Catholic Studies, Rome Course Information Session
The Catholic Studies programme is pleased to offer RS 388, "Rome: Centre of Christianity," May 6 -27, 2017. Taught in Rome, Italy, the course is supported by the Saint Dunstan's University Institute for Christianity and Culture and its commitment to global and experiential learning. An information session on the application process for the course will be held on November 3, 4 pm in SDU MB 203. All interested students are invited to attend.
Soup for the Soul
Last year, UPEI and PEI Health and Wellness combined to offer a hot bowl of soup in a safe environment - healthy food for mental health. This year, gardens are adding physical health to our plan.
To increase sustainability, we invited the campus to donate bowls and spoons. We received 75 bowls and 15 spoons, and installed soap and sanitizer at the Chaplaincy Centre to decrease our footprint. As cottages close, we are hoping for more spoons and bowls. Donations can be left at the Chaplaincy Centre.
Our first event will be Wednesday October 19, 11:30 am - 1:00 pm. Drop by with a bowl for a soul!
Sister Sue
Global Village
The UPEI Global Village committee in collaboration with the Society for International Students will be hosting the 2nd Global Village and Gala. The aim of this event is to celebrate cultural diversity on campus, and facilitate cultural exchange between members of the domestic and various international communities.
Similar to the first Global Village, this event will include: talent show, cultural presentation, information booths, fashion show and musical presentations, dance performances, and a lot more!
Admission to students and members of the public is FREE! See you there!
Theology on Tap: "Getting Medieval with CS Lewis"
Please join us for "Theology on Tap" with speaker Dr. Chris Armstong, Wheaton College, on "Getting Medieval with C.S. Lewis." The Pourhouse, 189 Great George Street. Doors open at 630 pm with the talk at 7 pm. Sponsored by the Saint Dunstan's University Institute for Christianity and Culture. Free Admission, 19 +.
7th Annual Candlelight Vigil, and Screening of Fire Song
The 7th Annual Candlelight Vigil Against Homophobia and Bullying will start at 6pm, with students and community members speaking about their experiences with discrimination and bullying. We will hold a moment of silence for those who have lost their lives, or a part of themselves as a result of bullying or suicide.
To conclude (at approximately 7pm) the UPEI Rainbow Alliance and UPEI Mawi'Omi Student Centre are partnering for the screening of Adam Garnet Jones's film Fire Song.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HyRNI9kKkA
There will be light refreshments
Free admission
North of 49 Campus Movies:
In partnership with Telefilms Canada and the Atlantic Film Festival, UPEI will be offering a FREE screeing of The Grand Seduction. There will be pizza, pop and chips, we will also be drawing for gift cards to Superstore!
"The small harbour village of Tickle Cove needs a doctor or they will lose a factory, which could save them all from financial ruin. Village resident Murray French (Gleeson) leads the search to convince a young doctor to take up residence by any means necessary. When Dr. Paul Lewis (Kitsch) arrives, the whole town tries to seduce him to stay permanently.
Director: Don McKellar
Producer: Barbara Doran, Roger Frappier
Actors: Taylor Kitsch, Brendan Gleeson, Liane Balaban, Gordon Pinsent, Mark Critch
Country: Canada
Runtime: 113 minutes
Rating: Parental Guidance
‐ Language may offend
‐ Tobacco use
Trailerhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z61XwqxI8hM
School of Nursing Celebration of Student Success- Dean's Honours List Ceremony
The Celebration of Student Success- Dean's Honours List Ceremony for the School of Nursing will be held on Monday, October 24th at 7:00 p.m. in McMillan Hall, W.A. Murphy Student Centre. Students who are on the Dean's List for the 2015-16 academic year will be presented with a certificate recognizing their outstanding academic performance.
Open Appetizers: What Open can do for Higher Ed
Open Appetizers: What Open can do for Higher Ed
We’re talking “open” in higher ed as a preview for the UPEI library’s Open Access Week celebrations, and welcome you to join us.
We’ll have light refreshments, a series of 5 minute Lightning Talks on various aspects of “open” currently in practice at UPEI, and time for questions and discussion. It will be a great way to get a sense of what open can do on campus, and to build potential collaborations.
LIGHTNING TALKS:
Moderated by Dave Cormier
Open Tenure & Promotion Processes- Robert Gilmour
Open Benefits- Megan MacKenzie & Frederic Fovet
Open Source- Rosie LeFaive
Producing Open Textbooks- Lisa Chilton
Using Open Textbooks- Philip Smith
Open Licensing- Donald Moses
Open Research & Engagement- Bonnie Stewart
Open Teaching- Brian Wagner
Open Courses- Christian LaCroix
Open Journals- Richard Raiswell
Open Access Week & What's Next- Dawn Hooper
Volunteer Fair
All students are encouraged to attend and learn abou tthe many volunteer organizations and available opportunities. This is a great time to get hands-on experience, make connections, and help make a difference in your community.
Island Lecture Series: Stories of Weathering Cyclone Pam in Vanuatu, with Dr. Jean Mitchell
Stories of Weathering Cyclone Pam in Vanuatu:
Leaf-houses, Flying Foxes and Body Bags
Island Studies Lecture by Dr. Jean Mitchell
The November Island Studies Lecture will be Tuesday, November 15, at 7 p.m. in the SDU Main Building Faculty Lounge on the UPEI campus, featuring Dr. Jean Mitchell sharing Stories of Weathering Cyclone Pam in Vanuatu: Leaf-houses, Flying Foxes, and Body Bags.
With winds up to 300 kph, Cyclone Pam was the largest cyclone to make landfall in the South Pacific islands since recordkeeping started. It struck the island of Vanuatu on March 13, 2015, leaving in its wake enormous losses of infrastructure, housing, animals, and food gardens. The ferocity and destructiveness of Cyclone Pam spurs questions about climate change and the effects of global warming and sea-level rise in the South Pacific Islands. Another key question also emerges: why did so few islanders die during the cyclone and its aftermath? Drawing on recent interviews with Islanders from the southern islands of Erromango and Tanna, which were literally in the eye of the storm, this presentation recounts stories from those Islanders about the cyclone and its aftermath. How social relationships, the gift/kastom economies, local knowledge, and the ways in which nature and culture are entangled in Vanuatu offer powerful insights into how to survive a cyclone.
Jean Mitchell, an associate professor of Anthropology at UPEI, has been working in Vanuatu for 20 years and has also conducted research in Kiribati and Solomon Islands. Prior to working in the Pacific she worked with the UN in India for five years. In Vanuatu she started the Young People's Project at the Vanuatu Cultural Centre. Her research interests include post-colonialism, youth, gender, health and urbanization. She has co-edited several volumes of essays on L.M. Montgomery and has been researching the Presbyterian Missionary history that connects Vanuatu and Prince Edward Island. She has, together with Vanuatu Cultural Centre, recently started a project on local knowledge, youth and the ecologies of gardens in Tanna and Erromango.
Admission to the Lecture is free and everyone is welcome to attend.
Watch for details for another lecture about islands – near and far – December 6! For more information, please contact Laurie at brinklow@upei.ca or (902) 894-2881.