International careers presentation October 13

Jean-Marc Hachey, a leading authority on international careers, will give a presentation about working and studying overseas on Tuesday, October 13, from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Bill and Denise Andrew Hall, Room 142, at UPEI.
A best-selling writer, Hachey has shared his international employment strategies with thousands as author of The BIG Guide to Living and Working Overseas and as the international careers editor and columnist for TransitionsAbroad.com. He has worked overseas for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, World University Service, Canadian Crossroads International, and the German Volunteer Service. Since 1990 he has been mentoring students, recent graduates and others interested in pursuing opportunities abroad. He has presented seminars at more than 160 colleges, universities and career fairs, and for governments and nongovernmental organizations.
Fluent in French and English, Hachey has a business degree from the University of New Brunswick and an MA in Political Science from l'Université Laval in Québec City.
This event is open to the public. For more information, please contact Kyla Hennessey at UPEI's Department of Student Services, at (902) 566-0738. For information about Hachey, visit www.workingoverseas.com.

Atlantic Veterinary College celebrates re-opening of expanded Veterinary Teaching Hospital

The Atlantic Veterinary College at UPEI celebrated the re-opening of its expanded and renovated Veterinary Teaching Hospital today marking a new era of veterinary health care for Atlantic Canada.
'The Atlantic Veterinary College's Veterinary Teaching Hospital is the only full service veterinary referral hospital in Atlantic Canada,' said Dr. Donald L. Reynolds, Dean of the Atlantic Veterinary College. 'We take great pride in providing exceptional care for our clients and their animals, and an outstanding education for our veterinary medicine students.'
Approximately 10,000 square feet was renovated and added to the veterinary hospital at a cost of $3.2 million. The upgrade included increasing the number of surgery rooms; an expanded anesthesia, induction and recovery area; an Intensive Care Unit and isolation ward; a family consultation room; clinical conference space; rooms dedicated to dentistry, special procedures and exotic animals; and an improved bovine loading area.
Each year more than 5,000 companion animals and approximately 750 large animals from throughout the Atlantic region receive care at the College's Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Many of these animals are referred to the Atlantic Veterinary College by veterinarians from throughout the Atlantic provinces.
The Atlantic Veterinary College's Veterinary Teaching Hospital provides comprehensive treatment and care through specialties such as veterinary cardiology, orthopedics, dermatology, ophthalmology, surgery, herd health, internal medicine, theriogenology and community practice. This expertise is delivered by a team of clinicians, technicians, interns, residents and veterinary students.
Senior veterinary students spend their final year of training in the Veterinary Teaching Hospital working directly with clients to gain valuable hands-on experience.
'In addition to better care for client animals, improvements to the hospital translate directly into enhanced training and learning opportunities for our soon-to-be veterinarians,' explains Dr. Reynolds.
The Atlantic Veterinary College is committed to excellence and innovation in education, research and professional services. Funded by the four Atlantic provinces, the Atlantic Veterinary College is the only veterinary college in eastern Canada and north of Boston. Since 1990, the College has trained more than 1,100 veterinarians - the majority of which work and live in Atlantic Canada.

UPEI opens state-of-the-art new learning facilities in Robertson Library

The University of Prince Edward Island has opened a new state-of-the-art Language Lab as well as a multimedia computer lab, known as the Collaboratory, in the Robertson Library for use by the university and Island communities
'The Language Lab uses the latest computing and learning resources to help with language training and the development of compelling learning materials,' says University Librarian Mark Leggott. 'We know students will quickly come to appreciate the opportunity to collaborate and build compelling learning material of their own.'
'The Government of Canada is proud to have invested in a dynamic, multi-media resource that benefits students and Islanders by strengthening language skill sets and other important areas of knowledge,' said the Honourable Keith Ashfield, Minister of State (Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency). 'Thanks to our government's Economic Action Plan we are investing in projects that are helping Canadians develop the skills they need to prepare for the jobs of tomorrow.'
The Language Lab consists of 30 iMac workstations loaded with internationally renowned Rosetta Stone language-learning software. Students will be able to learn English, French, Mandarin Chinese, Japanese, Latin American Spanish, Russian, Korean, Irish, Latin and Welsh.
The Language Lab will be used by the Department of Modern Languages to supplement regular classes as well as by English as a Second Language students. Students who are learning another language will be able to practice their conversational skills in that language, either individually or in groups. As well, the lab will be available to community groups when it is not being used for university classes.
Located next to the Language Lab is the Collaboratory, which is equipped with 16 dual-screen Power Mac workstations and other equipment. Students can create text, image, audio and video material for use in their courses and loading to the campus e-learning system.
In addition, the Collaboratory is equipped with audio-visual playback equipment, including turntables, VCR/DVD players and audio decks that can play older media such as LPs, VHS tapes and cassettes.
'This ensures that the ‘legacy' media in our collection are preserved and remain accessible to students and the general public,' says Leggott. 'Our archives contain many treasures that we want to preserve, such as a recording of Senator Ted Kennedy's Convocation address to St. Dunstan's University in 1964; a series of lectures by noted Island historian Dr. Francis Bolger in the early 1970s; and Convocation ceremonies over the years.'
The Collaboratory is an open facility, although some workstations may be designated for sign-up to ensure access when needed. Others will be openly accessible for drop-in use. Community groups interested in accessing the facilities are encouraged to contact Leggott at (902) 566-0460 or mleggott@upei.ca

International poetic inquiry symposium takes place in Charlottetown October 15 to 18

The second biannual International Symposium on Poetic Inquiry will be held in Charlottetown from October 15 to 18.
The three-day symposium, called 'Poetry as a Way of Knowing,' brings together international poets and scholars from different disciplines and countries. Over 35 presenters from the United Kingdom, Tasmania, Japan, United States and throughout Canada will explore the role of poetry in research. They will discuss the art of poetry as a literary genre and inquiry practice during academic sessions, presentations, poetry readings and informal discussions.
'We are excited that the symposium builds partnerships and brings together local and international poets, scholars and the community at large, in a vibrant gathering and celebration of poetic voices,' says UPEI education professor Suzanne Thomas. She is co-chairing the symposium with Arda Cole of OISE at the University of Toronto.
Many of P.E.I.'s literary scholars and poets, including current poet laureate David Helwig, former poet laureate John Smith and Governor General Award winner Anne Compton, will be showcased with international poets and scholars, creating a culturally rich, international event.
The keynote speaker is Dr. Pete Hay, of the University of Tasmania's School of Geography and Environmental Studies. He has inspired a generation concerned with the preservation and protection of Tasmania as a unique place in the world. His poetry is informed by his academic work, his vast knowledge, his reflection on Tasmanian issues, and his deep sense of 'island' as place and as unique heritage. His political incisiveness and ability to explain his beliefs in accessible language make him one of Tasmania's most important writers and thinkers.
A poetry gala will be held on Friday, October 16, from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Haviland Club in Charlottetown. This event is open to the public, and admission is free.
The symposium is being co-hosted by the UPEI Centre for Education Research and the Centre for Arts-informed Research, OISE at the University of Toronto, in co-operation with the UPEI faculties of Arts and Education, Confederation Centre of the Arts, League of Canadian Poets, UPEI Department of English, PEI Writers' Guild, Writers' Union of Canada, Canada Council for the Arts and Canadian Society for the Study of Education.
For detailed information about registration and the program, including the various venues where events will be held, please contact Christine Gordon Manley (cgmanley@upei.ca or (902) 566-6784), or visit the symposium's website.

UPEI introduces PhD in Educational Studies

As the University of Prince Edward Island continues to build its reputation for research excellence, it is also expanding its portfolio of graduate degree programs. UPEI has just reached a significant milestone in graduate studies development with the introduction of a new PhD program in the Faculty of Education.
The degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Educational Studies is a new research degree requiring a dissertation on original and significant research within traditional educational and community-based educational contexts extending from early childhood through mature adulthood. It is the first doctoral program to be offered at UPEI outside the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine.
'I am delighted to announce that our new doctoral program in Educational Studies will begin in September 2010,' says Dr. Tim Goddard, UPEI Dean of Education. 'This high-quality thesis-oriented research degree will continue the intellectual growth of education graduates and foster the development of a vibrant extended educational research community in PEI and beyond.'
Acceptance into the new program will be highly competitive. UPEI will accept just four doctoral students a year. They will be required to complete a full-time residency of three semesters at UPEI. Students will typically complete their degrees within four years if they are enrolled full-time or within seven years on a part-time basis.
The announcement of the new PhD program coincides with the opening this fall of the UPEI Office of Graduate Studies and the appointment of Dr. Brian Wagner in the new position of Assistant Vice-President of Graduate Studies.

An information meeting about the PhD in Educational Studies and other education graduate programs will take place at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, November 10, in Room 305 of Memorial Hall at UPEI, prior to the Faculty of Education's Open House at 6:30 p.m. The deadline for applications for the September, 2010 start-up is January 15, 2010. More information is available from Dr. Miles Turnbull, Co-ordinator of Graduate Studies for the Faculty of Education, at mturnbull@upei.ca or (902) 566-0341.

UPEI public forum to launch Sustainability Week on October 19

To launch Sustainability Week on October 19, the UPEI Office of Sustainability and Energy Management is organizing a public forum about sustainability initiatives at post-secondary institutions in the Atlantic region. Speakers from six institutions will highlight their efforts and initiatives around sustainability.

Their presentations will be followed by a panel discussion on how institutions can work together to improve sustainability across the region. The forum is open to the public. It takes place in the MacKinnon Lecture Theatre, McDougall Hall, UPEI, beginning at 7:00 p.m.
On October 20, at 6:00 p.m. in AVC Lecture Theatre A, the UPEI Graduate Students Association will host a movie night and discussion on water use and abuse. It will start with the award-winning film FLOW (For the Love of Water).
Students in residence at UPEI are also developing an energy challenge initiative to encourage students on other campuses in the region to reduce energy consumption. This is being planned for January.
For more details on Sustainability Week activities at UPEI, contact David Taylor at (902) 566-0673 or dctaylor@upei.ca.

Author Deirdre Kessler publishes first poetry book

What are afternoon horses? The phrase comes from a poem in Deirdre Kessler's poetry book, Afternoon Horses, which will be launched on Tuesday, October 20, at Beaconsfield's Carriage House, from 7 to 9 p.m.
Though Kessler has been writing poetry for more years than she has been writing fiction and nonfiction and has had poems published in chapbooks and in a number of collections and journals, Afternoon Horses is her first book of poetry. The book is published by Acorn Press.
"Deirdre Kessler enfolds us in her sense of wonder for friendship, for history, for the endless revelations of nature," writes poet and UPEI professor Richard Lemm. "Fierceness and sadness also appear, when a desert is sown with land mines, when we slaughter other species. Yet, so much of life surprises with beauty, and our 'hands find the right places / in dark rooms or under
stars in middle of nowhere.' These are poems that find the right places, that surprise us with us joy."
Poet Laureate David Helwig writes: "Deirdre Kessler's Afternoon Horses...pays its homage to the bright images and shapely tales collected in travel. It goes abroad, but it also follows the vital rhythms of language inward. Then her lean, taut lines offer lessons in how to take flight while standing perfectly still."
Peter Hay, Taswegian poet and visiting scholar to UPEI this fall, says: "Here is a poetry of quiet power, a poetry of deep, all-gathering compassion, a poetry that reaches out in love to all that swims and swarms upon the face of the earth."
Deirdre Kessler is the author of a dozen novels and picture books for children, including Canadian Children's Book Centre Our Choice Award-winning Brupp Rides Again, a children's novel, and Lobster in My Pocket, a perennially best-selling picture book. Her Island history book, a work that combines a fictional narrative with informational text, Exploring the Island, is now part of the P.E.I. grade six curriculum.
Kessler is recipient of the Award for Distinguished Contribution to the Literary Arts on Prince Edward Island and a P.E.I. Museum and Heritage Foundation Writing Award for A Century on Spring Street. She has freelanced for CBC Television and Radio. Her poetry has appeared in several collections, including Landmarks: An Anthology of New Atlantic Canadian Poetry of the Land (Acorn 2001).
She lives in Charlottetown and teaches children's literature and creative writing with the UPEI Department of English.
Wondering what afternoon horses are? Come to Beaconsfield's Carriage House on Tuesday evening, October 20, 7 to 9 p.m., and all will be revealed. There will be a poetry reading, music, refreshments, book signing, and one terrible joke.

Journalist and novelist Linden MacIntyre gives reading at Confederation Centre on October 27

Linden MacIntyre, distinguished Canadian journalist, broadcaster and novelist, will read from his new novel, The Bishop's Man, on Tuesday, October 27, at 7:30 p.m., in Studio One at the Confederation Centre of the Arts.
His reading is sponsored by the UPEI Department of English and Confederation Centre Public Library, with support from The Canada Council for the Arts. A reception and book signing will follow, and admission is free.
MacIntyre has won nine Gemini Awards, an international Emmy, an ACTRA Award and numerous other honours for writing and journalistic excellence. Born in St. Lawrence, Newfoundland, and raised in Port Hastings, Cape Breton, he began his career in 1964 with The Halifax Chronicle-Herald as a parliamentary bureau reporter. He joined the CBC in 1976. In 1990 he was appointed co-host of The Fifth Estate, with which he is still involved. For three decades, he has produced documentaries and stories from all over the world.
His first novel, The Long Stretch, was published in 1999, and his 2006 memoir, Causeway: A Passage from Innocence, won the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction and the Evelyn Richardson Prize for Non-Fiction.
The Bishop's Man, short-listed for the 2009 Giller Prize for fiction, 'centres on a sensitive topic-the sexual abuses perpetrated by Catholic priests on the innocent children in their care. Father Duncan, the first person narrator, has been his bishop's dutiful enforcer, employed to check the excesses of priests and, crucially, to suppress the evidence. But as events veer out of control, he is forced into painful self-knowledge as family, community and friendship are torn apart under the strain of suspicion, obsession and guilt. A brave novel, conceived and written with impressive delicacy and understanding.' (Giller jury citation)

John Acorn, aka The Nature Nut, to speak at UPEI

John Acorn, aka The Nature Nut, will share his passion for natural history and entomology during two presentations at the University of Prince Edward Island on Monday, October 26, in the KC Irving (KCI) Chemistry Centre.
Acorn will give a presentation called "It's natural to be a naturalist (and it pays too!)" at 1:30 p.m. in the KCI Wanda Wyatt Lecture Theatre (Room 104). And at 7 p.m. he will give another talk called "Life, Ladybugs, Nature Nuts and Nativeness," also in the KCI lecture theatre. Members of the public are welcome to attend both presentations.
'Introduced species are often seen as ‘alien invaders,'' says Acorn, 'and indeed some have done great harm after arriving in new places. This pattern, however, is not universal, and biologists are beginning to rethink the science we have called ‘invasion biology.'
Using examples from ladybugs and other animals, Acorn will explore this theme and ask questions about ideas such as nativeness, naturalness, and ecological integrity.
Born in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1958, Acorn has been fascinated with animals his entire life. He is perhaps best known as the writer and host of the television series "Acorn, The Nature Nut," a family-oriented, how-to-be-a-naturalist show. He also hosted "Twits and Pishers," a travel show for bird watchers, and is the video host for the galleries of the Royal Tyrell Museum, where he has also served as a research associate.
Currently he teaches at the University of Alberta and travels widely as a public speaker. To date, he has written 17 books, including many well-received field guides.
Acorn is the recipient of NSERC's 2007 Michael Smith Award for Science Promotion, the University of Alberta's 2005 Distinguished Alumni Award, two 'Rosies' for best host from the Alberta Motion Picture Industry Awards, and two nominations for Canada's national television award, the Gemini. Both the Entomological Society of Alberta and the Canadian Society of Zoologists have also recognized his contributions to public education.

Acorn's presentations are sponsored by the UPEI Faculty of Science and the UPEI NSERC representative as part of National Science and Technology Week.

Light Up Papua New Guinea fundraiser November 7

Musicians Lennie Gallant, Richard Wood, Michelle Wright and friends will donate their performances in a concert on November 7 for Light Up Papua New Guinea, a project to honour Captain Nichola Goddard who was killed in 2006 in Afghanistan while serving with the Canadian Forces.
Nichola's parents, UPEI's Dean of Education Tim Goddard and Sally Goddard, will attend the event. Nichola was born in Papua New Guinea when her parents were CUSO teachers there. The Light Up Papua New Guinea project brings solar lights to rural first aid posts and birthing centres in Papua New Guinea.
A dinner preceding the concert will feature a keynote address by CTV News journalist Lisa LaFlamme who was imbedded with Nichola's battalion in the weeks preceding her death. One of Canada's top journalists, LaFlamme regularly unravels complicated political events and national issues for viewers. She covered the inauguration of President Barack Obama in January 2009 and the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games. In 2007 she examined two of the biggest legal cases in North America: the murder trial of Robert Pickton and the fraud trial of Conrad Black.
True to her hard news journalism roots, LaFlamme has made multiple trips to Iraq and Afghanistan to cover ongoing military activity. Outisde of broadcasting, she avidly supports Plan International, formerly known as Foster Parents Plan. Traveling to remote areas for the last several years, she highlights child poverty throughout the world.
The concert will begin at 8 p.m. at the Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre at UPEI. Tickets are $20 and can be purchased online at www.themontgomerytheatre.com
The dinner will start at 5 p.m. with a reception in the W.A. Murphy Centre's McMillan Hall at UPEI. Tickets are $125 which includes dinner, the concert, commemorative t-shirt and a post-concert reception. Cheques can be made out and sent to Light Up Papua New Guinea, c/o 45 Parkside Drive, Charlottetown, PE, C1E 1N1. Call (902) 569-5665 to purchase dinner tickets or for further information.
Tickets for the dinner and the concert may also be purchased from Kate Graham, UPEI Department of Education, at (902) 566-0731 or kegraham@upei.ca.
For further information, contact Sue Platts at suesue00118@hotmail.com or www.nicholagoddard.com