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Workshops & seminars, Meetings

Teaching with contemplative practices (Part 1): Valuing presence, connection, and mutual flourishing


Date & time
Thursday, September 18, 2025
10 a.m. – 10:45 a.m.

Registration is closed

Other dates

Friday, September 19, 2025

Speaker(s)

LeeRay Costa, PhD

Cost

This event is free.

Where

Online

This workshop is part of the Contemplative Practices Summit series.

In this two-part session participants will learn about the use of contemplative practices in the classroom and their positive impacts on student learning and flourishing. In session 1, Dr. Costa will briefly summarize research on contemplative pedagogy and its student learning outcomes, and introduce her personal and pedagogical practice of making earth altars. Earth altars are human-made creations using natural materials like leaves, flowers, rocks, and other found elements. They provide opportunities to connect with nature, express gratitude, process change, and engage in reflection. Participants will be invited to practice creating their own earth altars in the intervening time between sessions 1 and 2, with the option to post images of their earth altars to a shared digital site. Session 2 will provide time for shared reflection and discussion with a focus on the grounding, embodied, and relational aspects of contemplative practices, and their ability to foster deepened attention, presence, and connection (among other things) in the learning environment.

Session 1: September 18, 10:00-10:45

Session 2: September 19, 10:00-10:30

grass, red leaves, pine cones and small stones arranged in a circle on the ground Earth altar example 1
yellow leaves, spruce and red petals arranges in a circle on bricks Earth altar example 2
green, red, and yellow leaves arranged in circular pile on moss Earth altar example 3
A smiling person with short gray hair and purple glasses, wearing a colorful patterned blouse, standing outdoors with a blurred background of greenery and pink flowers.

Facilitator’s bio

LeeRay Costa, PhD is a lifelong contemplative practitioner and has been actively integrating contemplative practices into her teaching since 2012. Trained as a feminist cultural anthropologist, she currently serves as Executive Director of the Batten Leadership Institute, and Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies / Anthropology at Hollins University in Roanoke, Virginia. She is co-editor of the book Contemplative Practices and Acts of Resistance in Higher Education: Narratives Toward Wholeness (Routledge, 2024). Her current interests include engaging spirituality, contemplative practices, and creative expression in the service of leadership, human flourishing, and transformative social change.

Logo of Quebec's ministère de l'Enseignement supérieur with blue and white flag with fleur de lys

This program is funded by Quebec's ministère de l'Enseignement supérieur, through contributions from the Canada-Québec Agreement on Minority-Language Education and Second-Language Instruction.

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