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COMPLETE THE CATCA 2025 SURVEY TO IMPROVE FUTURE CONVENTION

CLOSURE REMARKS FROM CATCA 2025!

THANK YOU FOR ATTENDING THE CONVENTION AND FOR CATCA 2026 WILL HAPPEN ON FEBRUARY 19 AND 20, 2026 AT RDP.

STAY TUNED FOR MORE INFORMATION FROM YOUR ATA LOCALS.

All pre-recording videos will be up until May 31st.


Venue: RDP Room 1328 clear filter
Thursday, February 20
 

9:00am MST

How to get students speaking in French and decrease behaviors.
Thursday February 20, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am MST
Getting kids to speak in French is hard, it's even harder when you're dealing with behaviors. I'll offer some tips and tricks on how to get your students speaking in French early in the year and share how the techniques I use have deceased behaviors. During the session, I'll share resources, real-life examples, games and oral activities to get ALL students speaking in the target language. In the end, we will open it up for discussion and share what works in your classroom and what you need help with for a bit of collab surrounding the issue of oral production and language.
Speakers
avatar for Kaela Masikewich

Kaela Masikewich

Teacher
Hi, I`m Kaela, and I currently teach Grade 2 FI. I have been teaching for almost 10 years and taught grades 9,7,6,4 in a French Immersion setting. French is my passion and I especially love to teach writing structures and grammar.
Thursday February 20, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am MST
RDP Room 1328

10:20am MST

Dangerous Language Arts: Praxis to Support Safety in Risk-Taking
Thursday February 20, 2025 10:20am - 11:20am MST
Taking up controversy can be so engaging but becomes so much work when things slide off the rails! In our pluralistic, conflict-driven society, teachers must often hold space in our classrooms for challenging topics and examining multiple views. In the face of increasing unrest in our globalizing world, how can teachers create safety in which students can risk voicing ideas and exploring difficult topics without creating conflict? If critical, argumentative dynamics and writing are the focus, how can we strike a balance and create an environment without ideological blow-outs? In this follow-up session to the DLA Theory, we shift from introductions, intangible framing, and boundary establishment to practical hands-on pedagogical planning. I’ll offer a series of practical ways teachers can begin to or further implement the safety/ risk taking paradox and provide time and support for planning something “dangerous” for your own students. Bring a challenging text to work from OR draw from ideas and texts I’ll share to build a learning process or product that fits YOUR students, and encourages them to grow into practiced evaluators, communications, and push their comfort boundaries when they feel safe to do so. Holding space for this important work while feeling supported and confident with current research instead of on edge or at sea will bring you new confidence in building safe foundations from which to teach dangerously and allow your students to take new risks in their communication.
Speakers
avatar for Liz Harrison

Liz Harrison

Teacher
Liz Harrison has been teaching high school students for over a decade, and works to hold space and time for students to become courageously vulnerable creators and authentic communicators. Liz completed a Master of Education in Canadian Literacies in 2024 and is in the second-last... Read More →
Thursday February 20, 2025 10:20am - 11:20am MST
RDP Room 1328

11:40am MST

How to Keep the Movers, Shakers, Doers, and Makers in the Academic Stream
Thursday February 20, 2025 11:40am - 12:40pm MST
Have you noticed something changing between early middle school and later secondary school grades? After years of observing the shift in classroom dynamics, I took intentional action to support learners who struggle to ‘sit still and get to work’. Many students struggle with the behaviors academic streaming implies and seemingly requires, but it doesn’t have to be like this: teachers can implement practices that create dynamic engagement and rely on, instead of fight against, those creative, boisterous, and enthusiastic energies! In this session, I’ll share strategies and project exemplars that have changed the classroom dynamics of my 20 and 30 –1 classes by working to support, instead of struggle with, the need students have to move, speak, and learn in ways that are not strictly or silently textual. I’ll share approaches and plans that showcase the benefits of energetic, dynamic learners through interactive, experiential, situation, and multimodal process and product forms. Walk away from this session with new ways to support learners who struggle with static coursework by prioritizing conversational, hands-on learning. Your students will begin to see their capabilities and learning superpowers: no longer ‘villains’ who just can’t sit still, but rather heroes of and in their own learning.
Speakers
avatar for Liz Harrison

Liz Harrison

Teacher
Liz Harrison has been teaching high school students for over a decade, and works to hold space and time for students to become courageously vulnerable creators and authentic communicators. Liz completed a Master of Education in Canadian Literacies in 2024 and is in the second-last... Read More →
Thursday February 20, 2025 11:40am - 12:40pm MST
RDP Room 1328

1:00pm MST

Practicing Metissage for Compassion, Narrative Communication, & Community Building
Thursday February 20, 2025 1:00pm - 2:00pm MST
Connecting with Indigenous Ways of Knowing and offering rich experiences in support of TQS 5 can be intimidating, especially for non-Indigenous teachers. While we cannot have first-hand knowledge of the hardships and celebrations of our Indigenous peoples, we are privileged to have the opportunity to impact hearts and minds in the spirit of reconciliation and continue to pursue practical methods of reconcili-ACTION in our classrooms. I’ll share my experience of developing a research project and unit plan for my 30-1 students, and the widely applicable learning, growth, and gold that was generated through our practices of metissage, or collaborative storytelling and narrative weaving. Students can to learn to see themselves and one another in fresh, exciting, vulnerable, and deeply impactful ways as they share their own narrative strands and braid their stories with the stories of others while making choices for their own comfort and safety. The incredible transformation power I witnessed unfold with my class during my research has led me to continue practicing processes reflective of metissage, and has continued to support both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students in remarkable and exciting ways. If you struggle with supporting kids as they seek out and navigate peer, friend, classmate, and community connections, implementing practices of metissage (from major to minor approaches) will allow you to hold space and support new depths of inter- and intra-personal understandings with your students and your classroom community as a whole through this beautiful narrative practice.
Speakers
avatar for Liz Harrison

Liz Harrison

Teacher
Liz Harrison has been teaching high school students for over a decade, and works to hold space and time for students to become courageously vulnerable creators and authentic communicators. Liz completed a Master of Education in Canadian Literacies in 2024 and is in the second-last... Read More →
Thursday February 20, 2025 1:00pm - 2:00pm MST
RDP Room 1328

2:20pm MST

Children’s book writing, publishing and using
Thursday February 20, 2025 2:20pm - 3:20pm MST
Adventures of Willow- children’s chapter book. How I wrote and published. Using the book in grades 2-5. Study Guide of activities.
Speakers
NM

Norm McDougall

Teacher Red Deer Public, retired. Taught all levels, elementary phys. Ed. specialist. Middle School generalist. High School English.
Thursday February 20, 2025 2:20pm - 3:20pm MST
RDP Room 1328
 
Friday, February 21
 

9:00am MST

Computational Thinking 101: Foundations for Every Educator
Friday February 21, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am MST
Unlock the power of computational thinking for you and your students! Discover how computational thinking can enhance problem-solving skills while connecting with storytelling, nature, art, and more. This session provides a gentle introduction to core concepts found in the new curriculum such as decomposition, abstraction, and algorithms. Through exploring a variety of activities, both plugged-in and unplugged, you’ll learn how to seamlessly incorporate these principles into your classroom regardless of subject or grade level. No prior experience in teaching computer science needed!
Please bring a laptop, Chromebook or tablet to this session
Speakers
avatar for Maura Armstrong

Maura Armstrong

Director, Education, Maura Armstrong
TELUS World of Science - Edmonton inspires life-long learning as we create a positive science and technology culture in our region. Enjoy our themed galleries, Zeidler Dome, IMAX Theatre, and Science Stage. We offer an array of in-person and virtual school programs. Our programs are... Read More →
Friday February 21, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am MST
RDP Room 1328

11:40am MST

Exploring the New Curriculum Through MakeCode Arcade Games
Friday February 21, 2025 11:40am - 12:40pm MST
Strengthen your students’ problem-solving skills and engage creatively with the curriculum by creating games in Microsoft MakeCode Arcade! This session will provide you with the foundational knowledge to help your students design their own video games, then bring those games to life through block-based coding. Learn how computational thinking skills such as pattern recognition, algorithm design, and debugging are necessary when coding and how to connect games to cur-ricular concepts in any subject. This session explores connections to the Computer Science curriculum for grades 4 and up.

One lucky participant will head back to class with a new Micro:bit!
A laptop, Chromebook, or tablet is required for this session.
Some devices will be available for loan on a first come, first served basis.
Speakers
avatar for Maura Armstrong

Maura Armstrong

Director, Education, Maura Armstrong
TELUS World of Science - Edmonton inspires life-long learning as we create a positive science and technology culture in our region. Enjoy our themed galleries, Zeidler Dome, IMAX Theatre, and Science Stage. We offer an array of in-person and virtual school programs. Our programs are... Read More →
Friday February 21, 2025 11:40am - 12:40pm MST
RDP Room 1328

1:00pm MST

Double Trouble: The Online Side of Sex Ed
Friday February 21, 2025 1:00pm - 2:00pm MST
Social media is a staple in teenage lives, and many kids have their own cell phones as young as grade 5. This means not only do youth need support learning skills for face-to-face life, but also online life. When it comes to sexual health, social media makes for double duty on skills to stay safe, protect their privacy, make healthy decisions and foster happy relationships. This session will empower teachers to tackle social media and online aspects in their sexual health units such as sexting, sextortion, pornography, gender stereotypes, online dating, privacy, and more! We will cover how these topics relate to curriculum objectives, what youth need to know, and how much detail to provide.
Participants will leave with a pocket full of evidence-based resources to support their unit design, and the confidence to tackle this topic and meet best practice standards.
Speakers
CM

Carlie McPhee

Meet Carlie (she/they) - your go-to authority on all things sexual health education.Carlie has been working in the Sexual & Reproductive Health field as a specialized sexual health educator for over a decade across western Canada. She has a Bachelor of Kinesiology in Leadership in... Read More →
Friday February 21, 2025 1:00pm - 2:00pm MST
RDP Room 1328
 


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