HomeBlogStudent-Faculty Partnership Considering Time in Students as Partnersby Jessie L. MooreFebruary 12, 2026 Share: Section NavigationSkip section navigationIn this sectionPodcasts – Home 60-Second SoTL Limed: Teaching with a Twist Making College “Worth It” Special Series First-Year Seminars Land Acknowledgement 60-Second SoTL – Episode 73 How does time—including age, career stage, and historical moments—shape students-as-partners work in higher education? And what do we miss when we don’t explicitly account for it? This episode features a secondary qualitative analysis drawing on three prior case studies connected to SoTL and Students-as-Partners work at a Canadian university: Harvey, Kelsey, Katherine R. Cooper, Stephanie Hatzifilalithis, Elisa Do, Julia Cerminara, and Jacob Krone. 2026. “Students as (Intergenerational) Partners: Considering Time in the 4M Framework.” Teaching & Learning Inquiry 13: 1–17. https://doi.org/10.20343/teachlearninqu.14.2 View a transcript of this episode. Show Credits This episode was hosted, edited, and produced by Jessie L. Moore, Director of the Center for Engaged Learning and Professor of Professional Writing & Rhetoric. 60-Second SoTL is produced by the Center for Engaged Learning at Elon University. Music: “Cryptic” by AudioCoffee. Image in episode art is by pch.vector on Freepik. Explore Related Resources A Conversation on What Matters: Collaborative Writing This blog post was written as a conversation piece involving collaborators who started as a student (written by Kira Campagna) and professor (Caroline Ketcham) and became colleagues. The post focuses on work style and the different approaches and experiences we… Reflecting on my Experience as a Neurodivergent Learner I recently started my role as a CEL Student Scholar for the 2024–2026 Research Seminar on Affirming and Inclusive Engaged Learning for Neurodivergent Students. As a neurodivergent student myself, I was able to provide an important perspective for the participants,… Building Trust in Mentoring Relationships Mutual trust is widely recognized as a significant component of effective mentoring relationships because emotional and psychological safety allows both mentors and mentees to use their energy for learning and productivity rather than self-protection. Unfortunately, limited research exists on building… Student-Faculty Partnerships for Co-Constructing Learning Making College “Worth It” – Season 1, Episode 12 In this episode of “Making College Worth It,” hosts Nolan Schultheis and Jessie Moore delve into student-faculty partnerships in higher education. They interview Olivia Choplin, an associate professor at Elon University,… CELebrating Collaboration: Eyes of Innovation As undergraduate CEL Student Scholars working with the Center for Engaged Learning, we often are asked what our roles entail. Both in the context of the research itself, as well as in our partnerships, this collaborative leadership team was developed… 1 2 … 15 16 >