York’s UNESCO Chair will be a featured presenter during THE’s University Impact Forum, June 14

Charles Hopkins, York’s UNESCO Chair in Reorienting Education towards Sustainability, will be a featured presenter in the Times Higher Education University Impact Forum on Monday, June 14.

The event, which will be presented in a virtual format, is free for all York University faculty and staff to attend. The forum will look at the global inequities exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic and how this unprecedented health crisis has disrupted the education landscape and the opportunities to build back better and reimagine a new era for learning and pedagogy.

Charles Hopkins will be a featured presenter at the Times Higher Education (THE) University Impact Forum, June 14
Charles Hopkins will be a featured presenter at the Times Higher Education (THE) University Impact Forum, June 14

York University through Hopkins, who is a long-standing UNESCO Chair, will be the only Canadian University represented at the forum, which features an international cohort of 22 speakers. University delegates, including faculty and staff, can attend the forum free of charge. Register at https://www.timeshighered-events.com/impact-education-forum-2021/page/1801948/register.

During the forum, presenters will address the role of universities in achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal #4 on quality education. Their comments will explore:

  • Universities’ commitment to improving access to education,
  • building inclusive models of education,
  • embracing a culture of lifelong learning,
  • a new era for micro-credentials,
  • the role of partnerships in delivering SDG4,
  • sustaining high-quality educational research with impact, and
  • is the future experiential?

Hopkins will participate in the discussion with Paul Basken, Times Higher Education’s editor for North America. They will discuss the topic “Quality education for a resilient recovery,” which will focus on how the pandemic has highlighted many of the inequalities among learners around the world and, those who do not have equitable access to remote learning. How can universities ensure that education is more effective, impactful and inclusive than it was before the crisis? Their discussion will take place June 14, from 9:30 to 10 a.m. EST (2 to 3 p.m. GMT+1).

More about Charles Hopkins

Hopkins holds the UNESCO Chair in Reorienting Education towards Sustainability at York University in Toronto, Canada. This chair, established in 1999, was the first UNESCO Chair to focus on Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) as a central concept and a purpose of education. Since 2017, ESD has been recognized as an integral element of Quality Education and as a key enabler of all SDGs.

Hopkins coordinates two global research networks focused on ESD. One network is the International Network of Teacher Education Institutions (INTEI) focusing on reorienting teacher education towards a sustainable future. The second network, #IndigenousESD aims to engage ESD content and pedagogy in reorienting education and training for Indigenous youth. Both networks are each active in over 50 countries to address the SDGs, in particular SDG 4 and the Global Education 2030 Agenda.

In 2020, his Chair was appointed to serve as focal point for SDG 4 in the Global Cluster of Higher Education and Research for Sustainable Development (HESD), hosted by the International Association of Universities (IAU) and Hopkins was invited to co-chair the York University President’s Sustainability Council Knowledge Working Group.

Hopkins is a founding developer of the UN University´s Regional Centres of Expertise on ESD and is advisor to the program. He is the Co-Director of the Asia-Pacific Institute on ESD in Beijing, China. The Chair also collaborates closely with UNESCO-UNEVOC and Colleges and Institutes Canada (CICan) to enhance the Greening of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET).

Social media use one of four factors related to higher COVID-19 spread rates early on

Social media icons on a phone screen

Researchers from York University and the University of British Columbia have found social media use to be one of the factors related to the spread of COVID-19 within dozens of countries during the early stages of the pandemic.

The researchers say this finding resembles other examples of social media misinformation, ranging from the initial phase of vaccine rollout to the 2021 Capitol riot in the United States.

Countries with high social media use leading to off-line political action prior to the pandemic, as surveyed before the pandemic by V-Dem (a database from the University of Gothenburg), showed the strongest trend toward a high R0 – an indicator of how many secondary infections one infected individual is likely to cause – and a faster initial spread of the virus. For example, Canada when compared to the United States had a lower level of social media use leading to off-line action and a lower R0. A set of multiple factors, including social media, could explain the different outcomes between the two countries, although the findings do not imply causation.

“What we found was surprising, that the use of social media to organize off-line action tended to be associated with a higher spread rate of COVID-19. This highlights the need to consider the dynamic role that social media plays in epidemics,” says Assistant Professor Jude Kong of York University’s Faculty of Science, who led the research with University of British Columbia Postdoctoral Fellow Edward Tekwa.

The research team examined national-level demographic, disease, economic, habitat, health, social and environmental characteristics that existed before the pandemic across 58 countries, including Ghana, Canada and the United States. They broke those characteristics down into covariates and analyzed which ones had the strongest associations with vulnerability to the virus before government interventions were put in place.

“The world has changed to modify R0,” says Tekwa. “Social media, for example, could help rather than hurt now that we have more reliable information to pass around. But some of the factors identified in our research have not changed and could be informative for the current and future pandemics.”

Kong and Tekwa found that a country with an intermediate number of youth (between the ages of 20 and 34), an intermediate GINI inequality factor (the amount of income inequality across a population) and a population that primarily lives in cities of more than one million people were three additional factors with the strongest relationship to the rate of spread.

“We found that with a lower youth population, the spreading was very low, while a country with an intermediate level of youth population had the highest rate of spreading of COVID-19,” says Kong of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics. “Interestingly, we found that as the youth population increases, it was associated with a lower number of cases, rather than a higher number.”

Pollution, temperature and humidity did not have a strong relationship with R0. The overall goal was to find baseline epidemiological differences across countries, shape future COVID-19 research and better understand infectious disease transmission.

“Different countries have different characteristics that predispose them to greater vulnerability,” says Kong. “When we are looking to compare COVID-19 progression among countries, we need to take into account those pre-existing country characteristics. The reason being is that if you just do a simple analysis the result will be misleading.”

Understanding the initial phase will help account for pre-existing, intrinsic differences, as regions try to identify their own best management strategy going forward. Kong says they are already using this data to inform policy-makers in Africa about which communities are most vulnerable.

The paper was published June 9 in the journal PLOS ONE.

A statement from President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton on the attack in London, Ont.

Flag at half mast Keele campus FEATURED
Flag at half mast Keele campus FEATURED

President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton issued the following statement on Tuesday, June 8:

La version française suit la version anglaise.

On behalf of the entire York University community, I want to extend my deepest condolences to the family, loved ones and friends of the five family members who were intentionally struck down by a driver in London, Ont., in a horrific and hateful act of violence.

York unequivocally opposes all manners of hate and discrimination, and does not tolerate racist expressions in any form. This recent tragedy affects us all deeply.

York stands with the people of London, Ont., and with members of the Muslim community at York, and across Canada, at this difficult time. We must never become complacent about hate and racism in society.

Supports are available to the York community through the Mental Health and Wellness site, the Employee & Family Assistance Program, and Student Counselling, Health & Well-Being.


Message de la présidente et vice-chancelière, Rhonda Lenton, au sujet de l’attaque à London (Ontario)

Au nom de toute la communauté de l’Université York, je tiens à présenter mes sincères condoléances à la famille, aux proches et aux amis des cinq personnes fauchées intentionnellement par un conducteur à London (Ontario), dans un acte de violence épouvantable et haineux.  

York condamne sans équivoque toute forme de haine et de discrimination et ne tolère aucune expression de racisme. Cette tragédie récente nous affecte tous profondément.  

York est solidaire des habitants de London (Ontario) et des membres de la communauté musulmane de York et du Canada tout entier durant ces moments difficiles. Nous ne devons jamais faire preuve de complaisance vis-à-vis de la haine et du racisme dans la société.  

Des ressources de soutien sont à la disposition des membres de la communauté de York sur le site Mental Health and Wellness at York, dans le cadre du programme d’aide aux employés et à la famille, et des services Student Counselling, Health & Well-Being. 

Lassonde welcomes undergraduate student researchers for Summer 2021 term

Bergeron Centre

In May, the Lassonde School of Engineering welcomed 62 undergraduate student researchers for the seventh annual Lassonde Undergraduate Research Awards (LURA) and Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Undergraduate Student Research Awards (NSERC USRA) programs.

John Moores Lassonde York U
John Moores

The students will be working on various research projects alongside Lassonde faculty members for the duration of the summer term. “For many of us, summer encounters with research can be the spark that ignites a lifelong passion for inquiry in engineering and science,” says Lassonde Professor John Moores, associate dean, Research and Graduate Studies. “Getting to experience how world-class research is actually done provides our students with a sense of accomplishment and the confidence that they, too, can make a contribution to advance knowledge and solve global problems.”

This year, the Lassonde School of Engineering awarded 17 NSERC USRA and 45 LURA, with each student receiving a minimum stipend of $10,000. Incoming students include representatives from programs across the Lassonde School of Engineering and York University as well as the University of Toronto, the University of Waterloo and McGill University.

The undergraduate summer research program focuses on providing undergraduate students with experience in a professional research environment and giving them a chance to take part in experiential education. In 2021, despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, students have embarked on meaningful research experiences with the faculty members across all four departments. This year, students are conducting much of their work remotely, but some may be able to access campus facilities to conduct laboratory research, depending on regulations.

“Thanks to LURA, I had the opportunity to participate in research as an undergraduate student. This opportunity helped me see how curiosity, collaboration and creative problem-solving can be integral parts of the research process,” said Arma Khan, a student in the 2020 LURA program, now an MASc student in mechanical engineering with Professor Marina Freire-Gormaly. “It led me to appreciate the role researchers have in the scientific community and inspired me to pursue my master’s, where I can further delve into research.”

A virtual rendering of a conference facility
A virtual rendering of the 2020 Lassonde Undergraduate Summer Student Research Conference. The event took place entirely online

This year, professors have worked tirelessly to provide students with flexible opportunities for engagement and create research environments for students to hone their skills, solve problems, analyze data, write reports and disseminate their findings.

The research projects span across a variety of areas, many of which support the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs), including UN SDG 3 – Good Health and Well-Being; UN SDG 9 – Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure; and UN SDG 11 – Sustainable Cities and Communities.

Research projects include:

  • protecting heritage structures from climate and fire;
  • robot-based disinfection of COVID-19;
  • development of autonomous vehicles;
  • technology to ensure safety of drinking water; and
  • human-computer interaction in virtual environments

In August, each student will get the opportunity to present their findings at the 2021 Summer Undergraduate Conference taking place virtually on Aug. 17.

In 2020, the Summer Undergraduate Conference included live oral and pre-recorded video presentations from over 60 students, and a keynote address from Caroline Floyd (BSc ’01). Attendees included government officials, professors, industry experts and students.

Learn more about the program here.

A statement from President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton and Vice-President Equity, People & Culture Sheila Cote-Meek on Pride Month

The pride flag

The pride flag

June is Pride Month, an opportunity to celebrate and recognize the contributions of 2SLGBTQIA communities and to reflect on the ways we can continue to support equal rights for all and to challenge homophobia, biphobia and transphobia.

York University is dedicated to fostering the values of equity, diversity and inclusion. Our University Academic Plan 2020–2025: Building a Better Future identifies Living Well Together as one of our six priorities for action and makes a formal commitment to ensuring that all members of our community feel welcome, and have a sense of belonging, common purpose and shared responsibility.

We are grateful for the significant contributions 2SLGBTQIA communities have made toward making York — and our local and global communities — safer and more positive spaces for all, and we remain committed to supporting this work, and to creating and maintaining an accessible, affirming and inclusive teaching, learning and work environment for all of our community members.

We encourage everyone at York to take the time to acknowledge and celebrate the experiences, contributions and successes of our 2SLGBTQIA community members by participating in the many virtual initiatives and events taking place at York this month, and by continuing to learn about the experiences of 2SLGBTQIA communities throughout the year.

York has created a website that lists the events and celebrations happening throughout Pride Month, shares stories about the accomplishments and contributions of members of the York 2SLGBTQIA community, highlights important research happening across the University and provides resources for further reading.

On behalf of everyone at York, we would like to thank our 2SLGBTQIA community members for their tremendous contributions both on and off our campuses and wish everyone — and their loved ones — a very happy Pride.

Sincerely,

Rhonda L. Lenton
President and Vice-Chancellor

Sheila Cote-Meek
Vice-President, Equity, People & Culture


Déclaration de la présidente et vice-chancelière, Rhonda Lenton, et de la vice-présidente de l’équité, des personnes et de la culture, Sheila Cote-Meek au sujet du Mois de la Fierté

Le mois de juin est le Mois de la Fierté. C’est l’occasion de célébrer et de reconnaître les contributions des communautés 2ELGBTQIA et de réfléchir à des façons de continuer à appuyer l’égalité des droits pour tous et à lutter contre l’homophobie, la biphobie et la transphobie.

L’Université York s’engage à promouvoir les valeurs d’équité, de diversité et d’inclusion. Dans notre Plan académique de l’Université 2020-2025 : Bâtir un avenir meilleur, Bien vivre ensemble fait partie de nos six priorités d’action; c’est un appel solennel à faire en sorte que tous les membres de notre communauté se sentent bienvenus et éprouvent un sentiment d’appartenance, d’objectif commun et de responsabilité partagée.

Nous sommes reconnaissants envers les communautés 2ELGBTQIA qui ont contribué à faire de York — et de nos communautés locales et mondiales ­— des espaces plus sécuritaires et positifs pour tous; nous poursuivons nos efforts dans ce sens pour créer et maintenir un environnement d’enseignement, d’apprentissage et de travail accessible, accueillant et inclusif pour notre communauté.

Nous encourageons tous les membres de la communauté de York à prendre le temps de reconnaître et de célébrer les expériences, les contributions et les succès des membres de notre communauté 2ESLGBTQIA en participant aux nombreuses initiatives et événements virtuels qui auront lieu à York ce mois-ci et en continuant à s’informer sur les expériences des communautés 2ELGBTQIA tout au long de l’année.

York a créé un site Web qui répertorie les événements et les célébrations se déroulant tout au long du Mois de la Fierté, qui partage des témoignages au sujet des réalisations et des contributions des membres de la communauté 2SLGBTQIA de York, qui souligne les recherches importantes dans toute l’Université et qui fournit des suggestions de lecture.

Au nom de nous tous à York, nous tenons à remercier les membres de notre communauté 2ELGBTQIA pour leurs contributions remarquables, tant sur nos campus qu’au-delà, et nous souhaitons à tout le monde une excellente célébration de la Fierté.

Veuillez agréer nos sincères salutations,

Rhonda L. Lenton
Présidente et vice-chancelière

Sheila Cote-Meek
Vice-présidente de l’équité, des personnes et de la culture

York University graduate student receives Trudeau Doctoral Scholarship

Cristina Wood featured image
Cristina Wood
Cristina Wood

Cristina Wood, a PhD candidate in York University’s Department of History, has been awarded the prestigious Trudeau Doctoral Scholarship, presented by the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, which recognizes top doctoral students in Canada and abroad in the fields of humanities and social sciences. This is the first time since 2016 that a York student has been chosen for this scholarship.

This year, candidates had the opportunity to apply directly to the foundation instead of being nominated by their university. Through this change in the application process, the foundation supports its commitment to inclusive excellence by ensuring that all applicants were given equal consideration regardless of region, background or discipline.

More than 600 scholars applied, and only 15 were selected to receive this year’s scholarship based on their academic excellence, leadership and engagement, willingness to engage with a plurality of perspectives, agility and resilience. These students, from 13 different universities in Canada and abroad, will be supported by the foundation to achieve meaningful impacts in the world, becoming a part of the diverse community of Trudeau Scholars.

The scholarship includes up to $40,000 per year for three years to accommodate tuition and living expenses, with up to an additional $20,000 per year for research, networking and travel expenditures. In addition to this financial allowance, each student becomes a member of a vibrant community of scholars, mentors and Fellows. Moreover, successful applicants receive leadership training, which includes unique experiential learning opportunities that enrich and complement their academic experience.

Wood’s innovative research practices and community engagement are truly characteristic of an outstanding Trudeau Scholar. Her proposed dissertation research, titled “Enchanting the Ottawa: An Affective Environmental History of the Ottawa River,” will follow the waterway’s transition from a transit and trade thoroughfare to a regulated, recreational place. Through archival research, oral histories and material culture, Wood will bring alive environmental pasts and futures of the water, land and air surrounding the area.

The project emphasizes the dynamic history of the Ottawa River, from the migration patterns of settlements to the boat traffic that was present. Wood has developed a novel method for communicating information through sound, called data sonification. The historical data of the Ottawa River is translated into sounds though this distinctive process. Her project presents an experiment in digital history through its unique auditory presentation.

Furthermore, Wood displays outstanding leadership skills through her involvement with the community. She was the 2018-19 Garth Wilson Fellow for Public History at Ingenium: Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation. During her work at the museum, Wood presented tools for digital curation to the staff.

“As part of an interdisciplinary cohort of Pierre Elliott Trudeau Scholars, with guidance from mentors, I hope to sharpen my skills as a public historian in understanding and communicating stories of complex pasts,” said Wood.

Her project is truly befitting of the leadership program for the 2021 cohort, which will centre on the theme of Language, Culture and Identity, due to her interest in the narrative that the Ottawa River presents by its fusion of diverse communities and histories.

The foundation

The Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation is an independent and non-partisan charity established in 2001 as a living memorial to the former prime minister by his family, friends and colleagues. By granting doctoral scholarships, awarding fellowships, appointing mentors and holding public events, the foundation encourages critical reflection and action in four areas important to Canadians: human rights and dignity, responsible citizenship, Canada’s role in the world, and people and their natural environment. For more information about the foundation, visit trudeaufoundation.ca.

Four York professors receive awards from Government of Canada’s New Frontiers in Research Fund

research graphic

Four York University researchers have received research awards from the Government of Canada’s New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF)-Exploration stream.

Professors Cristina Delgado Vintimilla (Faculty of Education), Sarah Flicker (Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change), Matthew Perras (Lassonde School of Engineering) and Dayna Scott (Osgoode Hall Law School) are the principal investigators on the winning projects, which were announced in late May.

“York University is delighted to see Professors Cristina Delgado Vintimilla, Sarah Flicker, Matthew Perras and Dayna Scott receive these highly competitive NFRF Exploration grants. My heartiest congratulations to them,” said Vice-President Research and Innovation Amir Asif. “These grants allow Canada’s foremost researchers to build strength in high-risk, high-reward and interdisciplinary research for societal benefit – an historical strength for the University.”

Cristina Delgado Vintimilla is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Education. Delgado Vintimilla’s project, titled “Ecological Devastation in Extractive Zones: Resistance, Recuperation and Regeneration,” received $248,053.00. Working with a multidisciplinary team of Indigenous and non-Indigenous researchers, artists and activists from across Canada and Ecuador, including Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies sociology Professor Denielle Elliott, the research team will explore what it takes to recuperate the devastation of the “Capitalocene.”

The project considers the urgent nature of ecological and environmental challenges posed by the devastation of blasted landscapes (Mountaintop removal mining, open-pit mining, strip mining). Women and children who are targets of annihilation through capitalism and colonialism, specifically, Black, Indigenous and people of colour (BIPOC), understand the value of non-hegemonic knowledges/practices to heal ruined places. The challenge is in recognizing their unconventional ways of knowing and doing as legitimate healing alternatives to the technological “fixes” that damaged blasted landscapes.

This research will congregate a diverse team of scholars, students, Indigenous activists, Elders, knowledge keepers and healers to lead an interdisciplinary project that draws from and contributes to education, anthropology, biology and the arts. The researchers’ approach is to codesign recuperative practices in “blasted landscapes” in Canada and Ecuador in an urgent effort to address the damage of extractive capitalism and exploitative investments. The sites— built on the dispossession and enslavement of BIPOC—are connected through capitalist, extractive industries that have left the environments forever changed.

The ecological devastation of these sites is the point of departure for this project. The researchers will ask: How are women and children who identify as BIPOC staging unconventional relations with the land to regenerate “blasted landscapes”? And how are they activating alternative modes of belonging in the process? How can we approach blasted landscapes as sites for imagining other futures?

Sarah Flicker, a professor in the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, is the principal investigator on the project “Transnational Perspectives on COVID-19’s Impact on Youth Sexuality, Risk and Relationships.” The project, which involves an international research team that includes Faculty of Education Assistant Professor Jen Gilbert, received $249,038.00 in funding.

COVID-19 has fundamentally altered nearly every aspect of youths’ relational lives; new norms regarding physical and social intimacy and access to public and private spaces affect family, peer, and sexual connections. The challenge of navigating this new terrain coincides with adolescence, a developmental period when choices regarding risk and well-being are already fraught and complicated. Though decisions around how to connect, date, and love continue to be influenced by factors including gender, race, sexual cultures, community, and space, pandemic logics cause a profound shift: behaviors that once sparked alarm are now endorsed as low risk (e.g. sexting); practices that were up for debate are now decidedly off limits (e.g. sleepovers); and what were idealized as innocuous romantic gestures are now the height of danger (e.g. kissing). Changing policies and regulations (e.g. wearing masks, keeping distance, forming pods) influence sexual and intimate possibilities in new and unanticipated ways.

The international and interdisciplinary team brings together scholars in education, psychology, public health, social work, sociology, and youth studies with expertise in participatory methods, sexuality, and global health research. The project’s multi-method, multidisciplinary, and multi-site research will examine how COVID-19 is redefining risk and re-forming youth sexuality in Australia, Canada, and the United States, all countries with liberal democracies with comparable discourses and debates surrounding youth sexuality, but starkly different experiences of and responses to the pandemic.

Results will be used to develop site-specific and transnational briefings, videos, podcasts, and other resources to help sex educators, parents and youth navigate social norms, health risks, and sexual relationships during (and, eventually, in the wake of) a pandemic.

Matthew Perras, assistant professor, Department of Civil Engineering at the Lassonde School of Engineering is the principal investigator on the project “Using machine learning to understand ancient climatic influences on the stability of cliffs and tombs in the Theban Necropolis of Egypt.” Working with an international research team that includes his colleague Usman Khan, also an assistant professor in the Department of Civil Engineering at Lassonde, who is a co-principal investigator on the project, the research focuses on the Theban Necropolis, a UNESCO World Heritage site comprised of tombs and temples near Luxor, Egypt. The project received $250,000 in funding.

The tombs in the Theban Necropolis are often shallow excavations with entrances at the base of cliffs. The tombs hold evidence of rock mass collapses during construction through to recent deterioration leading to potential instabilities. Climatic variations are known to cause rock to deteriorate, however, there is debate about the exact influence on crack growth rates. Due to lack of detailed observations and experiments on long-term crack growth in rock, since such experiments span many months or even years, current numerical tools are not capable of capturing the influences of climate change on crack growth. This leads to challenges in determining when instabilities will develop and problems designing preservation strategies. To address these challenges, Perras and the research team propose to utilize machine learning (ML) to aid in analyzing existing climate data and crack growth indicators to predict instability. A ML algorithm will be trained on current measurements (weather & crack movement), then on historic climate & photographs of crack growth.

Ancient climate records and models (Nile sedimentation, tomb flooding & collapses) could be used to back analyze the influence on crack growth with time. With the expertise of geotechnical engineering, geology, archaeology, data and climate science, the researchers will seek to understand the prevailing conditions that led to the current state of stability and develop guidelines for preserving the stability into the future. The novelty of this research is in the combination of machine learning with archaeology and geological engineering. Machine learning in both fields is in its infancy, however, such techniques allow for nuanced behaviors to be extracted from large and complex data sets as in this project. Understanding the current measurements, past influences and applying it to predict future instabilities will help to identify key areas for protection and aid in preserving this UNESCO site for generations to come.

Dayna Scott, York Research Chair in Environmental Law & Justice in the Green Economy; associate professor, Osgoode Hall Law School and the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, is the principal investigator of the project titled, “Jurisdiction Back: Infrastructure beyond Extractivism.” The project received $ 246,725.00 in funding.

Resource conflicts and legal uncertainties have dominated the political landscape over the last decade. From Standing Rock to the TransMountain pipeline, conflicts over extraction and its infrastructures have intensified, catalyzing a fierce Indigenous resurgence. As Scott and the research team conceived this project, Wet’suwet’en hereditary leaders were blocking a pipeline company from accessing their lands, inspiring solidarity actions that blocked rail lines, ports, highways, and political offices. The situation dramatically demonstrated that when corporate interests thrust contested projects onto Indigenous homelands – even with governmental approvals – they must contend with Indigenous governing authority.

The research project offers a transformative way forward: a fundamentally new set of relations based on different underlying assumptions about law and land. It is a vision that insists the future is not foreclosed, but pregnant with potential for renewed relations of jurisdiction and infrastructure. If anything, the new COVID-19 reality has only made this more obvious. Will we rebuild? Should we rebuild? Or, even more importantly, what should we build anew? The ground-breaking 2019 Yellowhead Red Paper documents how Indigenous-led consent processes based on fulfilling responsibilities are already having the effect of restoring Indigenous jurisdiction and reclaiming Indigenous lands and waterways, foodways and lifeways. Scott proposes to systematically document, support, expand and evaluate this work to determine which strategies and approaches have the most success. How can remaking the material systems that sustain collective life enact Indigenous jurisdiction? What does infrastructure resilience look like for Indigenous communities emerging out of COVID-19 in an era of ongoing climate crisis? How can the “just transition” to sustainable economies be imagined and infrastructured to foreground Indigenous governance systems? This project offers an agenda for fundamentally re-making our socio-technical systems; for both conceptualizing and building infrastructure otherwise.

Faculty and students encouraged to speak up about their York experience in Maclean’s annual survey

Keele campus Fall image showing the Bergeron Centre for Engineering Excellence

Senior administrators, faculty and students are being encouraged to voice their opinion about York University by participating in the 2022 Maclean’s national university surveys. The Canadian news magazine uses the survey results to help compile its annual university rankings report, considered to be one of the most influential publications for prospective students to use when deciding their school of choice.

The rankings are derived from responses received from their Reputational Survey, which canvases the opinions of university faculty and senior administrators, as well as businesspeople from across Canada. The Reputational Survey will be available to qualified participants to complete until September 2021. The other component of the rankings comes from the responses received from the Student Survey. Current students are polled about their university experience and satisfaction in areas such as teaching, learning and the student experience, mental health services, sexual violence prevention, academic advising, and student and residence life. It is available to all students wishing to complete it until September 2021.

In the 2021 Maclean’s University Rankings, York University placed No. 6 in the overall rankings for comprehensive schools, moving up one spot from the 2020 rankings when it was No. 7. In the same rankings, York was No. 20 out of 49 Canadian universities in the reputational ranking and No. 13 out of 15 comprehensive schools for student satisfaction.

Lisa Philipps
Lisa Philipps

“The Maclean’s University Ranking is an important source used by many students to decide on their university of choice. The complications imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic and remote learning have made this year tough for students who are making this key decision about their future,” said Provost and Vice-President Academic Lisa Philipps. “York University is encouraging faculty and senior administrators to complete the Reputational Survey to help highlight to prospective students the many advantages associated with choosing York University.”

York continues to make it a priority to support its students, staff, instructors and faculty members. Philipps highlighted York University’s commitment to student success through its proactive measures to enhance access to critical technology and services, and to improve delivery of remote learning in the pandemic. The University also provided a range of supports to help instructors adapt their courses while balancing family and work responsibilities.

A key strategic investment in the Student Systems Renewal Program (SSRP) is focused directly on building faculty and student satisfaction. The SSRP is the largest information technology project in the history of York University. It is a digital and technological transformation program that will enable the University to significantly improve the supports and services provided to students, faculty and staff.

As well, the University’s new academic plan, Building a Better Future, is focused on bringing students, faculty, instructors and researchers together to work towards this common goal across six priority areas. York’s commitment to creating positive change was once again reflected in its ranking in the top six per cent of universities globally for contributions to the UN Sustainable Development Goals in the Times Higher Education Impact Rankings.

York University is also investing $20 million in a Classroom Renewal Program, which is in response to the needs of students and the academic community. The renewed classrooms provide 21st-century sustainability, updated audiovisual technology and/or equipment, furniture, finishes, lighting, heating and air conditioning.

To further enhance student satisfaction, York University has established SAVY, an artificial intelligence-based bilingual student virtual assistant for student advising, student life and career development. SAVY has proven to be extremely popular with students. In 2020, SAVY had more than 50,000 conversations and 120,000 messages from 20,000 students.

Amir Asif
Amir Asif

From a research perspective, York University has much to be proud of, said Vice-President Research and Innovation Amir Asif. “York University has played an important role in navigating the COVID-19 pandemic. The University is proud of its researchers and graduate students, who despite the closure of most on-campus facilities, continued their research activities to the best of their abilities,” said Asif. “Our research enterprise remains active and, in terms of research funding, we had a highly successful 2020-21 year.

“In COVID-related areas, for example, York spearheaded several initiatives, including the One Health Network for the Global Governance of Infectious Diseases and Antimicrobial Resistance for $2.5 million, led by professors Mary Wiktorowicz and Sean Hillier, and the pan-Canadian Emerging Infectious Disease Modelling network – Mathematics for Public Health for $3 million, co-led by Professor Jianhong Wu and University of Toronto Professor V. Kumar Murty.”

The University is also celebrating new research infrastructure that positions both researchers and students as global leaders. “We are excited about our new, state-of-the-art telescope installed in the Allan I. Carswell Observatory on the Keele Campus, which is the most advanced of its kind in Canada. We thank our researchers for their patience and look forward to the full resumption of on-campus research activities for which plans are in place for implementation as soon as the COVID-19 situation permits,” added Asif.

Globally, there is a high regard for the quality of research undertaken at York University. This is demonstrated in the 2020 QS World University Rankings that ranked York’s research output as “very high.” Researchers at York University have, for the past seven years, ranked first in Ontario for global collaborative research publications. Nearly 60 per cent of York’s publications have international co-authorship, according to SciVal 2019-20. More than $100 million in research grants and awards was earned by York researchers 2018-19.

Schulich instructor lands $3.1M investment for electric vehicle charging network

Stuart Browne
Stuart Browne

A sessional instructor from York University’s Schulich School of Business has raised $3.1 million in financing to launch the expansion of a comprehensive public electric vehicle (EV) charging station network.

ChargerQuest owns and operates Canada’s most innovative smart EV charging stations, and was co-founded by York’s Stuart Browne (MBA ’09), who is also CFO of the company.

Stuart Browne
Stuart Browne

Despite the pandemic, the company successfully completed its pilot phase in 2020 and plans to raise additional capital to expand and grow its EV charging network over the next two years. Its next big mission is to deploy its charging station assets at some of the very best properties across Canada and beyond.

Beyond his role at ChargerQuest, Browne teaches the Private Equity and Venture Capital course at Schulich. He is also the founder and CEO of Pycap Venture Partners, an Investment Committee member of the Ontario Centres of Excellence and has acted as managing partner and interim CFO for a number of early-stage technology companies.

“Being an alumni and instructor at Schulich, as well as being a member of the Schulich Startups community, has allowed me to connect with a network of very enthusiastic aspiring entrepreneurs, as well as future and current industry leaders,” said Browne.

Last year, Browne was nominated for the Schulich School of Business John Peace Part-Time Faculty Teaching Award by Chris Carder and Moren Levesque, co-directors of Entrepreneurial Studies. They noted that Browne donates much of his time volunteering for Schulich events, and played a pivotal role in designing and launching the Schulich Pycap COVID-19 Business Support Centre. This initiative helped small Canadian businesses and entrepreneurs navigate the growing list of government and private-sector business support programs, while offering summer employment to at least 15 Schulich students.

Learn how to boost your business with social media at the next ELLA Entrepreneurial Insights event

Social media icons on a phone screen
Melissa Maker
Melissa Maker (photo by Shayne Grey Photography)

In today’s digital age, having a social media presence is necessary for businesses, but are you making the most out of your online presence? Did you know that social media is a great way to create revenue streams? Join ELLA, Innovation York’s accelerator focused on supporting women-led businesses, on Wednesday, June 23 at noon for their next Entrepreneurial Insights event, Make Your Mark: Designing a Time-Tested Business Through Social Media.

Attend this free online event to hear from Toronto-based YouTube sensation and accidental cleaning expert Melissa Maker, president and founder of Clean My Space, as she explains how she built a successful business through an active social media presence. Learn which revenue streams you might be missing out on and hear her top social media tips and tricks that can be implemented right away to bring your business to the next level.

Nicole Troster
Nicole Troster

Maker’s keynote presentation will be followed by a moderated Q-and-A with Nicole Troster, ELLA’s entrepreneurship manager. Bring your note-taking tools and inquisitive minds and get ready to engage in an active discussion. To register for the event, visit yorku.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_eGZNa8IKRyql7bqfh1WgHA.

About the speaker

In 2006, Maker launched the cleaning service Clean My Space. In 2011, she decided to create digital content, including a YouTube channel, to help drive bookings. Since then, her YouTube channel has amassed over 235 million video views and over 1.7 million subscribers, she has gained a hefty Instagram following and a high-traffic website. She also founded a microfibre cleaning tools company in 2016 called Maker’s Clean.

While Maker has delivered her expert advice on cleaning products, tools and do-it-yourself substitutes for over the past 10 years, she wasn’t always a cleaning pro and she understands that people are looking for practical, time-saving solutions to everyday problems. Her fans tune into her YouTube, Facebook and Instagram pages to get the latest cleaning advice and follow her life as an entrepreneur, foodie and mother of a toddler.

For more information about this ELLA Entrepreneurial Insights event, visit yspace.yorku.ca/makeyourmark. For more information about ELLA, visit yorku.ca/ella.