Campus Notices
Please join us for an Open House at the UPEI Health & Wellness Centre to talk about the newly expanded services. The Open House will be held on Friday, February 15th from 1-2:30 pm. Snacks available.
The Faculty of Education formally announces the upcoming PhD defense by
Brittany Jakubiec titled "Out of the Box: Queerying Identity Development for Sexual and Gender Minority Youth in Prince Edward Island".
All are welcome to attend Brittany's public presentation, taking place on Tuesday February 26, 2019 from 2:00 - 2:30 pm in the Irving Chemistry Centre room 104.
The next deadline for submitting Biosafety applications including new applications, renewals and/or amendments is Friday February 22, 2019. These applications will be reviewed at the March 2019 meeting.
Please ensure that you use the new electronic forms available at http://www.upei.ca/research/forms.
Submit the following:
• one hard copy of the application form with signatures and associated documents to Joy Knight at the Office of Academic and Research, 200 Kelley Memorial Building and
• one e-copy of all documents to reb@upei.ca
Please note that applications received after this deadline will be reviewed at the April 2019 meeting. For more information, please contact Joy Knight at 620-5104 or reb@upei.ca
Ethics protocols that involve ‘more than minimal risk’ must be reviewed by the full UPEI Research Ethics Board (REB). The next deadline for submitting these protocols is Monday March 4 2019. They will be reviewed at the March meeting. Protocols involving ‘more than minimal risk’ that are received after March 4 will be reviewed at the April 2019 meeting.
Other ethics protocol submissions, including new applications that do not involve ‘more than minimal risk’, renewals, and amendments may be submitted at any time. They will be sent for delegated review as soon as all necessary forms are received.
Please ensure that you download and use the current forms from http://www.upei.ca/research/forms. Use Adobe Reader to complete forms.
Submit the following:
• one hard copy of the signed application form and associated documents to Joy Knight at the Office of Academic and Research, 200 Kelley Memorial Building and
• one e-copy of all documents to reb@upei.ca
For more information, please contact Joy Knight at 620-5104 or reb@upei.ca
UPEI Multicultural Choir rehearsal scheduled for February 13 is cancelled due to weather. The next rehearsal will be February 27, with pizza to follow, as an end-of-month social event.
The UPEI Multicultural Choir meets Wednesdays from 4:30 pm to 5:30 pm in the Faculty Lounge of UPEI's SDU Main Building. All are welcome - students, staff, and faculty. No past experience is required. Share your voices and culture, meet new friends, relax, have fun, and sing. Contact Justin Amador (jamador@upei.ca) or Joy Nnadi (jnnadi@upei.ca) for more information.
Call for Nominations: UPEIFA Hessian Merit Award for Excellence in Teaching by SESSIONAL Instructor Winter 2019 & FULL-TIME Instructor.
The UPEIFA’s Hessian Merit Award for Excellence in Teaching Committee is currently calling for nominations for this award.
For information on Guidelines and to obtain the Nomination Forms, please visit the UPEI Faculty Association Website at http://www.upeifa.org.
Nominations must be made collaboratively by three or more sponsors & should be sent ELECTRONICALLY by noon Friday, February 15th, 2019 to the Faculty Association Office upeifa@upeifa.org.
Mental Health First Aid is being offered to UPEI students, staff, and faculty for FREE over the February break week. If you would like to participate, please email us at saworkshops@upei.ca to register.
The School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences welcomes the campus community to a public research presentation by Dr. Christopher Power, candidate for tenure track position in Computer Science, on Monday, February 11th at 12:30 pm at Robertson Library, Room 208.
Presentation Title: Designing Accessible Player Experiences
Abstract: Digital games provide opportunities for players to escape from reality, divert themselves from everyday concerns and connect with other players around the world. For players with disabilities, gaming provides all of these experiences and more. Gaming enables players with disabilities to participate in a shared culture with their peers on a level playing field, giving them all not only something to play but something to bond over. Unfortunately, the majority of accessible game design is reactive, relying on checklist approaches from previous generations of technology to drive the selection of accessibility features. This leads to inflexibility that often chafes against the creative process of game design, and leads to an implementation lag in new solutions for the evolving space of barriers encountered by players with disabilities in games. In this talk, Dr. Power will present his research programme aimed at changing this paradigm of accessible game design. He will argue that to break the implementation lag, we need new design thinking tools that allow game professionals to proactively create games that give players the opportunity to tune their own experiences.
All are welcome to attend.
During February, there will be three Triple P Positive Parenting seminars available for all dads and moms of children aged 2-12 who are looking to build better relationships with their children, raise confident children, and reduce stress. Triple P is an international parenting program that gives dads and moms the tools they need to feel confident in their skills as a parent. These seminars are open to anyone who cares for children aged 2-12– whether they be a father, mother, grandfather, grandmother, or any other caregiver. At these 90-minute seminars caregivers can learn strategies to promote good behaviour, help build independence, and help their children strive for success. Seminars will take place at the Murphy’s Community Centre, 200 Richmond Street in Charlottetown. The presenter is Dr. Philip Smith, UPEI Dept. of Psychology. These sessions are free, and childcare is provided. To register , and sign-up for childcare, visit:
www.triplep-parenting.ca/can-en/find-help/triple-p-parenting-in-prince-…
The seminars are on the following dates with the following themes:
Wed, Feb 13, 7:00pm-8:30pm – The Power of Positive Parenting
Wed, Feb 20, 7:00pm-8:30pm – Raising Confident, Competent Children
Wed, Feb 27, 7:00pm-8:30pm – Raising Resilient Children
The Arts Equity and Inclusion group has a new post up for your reading and commenting! It's an episode from the CBC show Unreserved, entitled "Is There Room for Indigenous Knowledge in Academia?" We're suggesting the first interview in particular, but the whole episode is worth a listen! Head on over to http://projects.upei.ca/arts-equity-and-inclusion/category/discussions/ and let us all know your thoughts. We welcome everyone in the campus community to join the conversation!
For more information, contact Ann Braithwaite at abraithwaite@upei.ca
The 2019 Summer Timetable is now available for viewing on myupei. Registration for the Summer Semester opens on February, 19th.
The Faculty of Science Graduate Studies Committee invites the campus community to a presentation by Sean Brillant (Canadian Wildlife Federation & Dalhousie University) entitled: "Finding the right way to save the North Atlantic right whale".
Everyone is welcome. This event is today at 12:30 pm in Duffy Science Centre room 204.
The School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences welcomes the campus community to a public research presentation by Dr. Christopher Power, candidate for tenure track position in Computer Science, on Monday, February 11th at 12:30 pm at Robertson Library, Room 208.
Presentation Title: Designing Accessible Player Experiences
Abstract: Digital games provide opportunities for players to escape from reality, divert themselves from everyday concerns and connect with other players around the world. For players with disabilities, gaming provides all of these experiences and more. Gaming enables players with disabilities to participate in a shared culture with their peers on a level playing field, giving them all not only something to play but something to bond over. Unfortunately, the majority of accessible game design is reactive, relying on checklist approaches from previous generations of technology to drive the selection of accessibility features. This leads to inflexibility that often chafes against the creative process of game design, and leads to an implementation lag in new solutions for the evolving space of barriers encountered by players with disabilities in games. In this talk, Dr. Power will present his research programme aimed at changing this paradigm of accessible game design. He will argue that to break the implementation lag, we need new design thinking tools that allow game professionals to proactively create games that give players the opportunity to tune their own experiences.
All are welcome to attend.
Title: Deciphering the Bat Signal: Evaluation of Mobile Acoustic Transect Surveys on PEI
Robertson Library Movie Talks and UPEI Student Diversity Office (SDO) are presenting the Sundance Film Festival award-winning movie The Miseducation of Cameron Post on Thursday, February 14th.
“Based on the celebrated novel by Emily M. Danforth, The Miseducation of Cameron Post follows the titular character (Chloe Grace Moretz) as she is sent to a gay conversion therapy center after getting caught with another girl in the back seat of a car on prom night.” Kanopy.
FREE movie!
Thursday, February 14th
5 pm, Doors open at 4:30 pm
Duffy Amphitheatre 135
Bring a date, a friend, or come on your own! Everyone is welcome!
Having difficulty navigating purchasing and financial policies/procedures at UPEI? Procurement and Financial Services will be hosting a joint information session to highlight all aspects of the Procurement to Payment process. This session will be beneficial for any employee with budgetary and administrative responsibilities. Topics will include: Spending Authority; How to Make a Purchase; Requests for Payment (and Reimbursement), etc.
Please join Tara Judson, Ian Burge, and Deidre Smith on Thursday, February 14, 2019 in Andrew Hall (rm 142) from 11 to 12:30 pm.
www.triplep-parenting.ca/can-en/find-help/triple-p-parenting-in-prince-edward-island/
The seminars are on the following dates with the following themes:
Wed, Feb 13, 7:00pm-8:30pm – The Power of Positive Parenting
Wed, Feb 20, 7:00pm-8:30pm – Raising Confident, Competent Children
Wed, Feb 27, 7:00pm-8:30pm – Raising Resilient Children
How can we help learners learn more of what they are taught? Students must gather information, deciding when to pay attention and what to pay attention to. In order to make the information stick learners must be able to combine the new information with what they already know, making it personal and meaningful. And last but not least learners must be competent at retrieving that stored information from their heads in a way that shows you they now know what you’ve taught them. This workshop can help you with all of those things. Come check it out on either Monday, February 11th or on Tuesday, March 19th, from 10:30 to 11:30 am in Room 265 of the Robertson Library. REGISTER
Come join us at an OPEN HOUSE for the UPEI Health and Wellness Centre as we welcome our newest member Lynne Fraser, Nurse Practitioner. The UPEI Health and Wellness Centre has expanded its hours of operation and will be open five days per week on a year-round basis. The Centre is also providing care to faculty, staff, and immediate family (spouse, partner, and children). Join us from 1:00 - 2:30 pm on Friday, February 8, 2019 at the UPEI Health and Wellness Centre on the second floor (north) of the W.A. Murphy Student Centre (above the bookstore). Tea/coffee and finger foods will be served!
The School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences welcomes the campus community to a public research presentation by Dr. Christopher Power, candidate for tenure track position in Computer Science, on Monday, February 11th at 12:30 pm at Robertson Library, Room 208.
Presentation Title: Designing Accessible Player Experiences
Abstract: Digital games provide opportunities for players to escape from reality, divert themselves from everyday concerns and connect with other players around the world. For players with disabilities, gaming provides all of these experiences and more. Gaming enables players with disabilities to participate in a shared culture with their peers on a level playing field, giving them all not only something to play but something to bond over. Unfortunately, the majority of accessible game design is reactive, relying on checklist approaches from previous generations of technology to drive the selection of accessibility features. This leads to inflexibility that often chafes against the creative process of game design, and leads to an implementation lag in new solutions for the evolving space of barriers encountered by players with disabilities in games. In this talk, Dr. Power will present his research programme aimed at changing this paradigm of accessible game design. He will argue that to break the implementation lag, we need new design thinking tools that allow game professionals to proactively create games that give players the opportunity to tune their own experiences.
All are welcome to attend.