational Research Podium and Poster Sessions
Session Co-Chairs Scholarship: Thomas Marino, Andrew West, Karen Boudreaux
Session Co-Chairs Poster: Jillian Haines, Sarah Guess
Wednesday, July 19th & Thursday, July 20th | Scholarship/Educational Research Podium: Teaching Scholarship/Educational Research are 15-minute podium sessions designed to present educational research to peers, facilitating our mission, and fostering potential collaborative research interests. Priority is given to completed studies not previously published and/or presented elsewhere, preferably including objective measures, statistical analysis, and/or qualitative analysis. Proposals will be reviewed and scored using a rubric with feedback supplied and returned to all submissions. This is a great opportunity to foster collaborative research interests as you share your work! We can’t wait to learn about what you’re trying! |
Tuesday, July 18th 4:00 – 5:00 pm | Poster Session: The primary goal of the poster session is to give as many members as possible the chance to present their work while also preserving time for scientific discussion during abstract presentations. A decision on which abstracts will be presented in traditional podium style and which will be assigned to the poster session will be made following abstract evaluation. Participants selected for a poster presentation will be expected to present a podium talk up to two minutes long. This is intended as an opportunity to promote and enhance the visibility of participants’ work. Summaries may choose to utilize PowerPoint slides (no more than two total) that illustrate key elements of the poster. Poster Sessions are informal times where conference participants peruse posters on a variety of topics by their colleagues. Posters can focus on teaching techniques, budding or developed educational research, and other topics. All submissions will be reviewed using a rubric. |
New RTA Fellow Orientation
More information is coming soon!


Tuesday, July 18th 10:30 – 11:30 AM PST

Tuesday, July 18th 9:00 – 10:00 am PST
EPRT – Wednesday, July 19th 8:30 am PST
Thursday, July 20th 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm PST
Tuesday, July 18th
Wednesday, July 19th & Thursday, July 20th
Tuesday, July 18th 4:00 – 5:00 pm
Monday, July 17th