Teaching with purpose:
How the Early Career Academic Fellowship program is building the next generation of engineering educators
How the Early Career Academic Fellowship program is building the next generation of engineering educators
A quiet shift is taking place inside the School of Chemical Engineering, one that鈥檚 helping early career researchers step confidently from the lab into the lecture theatre.
The Early Career Academic Fellowship (ECAF) Program is offering 国民彩票 postdocs something rare: a structured opportunity to gain teaching experience while continuing their research. For many, it鈥檚 their first formal step into education, and a chance to reimagine what it means to be an academic.
鈥淏efore ECAF, I knew I wanted to teach but didn鈥檛 know how to start,鈥 says Dr Xiaoran (Daisy) Chu. 鈥淣ow I know I can do it and enjoy it.鈥
Chu, who previously questioned whether she could ever teach 鈥渨ell enough,鈥 says the program gave her the tools and confidence to find her footing.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just about standing in front of a class. I learned how to design a course, how to adapt for different learners, and most importantly, that you don鈥檛 have to do it alone,鈥 she says.
The fellowship balances teaching and research roughly 50:50, with salary support from both the School and existing grants. Fellows also gain access to mentoring, peer observation, and targeted professional development in pedagogy.
Dr Choon Jie Wong, who joined the program after years of research-led roles, says ECAF helped him bridge the two parts of academic life.
鈥淏eing part of this program gave me a more realistic sense of what the job is: research and teaching are two sides of the same coin,鈥 he says.
Wong鈥檚 fellowship includes a teaching microgrant project to develop interactive courseware for process control, allowing students to explore real-time systems and test 鈥榳hat-if鈥 scenarios.
鈥淚 wanted to give students something beyond the whiteboard. Tools they can play with, learn from, and build confidence through,鈥 he says.
For Dr Seyedeh Maryam Hosseini, the ECAF Program was a chance to turn her passion for teaching into meaningful practice.
鈥淚 was inspired to apply after reflecting on the impact a brilliant lecturer had on me as a student,鈥 she says.
鈥淚 wanted to create that same spark鈥攖o help students see the possibilities in engineering through great teaching.鈥
As part of her fellowship, Hosseini co-taught two product development courses where she introduced peer feedback tools and redesigned assessment rubrics to boost engagement and collaboration.
鈥淲orking with May Lim, we trialled digital platforms that allowed students to evaluate each other鈥檚 work. It helped them reflect more deeply and take ownership of their learning.鈥
She says mentorship from senior academics Pat Spicer and Per Zetterlund played a key role in shaping her teaching style.
鈥淪eeing how differently they approached teaching鈥攁nd how effective both were鈥攔eally expanded my thinking.鈥
Balancing teaching and research helped her grow as a well-rounded academic.
鈥淚t taught me to prioritise, stay focused, and stay student-centred in everything I do.鈥
For others, the motivation to apply was deeply personal. Dr Rishi Ravindra Naik describes ECAF as a natural progression from his early days volunteering with NGOs in North India, teaching children in disadvantaged communities.
鈥淚鈥檝e always felt that education is the most valuable thing we can give,鈥 he says. 鈥淓CAF gave me the structure to grow that passion into a career.鈥
Now lecturing and assisting with labs in core Food Science and Technology / Food Process Engineering courses, Naik says the challenge hasn鈥檛 been lack of knowledge but translating it in a way that resonates.
鈥淭hrough the teaching accelerator and the supervision workshops, I learned how to meet students where they are, not where I assume they should be,鈥 he says.
Dr Federico Mazur joined ECAF to make a bigger impact on the next generation of researchers and professionals.
鈥淚 applied because I wanted to work with students early in their journey,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ot just to teach them content, but to help them build the skills they鈥檒l take into industry or research.鈥
In one of his teaching projects, Mazur mentored two student teams as they designed and built custom battery-powered vehicles. It was a move from one-on-one supervision to managing a group, something he hadn鈥檛 done before.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 always smooth sailing. But it taught me how to guide a team, manage conflict, and keep a shared goal in focus,鈥 he says.
For Dr Yasemin Fadil, the ECAF Program offered a chance to grow beyond research and deepen her impact in the classroom.
鈥淚鈥檝e always enjoyed teaching and supporting students,鈥 she says. 鈥淓CAF gave me the structure to contribute more meaningfully to the School.鈥
As part of her fellowship, Fadil co-developed a new course in the Chemical Product Engineering stream and applied inclusive, learner-centred design principles from the Course Design Institute and FULT.
Balancing teaching with an industry-collaborative research project pushed her to sharpen her time management and leadership skills.
鈥淚t made me a more confident, well-rounded academic and showed me how to support students in a way that really meets their needs.鈥
Participation in ECAF isn鈥檛 limited to classroom time. Fellows also gain insight into curriculum planning, assessment design, and student support, areas that often remain invisible to research-only staff.
Dr Amr Omar says it鈥檚 this behind-the-scenes experience that has been most eye-opening.
鈥淚鈥檇 spent years as a demonstrator and tutor, but I never really saw how courses were built or decisions made,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ow I get it and I鈥檓 part of it.鈥
Omar, who is teaching first-year design students, created a learning resource that explains fluid mechanics through sports. His goal was to make engineering more relatable, especially for students just starting out.
鈥淲hen I saw students quoting the examples back in their final reports, I knew I鈥檇 reached them,鈥 he says.
Since launching, ECAF has helped early-career researchers across the School become confident educators. Some will go on to pursue education-focused roles; others will fold teaching into broader research careers.
But for all of them, the experience has added a new layer to what it means to be an academic.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 separate research from teaching,鈥 says Wong. 鈥淥ne feeds the other.鈥
Applications for the next round of ECAF fellows will open later this year. For now, the current cohort is leading by example 鈥 bringing curiosity, energy and care into every class they teach.