Sunday’s Keynote – Dr. Saul Carliner
Dr. Saul Carliner has a double-double career in learning and communication with substantial tenures in both academia and industry in both fields. He currently is Professor of Educational Technology and serves as Chair of the Department of Education at Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec in Canada. His teaching and research focus on topics ranging from the design of instructional and informational materials for the workplace, the management of groups that produce these materials, and related issues of professionalism. He has received research funding from SSHRC, Entente Canada-Quebec, Canadian Council on Learning, Society of Technical Communication, and Hong Kong University Grants Council to address the research and scholarship in Technical and Professional Communication, as well as Instructional Design.
As an international consultant, he has provided strategic planning and evaluation services for organizations in Africa, Asia, Australia, North America, and Europe, includiing Alltel Wireless, Boston Scientific, AT&T, Equitas, IBM, Microsoft, ST Microelectronics Turkish Management Centre, Wachovia, and several U.S. and Canadian government agencies.
Among his 250-plus publications are several award-winning articles in Intercom and Technical Communication, the best-selling Training Design Basics, award-winning book Informal Learning Basics, numerous book chapters, articles, and op-eds and over 50 peer-reviewed publications. His recent work focuses on systemic stress on students, their financial wellness and navigation through global and transnational educational systems, as well as studying the bullying faced by LGBTQ+ faculty—all of which has been especially impactful on academic communities.
He has appeared on CNBC Asia, CTV Montreal, Global National, Globe and Mail, Jerusalem Post, Les Affaires, Montreal Gazette, and the Wall Street Journal. His Vice President of the Canadian Network for Innovation in Education, Fellow and past board member of the Institute for Performance and Learning, past Research Fellow of the Association for Talent Development, and Fellow and past international president of the Society of Technical Communication.

