摘要:The reputation of Sir Wilfred Grenfell College, a campus of Memorial University of Newfoundland,is a narrative in which undergraduate student teaching is at the heart of the institution’s mandate.Central to this narrative is the premise that a lower student/faculty ratio enhances the learningenvironment as it increases the potential for interaction between the two. However, a growingawareness in post-secondary education is the necessity of students interacting with each other as animportant element in facilitating intellectual growth and constructing a sense of belonging within theacademy. At Sir Wilfred Grenfell College, a psychology and a French professor piloted a thematiclearning community project in the fall of 2006 bringing together 16 students registered inintroductory French and psychology courses. These students attended both classes together and metonce a week for an additional 50-minute session. The premise of the additional session, as well asthe project itself, was to enable students to appreciate the overarching themes connecting twoseemingly unrelated disciplines and to understand better the interconnectedness of their first-yearundergraduate experience both intellectually and personally. This paper will outline how the learningcommunity project at SWGC fits the institutional mandate, how it has been influenced by recenttrends in pedagogy of higher learning, and how the project was designed and executed.