At Renison, we care about students’ well-being and we care about equity. The Care & Equity in Teaching Fellows Initiative was created by faculty, for faculty. With the enthusiastic support of our VPAD, Kristiina Montero, we are leveraging evidence-based practices that require a relatively small time commitment from instructors but have potential to be transformative for students.
Our Purpose
The Care & Equity in Teaching Initiative was created in response to the challenges many students face, including well-being struggles, isolation, and other barriers to success. These challenges can particularly impact students from equity-deserving groups, affecting their learning, academic achievement, and retention.
Instructors are generally aware of students’ challenges, but instructors are facing challenges of their own, from precarious employment, to heavy workloads, to burnout.
This initiative is designed to support instructors in making low-lift, scientifically-validated changes that can improve students’ experiences, learning, and achievement.
The initiative starts with a set of free, evidence-based, evaluated resources created for the Student Experience Project (SEP), a collaborative of university leaders, faculty, researchers and national education organizations committed to innovative, research-based practices to increase degree attainment by building equitable learning environments and fostering a sense of belonging on campus. The SEP has a Renison connection - Dr. Christine Logel, a founder of the Care & Equity in Teaching initiative. Dr. Logel was a lead scholar on the Student Experience Project and part of the team that created a library of teaching practices in her role as co-founder of the College Transition Collaborative and now as Consulting Scholar with the Equity Accelerator.
Focus for 2025: The Joy of Teaching. Many instructors report that, although teaching can be hard work, it can also be a source of purpose and even joy. The world needs more joy and purpose in these uncertain times, so the Care & Equity in Teaching team will be focusing workshops and resources on ways instructors can draw energy from their teaching, have fun in the classroom, and reconnect with the difference they make in students’ lives—and how their joy and sense of purpose can create a better learning experience for students.
What We Do
This initiative brings together dedicated instructors who are passionate about teaching and committed to fostering more inclusive, supportive, and effective learning environments. These instructors share their strategies for supporting student belonging, growth, and well-being, and learn the science behind the student experience so they can apply it in their own classrooms.
Fellows are experienced university instructors who bring their own expertise. As part of this initiative, they actively engage in both structured learning and hands-on application.
Our inaugural group of Care & Equity in Teaching Fellows actively engaged in both structured learning and hands-on application. Fellows worked on evidence-based strategies to bring more care and equity into their classrooms, including fostering a sense of belonging, cultivating a classroom culture of growth, and communicating care to students. They engaged with research from psychology and educational psychology, gaining insights into the cognitive and contextual processes behind these strategies and how they contribute to student success. They also explored resources that support equitable teaching and planned how to apply these strategies in their own classrooms.
Key Resources
- Classroom Practices Library: Classroom Practices Library - Equity Accelerator
- Tools and Resources for the Equity Accelerator: Higher Education Tools & Resources - Equity Accelerator
- Overview of the Student Experience Project: Home - Student Experience Project
Get Involved
Interested in joining our Teaching Fellows?
Interested in having our team give a free workshop?
Email Christine Logel: clogel@uwaterloo.ca
UW Teaching and Learning Conference

Christine Logel, Carrie Mitchell, and Katie Plaisance presented at the UW Teaching and Learning Conference 2025: "Enhancing Student Wellbeing in Higher Education: Insights from the WiSER@Waterloo Pilot." Their session highlighted innovative, research-informed strategies to support student wellbeing in university settings.
Dr. Logel won the 2025 Faculty Teaching Award!

In recognition of exceptional teaching, Dr. Logel won the 2025 Faculty Teaching Award! Her dedication to student success and evidence-based teaching continues to inspire both colleagues and learners.