Campus Notices
The Island Lecture Series January lecture is Tuesday, January 15, at 7 p.m. in the SDU Main Building Faculty Lounge on the UPEI campus, and will feature Dr. Margôt Maddison-MacFadyen speaking on the topic, “To be free is very sweet”: The story of Mary Prince, a West Indian slave.
Admission to the lecture is free and everyone is welcome to attend.
The next lecture is scheduled for February 19, 2019. Mark your calendars!
For more information, please contact Laurie at iis@upei.ca or (902) 894-2881.
Telefilm Canada, UPEI Campus Life, and Robertson Library are presenting the award-winning movie Play Your Gender. The documentary, by Nova Scotia-based filmmaker Stephanie Clattenburg, is about the under-representation of women in the music industry.
“Only 6 women have ever been nominated for a Producer of the Year Grammy and no woman has ever won. In PLAY YOUR GENDER, Juno award-winning producer Kinnie Starr is on a quest to find out why this disparity exists by speaking to industry stars and veterans about the realities of being a woman in the recording studio.
Play Your Gender features interviews with Sara Quinn of Tegan & Sara, Melissa Auf der Maur of the Smashing Pumpkins, Patty Schemel of Hole, Chantal Kreviazuk, and many more of the music industry’s most talented women.” https://indiecanent.com/2015/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/PLAY-YOUR-GENDER-Synopsis.pdf
Special guest Wayne Carter, Executive Director, FIN: Atlantic International Film Festival will introduce the film and host a Q&A session after the movie.
Free dinner – pizza, drinks, and cookies (while supplies last)!
Moodle will be updating its theme as part of the spring update happening this May. A preview of the theme has been set up and faculty are invited to try it out before the May update.
Feel free to come to the E-Learning Office's drop-in session Tuesday Jan 15 from 10am to 12pm, or Wednesday Jan 16 from 1pm to 3pm.
If you cannot attend these sessions but are interested in trying out the new theme, please contact moodle@upei.ca for more information.
Fisheries and Seaplants on PEI
The Environmental Studies Book Club Discussion Series
This winter we will be reading and discussing "Time and a Place: An Environmental History of Prince Edward Island" (2016). Our discussions will probe into past and present environmental changes on PEI, and how and why the Islanders are particularly sensitive to environmental issues and enmeshed in their landscape in a way that is unique among Canadians.
During our first discussion we will focus on two chapters: “Lines in the Water: Time and Place in a Fishery“ and “The Mermaid’s Tresses: Seaplants in the Culture and Economy of Prince Edward Island”.
We are thrilled that the authors of these chapters and the book editors, Dr. Edward MacDonald and Dr. Irené Novaczek, will join our discussion.
Date and time: January 16, 2019 at 5pm
Place: The Fox & Crow
All are welcome!
The e-book is available through the UPEI library. https://library.upei.ca/
If have any questions/suggestions, please feel free to contact Dr. Nino Antadze at nantadze@upei.ca
How can I promote more class discussion? What kind of questions should I ask or activities should I set up to stimulate more student engagement? This workshop will help instructors create a more engaging class environment. Offered by the E-Learning Office, this workshop will be offered on two separate dates: February 28th or March 5th from 10:30 to 11:30 am in Room 265 of the Robertson Library. REGISTER
Starting on January 14th, UPEI Experiential Education and Work Integrated Learning will be offering drop-in hours in the new Career Studio in Dalton 209.
Drop-in hours will be every week on the following days:
Monday and Tuesday, 10:00am - 1:00pm
Wednesday and Thursday, 1:00pm - 4:00pm
Students can drop in to meet with a Career Peer Mentor to receive one-on-one help with resumes, cover letters, interview prep, job search, and more. We will also offer to review students' online presence and professionalism with "social media checkups."
2019 Sir James Dunn Animal Welfare Graduate Scholarship
Deadline: noon, Friday, Feb. 22, 2019
The SJDAWC is calling for applications from potential graduate students for the 2019 Sir James Dunn Animal Welfare Graduate Scholarship. The Scholarship will support the training of researchers at the masters or doctoral level to pursue animal welfare research at the University of Prince Edward Island. Both applied or more fundamental approaches to research pertaining to animal welfare are welcome. Applications for 2019 will be accepted until 12pm (noon) (AST) Friday February 22, 2019, with decisions to be announced in April. Students may take up their award at any time of the year but must do so within 12 months of the date of the letter of offer.
Application info: http://awc.upei.ca/2019-sir-james-dunn-animal-welfare-graduate-scholarship/
Please note: All potential graduate students must identify a graduate faculty member willing to supervise the student should the application be successful. This must be included with the application.
The deadline for Animal Care Protocol Submissions (new, renewal, or amendment) is Friday, February 1st for the February meeting.
Ensure you download the current forms from http://www.upei.ca/research/research-services/research-certifications/a…, use the most current Adobe Reader to complete forms (only current forms will be accepted). To view any UPEI ACC SOPs and Polices, they can be accessed through myUPEI at https://portal.upei.ca/facultystaff/administrativeservices/AVCAnimalCare/Pages/default.aspx.
Both the signed hard copy and electronic protocol submission must be submitted by the deadline date.
• Submit one copy of original protocol with signature to AVC - North Annex, Biomedical Sciences Dept., Rm 2302
• Submit an electronic copy to animalcare@upei.ca
Those protocols received after the deadline will be reviewed the following month. The Committee requires at least one month for processing applications.
For more information, please contact Sherri Pineau, ACC Administrative Assistant at 902-566-0973.
The Island Lecture Series January lecture is Tuesday, January 15, at 7 p.m. in the SDU Main Building Faculty Lounge on the UPEI campus, and will feature Dr. Margôt Maddison-MacFadyen speaking on the topic, “To be free is very sweet”: The story of Mary Prince, a West Indian slave.
Admission to the lecture is free and everyone is welcome to attend.
The next lecture is scheduled for February 19, 2019. Mark your calendars!
For more information, please contact Laurie at iis@upei.ca or (902) 894-2881.
Please plan to join us on January 16th from 12-1 in room 328 of McDougall Hall for a talk entitled "Teaching iGen: Considerations for the Next Decade of University Instruction," presented by Dr. Dany MacDonald, Department of Applied Human Sciences.
Students currently attending our classes have been named the iGen generation. With them, these students carry many characteristics that affect how they should be taught. This brown-bag lunch session will start by providing an overview of iGen by identifying important considerations regarding this group of students and subsequently outline implications for the classroom. Following a brief presentation, a discussion regarding the impact of iGen in the classroom will take place.
Individuals interested in reading about iGen can look at the following text. The presentation will be based on the arguments made in the book.
Twenge, J.M. (2017). iGen: Why today’s super-connected kids are growing up less rebellious, more tolerant, less happy – and completely unprepared for adulthood. Simon & Schuster, Inc: New York, NY.
ISBN: 978-1-5011-5198-9
Moodle will be updating its theme as part of the spring update happening this May. A preview of the theme has been set up and faculty are invited to try it out before the May update.
Feel free to come to the E-Learning Office's drop-in session Tuesday Jan 15 from 10am to 12pm, or Wednesday Jan 16 from 1pm to 3pm.
If you cannot attend these sessions but are interested in trying out the new theme, please contact moodle@upei.ca for more information.
Fisheries and Seaplants on PEI
The Environmental Studies Book Club Discussion Series
This winter we will be reading and discussing "Time and a Place: An Environmental History of Prince Edward Island" (2016). Our discussions will probe into past and present environmental changes on PEI, and how and why the Islanders are particularly sensitive to environmental issues and enmeshed in their landscape in a way that is unique among Canadians.
During our first discussion we will focus on two chapters: “Lines in the Water: Time and Place in a Fishery“ and “The Mermaid’s Tresses: Seaplants in the Culture and Economy of Prince Edward Island”.
We are thrilled that the authors of these chapters and the book editors, Dr. Edward MacDonald and Dr. Irené Novaczek, will join our discussion.
Date and time: January 16, 2019 at 5pm
Place: The Fox & Crow
All are welcome!
The e-book is available through the UPEI library. https://library.upei.ca/
If have any questions/suggestions, please feel free to contact Dr. Nino Antadze at nantadze@upei.ca
Starting on January 14th, UPEI Experiential Education and Work Integrated Learning will be offering drop-in hours in the new Career Studio in Dalton Hall room 209.
Drop-in hours will be every week on the following days:
Monday and Tuesday, 10:00am - 1:00pm
Wednesday and Thursday, 1:00pm - 4:00pm
Students can drop in to meet with a Career Peer Mentor to receive one-on-one help with resumes, cover letters, interview prep, job search, and more. We will also offer to review students' online presence and professionalism with "social media checkups."
The Department of Psychology welcomes faculty, students, and the campus community to join us at our next Fiona Papps Colloquium Series on Friday, January 25 at 2pm. Dr. Scott Lee will present "Fetishism According to Lacan: Origins and Perversion in Jeanne by Marie-Hélène Lafon”. The presentation will take place in Main 232. All are welcome to attend.
UPEI Asian Studies-Korean Studies will host the second Korean Movie Night* on January 29 (Tuesday), beginning at 6 pm in ICC 104. Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War (directed by Kang Je-gyu, 2004), the most famous movie on the Korean War, will be shown in Korean with English subtitles. The film starts at 6 pm, and free light refreshments will be served from 5:30 pm. Everyone is welcome.
Location: Room 104, K.C. Irving Chemistry Centre
Date and Time: January 29 (Tuesday), 6:00 PM
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact Dr. Jeongeun Park at jeopark@upei.ca.
* The Korean Movie Night event is supported by UPEI's international Seed Program for Korean Studies grant (AKS-2017-INC-2230001) through the Ministry of Education, Republic of Korea and Korean Studies Promotion Service, the Academy of Korean Studies (AKS).
Starting on January 14, UPEI Experiential Education and Work Integrated Learning will be offering drop-in hours in the new Career Studio.
Drop-in hours will be every week on the following days:
Monday and Tuesday, 10:00am - 1:00pm
Wednesday and Thursday, 1:00pm - 4:00pm
Students can drop in to meet with a Career Peer Mentor to receive one-on-one help with resumes, cover letters, interview prep, job search, and more. We will also offer to review students' online presence and professionalism with "social media checkups."
The Faculty of Nursing Selection Committee has short-listed Dr. Gail Macartney as a candidate for tenure track nursing faculty position. Dr. Macartney's public presentation on Linking Teaching, Learning and Research will be today from 9:00-10:00 am in the Steel Building Rm. 224 .
Please plan to join us on January 16th from 12-1 in room 328 of McDougall Hall for a talk entitled "Teaching iGen: Considerations for the Next Decade of University Instruction," presented by Dr. Dany MacDonald, Department of Applied Human Sciences.
Students currently attending our classes have been named the iGen generation. With them, these students carry many characteristics that affect how they should be taught. This brown-bag lunch session will start by providing an overview of iGen by identifying important considerations regarding this group of students and subsequently outline implications for the classroom. Following a brief presentation, a discussion regarding the impact of iGen in the classroom will take place.
Individuals interested in reading about iGen can look at the following text. The presentation will be based on the arguments made in the book.
Twenge, J.M. (2017). iGen: Why today’s super-connected kids are growing up less rebellious, more tolerant, less happy – and completely unprepared for adulthood. Simon & Schuster, Inc: New York, NY.
ISBN: 978-1-5011-5198-9