UPEI Women's Hockey game tonight cancelled

The UPEI Women’s Hockey game scheduled for October 21 at MacLauchlan Arena versus Université de Moncton has been cancelled due to the passing of Ralph Manning earlier today.

Ralph Manning was owner of Panther Sports Physiotherapy and was chief physiotherapist for UPEI’s varsity athletics teams. He was very well known in Island community for his warm good-natured personality and dedication to providing quality physical therapy. The University has issued an official statement on upei.ca.

Flags on campus will be lowered to half mast in memory of Manning.

 

Join UPEI’s Executive MBA Book Club October 27 at Indigo. Everyone welcome!

UPEI’s Executive MBA program is excited to officially launch the EMBA Book Club.

Indigo! has graciously offered to partner by providing a meeting space at their Charlottetown store location. The first meeting will be on October 27th at 7 pm at Indigo! The first book is Give and Take by Adam Grant, published by Penguin Books.

All are welcome. We encourage everyone to get involved and bring a friend.

The EMBA Book Club’s books are selected by faculty at the UPEI School of Business. Sessions will be moderated by a School of Business faculty member.

This is a great way to get or stay connected with the UPEI School of Business and to support continuous learning.

For more information, contact Susan Graham, scgraham@upei.ca. For a complete list of meeting dates and book titles, visit the EMBA website

Winter’s Tales Reading Series presents Joan Clark

Whether you have read and enjoyed Joan Clark’s writing for years or are first reading about her now, her influence on Canadian literature and on her readers is undeniable. She has published four adult novels (including the highly acclaimed Latitudes of Melt and An Audience of Chairs), ten young adult novels, and two short story collections. Considering this creative output, it is incredible that Clark—born and raised in Nova Scotia—did not start seriously writing until somewhat later in life when she moved to Alberta with her husband, Jack. 
 
Clark has said that the West inspired her initial writing. While much of her writing is influenced by Canadian regions—especially Newfoundland since she settled there in the 1980s—Clark has also said in reference to the “Canadianness” of her writing that “Literature is about transcending boundaries of all kinds.”
 
She will give a public reading and sign books on October 28 at 7:30 pm in the Confederation Centre Art Gallery. The reading is part of the Winter’s Tales Authors’ Reading Series and is sponsored by the UPEI Faculty of Arts and The Canada Council for the Arts.
 
Joan Clark first learned the art of story telling from listening to her father, and from there, she developed a compulsion to tell stories. She is a highly empathetic writer when it comes to her characters, making her writing process, and the resulting fiction, very authentic. In fact, Clark—saying that she “could revise forever”—views her works as moldable pieces that should continue to be shaped as she continues her journey.  
 
A founding member of the Writer’s Guild of Alberta and a co-founder of the literary journal Dandelion, Clark has won numerous awards for her writing, including the Marian Engel Award to honour her entire body of work, as well as the Vicky Metcalf Award to honour her writing for inspiring Canadian youth. She is also a member of the Order of Canada.  
 
Clark and her “zany sense of humour” will be travelling from her home in Newfoundland to grace Islanders with a reading of her fiction, including her new novel The Birthday Lunch. All are welcome to enjoy this literary gem.
 

Message from the President

Dear Colleagues:

As a follow-up to my September 29th message, I’d like to provide an update on UPEI’s enrolment and course registration for fall 2015. UPEI’s enrolment results for 2015-16 tell an interesting story. Over the past year, UPEI succeeded in increasing application numbers and conversion rates, and significantly improved first year retention. UPEI also achieved growth in international student enrolment by 9%, domestic enrolment (students from outside PEI) by 3%, and graduate student numbers by 15%.  

The Association of Atlantic Universities (AAU) released data today from its 2015-2016 Survey of Enrolments. In relation to the other 15 universities in Atlantic Canada, UPEI placed sixth in respect to maintaining enrolment, with a 2 percent decline in the overall student body.  This places UPEI slightly above the Maritime average and just slightly below the Atlantic average for enrolment change as compared to 2014.

Although some levelling-off in student enrolment has been anticipated, shrinking demographics within our Island K-12 schools are a growing cause of concern for UPEI and our entire province. Between September 2013 and September 2014 alone, the total Grade 12 enrolment within PEI high schools fell by approximately 4%. From a regional perspective it is forecast there will be 34,900 fewer people in the typical university age range (18-24 years) in PEI, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick between 2012 and 2025.  PEI will see a decline of approximately 20% for this age group in the time frame.

While we cannot control the demographics in our region, with the number of high school students on the Island declining, we can control our accessibility to university studies through new academic programming, enhanced scholarships and awards, more support for students as they transition into university life, guaranteed residence accommodation for first year students, and earlier registration options for students. The quality of the student experience at UPEI is second-to-none and I know that together we continue to strive for excellence.

2015/2016 UPEI enrolment, by the numbers:

Total:                                         4,317 (down 2.0%)
Undergraduate:                         3,869 (down 3.6%)
Graduate:                                  448 (up 15.2%)
International:                             748 (up 9.2%)

A full breakdown of enrolment numbers for universities across the Atlantic Provinces can be found at the AAU’s website.

Thank you

 

Alaa

Panther-packed weekend! All teams see action

UPEI Athletics & Recreation is ready for one of the biggest weekends of the varsity season. It’s a Panther-packed weekend! All of our teams will be on the ice, on the field, in the pool, or on the track.

Nine teams are in action throughout the weekend, playing 13 games. Swimming and cross country will compete in AUS Invitational events. In addition, UPEI Athletics is hosting the Mickey Place Memorial Basketball Tournament and the home openers of the women’s and men’s hockey teams.

“Since my arrival at UPEI almost a year ago, I have been extremely impressed by the effort and spirit of our student athletes, coaches and staff,” said Chris Huggan, UPEI Athletic Director. “Their energy combined with the university’s commitment and support to athletics and recreation has positioned us extremely well for long-term growth and success. This Panther-Packed weekend involves all of our teams and is one we have been looking forward to for a long time. We are excited about hosting and connecting with our alumni and fans as we showcase our student-athletes, teams and game day experience.”

Friday, October 16

5:00 pm (W) Soccer vs UdeM
6:00 pm (W) Basketball vs Bishops (Mickey Place Tournament)
7:00 pm (M) Hockey vs DAL (Home Opener)
7:15 pm (M) Soccer vs UdeM
8:00 pm (M) Basketball vs UNB (Mickey Place Tournament)

Saturday, October 17

2:00 pm (W) Rugby vs SMU (Senior's Day)
6:00 pm (W) Basketball vs Ottawa (Mickey Place Tournament)
7:00 pm (M) Hockey vs StFX
8:00 pm (M) Basketball vs UMFK (Mickey Place Tournament)

Sunday, October 18

1:00 pm (W) Basketball vs Acadia (Mickey Place Tournament)
3:00 pm (M) Basketball vs HC (Mickey Place Tournament)
6:00 pm (W) Hockey vs MtA (Home Opener)

For more information on the Panthers weekend schedule visit: gopanthersgo.ca.

For information on the Mickey Place Tournament visit: gopanthersgo.ca/mickey-place-memorial-basketball-tournament.

All AUS regular season are webcast and available at www.austv.ca.

Follow the games on Twitter at @upeipanthers and by using the following hashtags #pantherpackedweekend2015 and #gopanthersgo.

Check out our UPEI Athletics & Recreation Facebook page for updates through the weekend and watch for upeipanthers1 on Instagram.

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation

  • Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
  • Proud member of the AUS and CIS
  • Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place and UPEI Turf
  • Home of Panther Sports Medicine
  • Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas

UPEI Field Hockey ready for AUFH Championship Weekend

UPEI Field Hockey is ready to challenge for the Atlantic University Field Hockey Championship this weekend in Halifax. After finishing regular season tournament play in third, the Panthers look to play their best field hockey of the season at the right time.

Coach Sheila Bell commented, “As we enter into our final tournament with high expectations and feeling confident in all areas of the field, we look forward to playing quality competition.  SMU has played us strong all season and we have made adjustments in order to reach our potential offensively.”

She added, “We will be counting on our veterans Kathryn Koughan and Sydney Stavert to set the tone and bring a new level of intensity as they have been doing leading up to this weekend. Laura Young has moved from centre back to the wing and has proven she has a natural scoring touch which will compliment Alyssa Ferguson up front.”

In Saturday’s pool play, UPEI will play SMU (1st in tier 1) at 1:00 pm and Acadia (3rd in Tier 2) at 3:00 pm.  Both games will be played on Dalhousie’s turf field. Championship Sunday will be hosted by SMU with Semifinal  #1  (1st Pool A vs 2nd in Pool B ) at 9:00 am  and  Semifinal #2 ( 1st Pool B vs  2nd in Pool A) at 10:15 am.

The AUFH Bronze Medal game is scheduled for 12:30 pm with the Championship at 2:30 pm. The All-Star and Major Awards presentation will follow the Championship game.

League play consisted for two tiers; tier 1 was comprised of UPEI, SMU, and DAL and tier 2 UNB, Acadia, St FX, and Mt A, but both tiers come together as one for the Atlantic Championship.

UPEI have two graduating students in their line up: Emily Ross, defender and fourth-year Nursing student and Katherine Koughan, sweeper and Business student. 

In honour of the late Ralph Manning, the Panthers will wear “RM” on their uniforms.  During the Field Hockey team’s recent home tournament at UPEI which included 16 games and 7 universities, Manning’s team of physiotherapists and trainers covered the entire tournament.  The team will be playing for Ralph this weekend.

“We are going into this tournament with heavy hearts,” said Bell. “And we will be remembering Ralph Manning and honouring his dedication and kindness he shared with so many.”


About UPEI Athletics and Recreation
• Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
• Proud member of the AUS and CIS
• Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place
• Home of Panther Sports Medicine
• Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas

 

UPEI announces Subway Athletes of the Week, October 19–25

UPEI Athletics and Recreation recognizes the hard work and dedication of talented Panther student-athletes to their respective sports by naming weekly Subway Athletes of the Week. The UPEI Panther Subway Athletes of the Week for the week of October 19–25 are Sydney Stavert, Field Hockey, and Cole MacMillan, Men’s Soccer.

UPEI Athletes of the Week are also nominated to Atlantic University Sport and Canadian Interuniversity Sport for possible recognition in the region and/or country.

Who:  Sydney Stavert, Field Hockey; and Cole MacMillan, Men’s Soccer

What: UPEI Panther Athletes of the Week

When: Week of October 19–25

Where: University of Prince Edward Island

Why:  Stavert, a third-year Bachelor of Science student from Charlottetown, played the best field hockey of her life during this past weekend’s AUFH Championship Tournament. Stavert controlled the games with intensity and passion, set the pace all weekend, and led the Panthers to almost perfect field hockey, even scoring a shootout goal. The entire Panther team enjoyed a strong weekend; their results shown through a 1-1 tie with SMU, a 4-0 win over UNB, and another 4-0 win over Acadia. They lost an exciting Championship game, 2-1, in overtime against Dalhousie.

MacMillan, a fifth-year Bachelor of Arts student from Stanhope, PEI, played two outstanding games over the weekend. In the Panthers 2-0 win at Mount Allison on Friday, MacMillan set up a goal, and then during Sunday’s 1-1 tie with Acadia kept his team in the game.


About UPEI Athletics and Recreation

  • Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
  • Proud member of the AUS and CIS
  • Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place and UPEI Turf
  • Home of Panther Sports Medicine
  • Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas

UPEI Subway Athletes of the Week for October 26-November 1

The UPEI Panther Subway Athletes of the Week for October 26-November 1 are Jerika Gimpel, Women’s Soccer, and Darcy Ashley, Men’s Hockey.

UPEI Athletics and Recreation selects these talented athletes to recognize their hard work and dedication to their respective sports. UPEI Athletes of the Week are also nominated to Atlantic University Sport and Canadian Interuniversity Sport for possible recognition in the region and/or country.

Who:  Jerika Gimpel, Women’s Soccer; and Darcy Ashley, Men’s Hockey

What: UPEI Panther Athletes of the Week

When: Week of October 26-November 1

Where: University of Prince Edward Island

Why:  Gimpel, a fourth-year Bachelor of Science, Nursing student from Alliston, Ontario, had a strong season for the Panthers. During two tough losses on the weekend, 2-0 versus Mount Allison, and 3-1 versus University of New Brunswick, Gimpel’s speed, skill and intelligent runs helped create a number of scoring opportunities for the Panthers. She also scored a goal against UNB.

Ashley, a second-year Bachelor of Science student from Brooklyn, PEI, took his game to another level this weekend. During the Panthers’ 4-2 loss against Saint Mary’s and 4-1 loss versus Acadia, Ashley scored two goals and played with high intensity and determination.

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation
• Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
• Proud member of the AUS and CIS
• Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place and UPEI Turf
• Home of Panther Sports Medicine
• Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas


 

October is university “rankings” season

Below is a message from President Abd-El-Aziz that was issued to the campus community earlier today.

 
Dear colleagues,

Universities are rated and ranked by several organizations using a variety of methods. Some reports are international, while others like The Globe and Mail’s “Canadian University Report” and Maclean’s “University Rankings” are Canadian in scope. Some data is comparative, either comparing universities of similar size or within a region, while other data, like that collected in the National Survey of Student Engagement, is more customized so that the university can use it as an improvement tool. It turns out that both The Globe and Mail’s and Maclean’s data are issued in October.

The “2016 Canadian University Report”, published on October 22, rates UPEI as above average in terms of bursaries and awards, positive change, and library resources. I am so proud to see that UPEI student Alexandra Heighington is prominently featured in one of the stories included in the report about how location plays a part in a prospective student’s decision on what university to attend. Also, in the profile for UPEI, it states, “UPEI announced construction of the School of Sustainable Design Engineering, an interdisciplinary approach to engineering that aims to train students to be globally aware, creative problem solvers. The opening of the new school is one of the first steps in the university’s plan to tailor all programming to prioritize hands-on and applied learning.”

Maclean’s released its annual “2016 University Rankings” to subscribers last evening. I am pleased to report that UPEI has moved two spots from tenth to eighth position among primarily undergraduate universities in Canada. In the 25-year history of Maclean’s rankings, this is the 13th year in a row that UPEI has been in the top ten in the country.

We are proud that we have ranked in the top ten in nine of the fourteen categories that form the overall ranking, including fourth in “student awards” and “total research dollars.” We remain consistently strong in categories like “student/faculty ratio”, ranking seventh, and “operating budget”, ranking sixth.

A significant part of the Maclean’s rankings focuses on reputation. In the national reputational survey, UPEI has moved up two spots, as well as in the “high quality” and “innovation” categories. UPEI has jumped eight spots in the “building leaders of tomorrow” category. Also, for the first time this year, Maclean’s surveyed students directly. We were ranked sixth in “student life staff” and “administrative staff” and fifth in “bureaucracy” (having the least red tape). This reaffirms UPEI's efforts toward the student experience, a key priority in the “UPEI Strategic Plan, 2013-18”.

One category in the student portion of the rankings where UPEI did not fare as well was in “critical thinking.” We feel this will shift positively in the near future as it is a lagging indicator. As identified in our Strategic Plan, with every program initiative, such as Engineering, Mathematics, and in Arts, we are building this key skill development into project-based curricula that is married to theory.

We recognize that connecting what we teach and how we teach it is fundamental to moving UPEI forward. For the most part, the markers found in the “Canadian University Report” and “University Rankings” confirm that UPEI is a vibrant institution that supports the delivery of outstanding experiential learning opportunities.

I would like to thank you, our faculty, staff, and administrators for your commitment to our promise of delivering such quality higher education. You are second to none. We can all be proud of the education system in Canada, as there is really very little that separates the quality of our institutions from coast to coast to coast. Our system is ranked highly around the world, and UPEI plays its role. From discussions with many of our international partners, I have learned that they rate UPEI among the top in terms of quality and student interaction.

We must thank our students for choosing to be a part of our great UPEI community. Whether from PEI, across the country, or around the world, students are our reason for being, and we will continue to promise them a community of scholars and researchers that encourages them to develop to their full potential.

Let’s keep up the good work!

Best wishes,

 

Alaa

Dr. Alaa S. Abd-El-Aziz
President and Vice-Chancellor
University of Prince Edward Island

Public lecture examines the changes in sexual culture in Sambia (Papua New Guinea) over 40 years

The public is invited to a free lecture by noted anthropologist Dr. Gilbert Herdt. His talk, entitled, “From Ritual Sex to Sexual Individuality: Sambia (Papua New Guinea) Sexual Culture Change Over 40 Years” is November 5 at 2:30 pm in the Alex H. MacKinnon Auditorium, room 242 of UPEI’s Don and Marion McDougall Hall.

Dr. Herdt is a founding professor and professor in the graduate program in human sexuality at the California Institute for Integral Studies. He is also emeritus director of the National Sexuality Resource Centre and a professor of sexuality and anthropology at San Francisco State University. Dr. Herdt has an international profile and distinction that spans the United States, Australia, the Pacific Islands, and Western Europe through more than thirty years’ research, teaching, policy and clinical studies. He was a Fulbright Scholar to Australia (1974-78), an individual NIMH Scholar at UCLA’s Neuropsychiatric Institute, and has been the recipient of Guggenheim, NEH, and Rockefeller Foundation fellowships. He has taught at Stanford University, University of Chicago, and San Francisco State University (SFSU). He has held major grants from the NIMH, Spencer Foundation, Ford Foundation, and others. Dr. Herdt founded the Department of Sexuality Studies and the Master of Arts in Human Sexuality Studies at San Francisco State University, the first in the United States. He is the founder of the University of Amsterdam Summer Institute on Sexuality and Culture and SFSU’s Summer Institute on Sexuality, Health and Society (2001-2010). His publications include thirty-five books, monographs, anthologies, and more than one hundred scientific papers. Dr. Herdt continues to conduct fieldwork among the Sambia and is a champion of sexual literacy and human rights in Pacific Island countries.

In his public talk, Dr. Herdt will discuss how in two short generations, the Sambia of Papua New Guinea experienced the most extraordinary transition: from constant warfare and ritual-controlled sexuality to contemporary individual-centered sexual meanings and relationships. Based upon long-term anthropological field work [1974-2010] and a humanistic eye both to detail and the big picture, this study reveals how Sambia sexual socialization and desire were grounded through ritual initiation and male-dominated arranged marriages in traditional warrior life, including prescribed secret homoerotic practices for all males. However, this ancient form of human development fell away in the colonial context of evolving interpersonal and individual norms, subjectivities, and behavioral development as evangelical Christian practice revolutionized gendered and sexual relationships through socio-economic development and primary schooling, thus greatly empowering young women. Today’s Sambia psychosexual reality is actually more complex because of a powerful inter-generational struggle over the meaning of “good” versus “bad” sexual practice. The Sambia have proved themselves resilient as individuals in this historic transformation, even as their traditional sexuality and hegemonic male rituals have not. Ritual sex is now a suppressed history as the Sambia make their way into the dreary marketplace of global 21st  century individualism. This transformation among the Sambia raises perennial questions regarding the plasticity and innateness of human nature and culture.

For more information, contact Dr. Jean Mitchell, mjmitchell@upei.ca or Ukrautwurst@upei.ca.