Grad students invited to submit proposals for research conference

Graduate students are invited to submit a proposal for Visions, Collaborations, & Transformations: The First Annual York University Graduate Student Research Conference in the Social Sciences & Humanities. This conference is a special multidisciplinary event that aims to connect participants within the social science communities at York University and beyond. The York Graduate Student Research Conference (GSRC) will take place on April 6 and 7.

150can-featuredCanada will celebrate the 150th anniversary of Confederation in 2017. The York GSRC will focus on the Canada 150 themes identified by the Government of Canada: the environment, diversity and inclusion, Indigenous people, and youth. Proposal submissions are for panel presentations, and approximately 15 minutes will be allocated to each presentation.

Topics can include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Canada’s past, present, future
  • social justice, diversity and equity
  • experiential learning, participatory methods, community-situated learning
  • (de)colonizing theory and practices
  • urban education
  • disability studies
  • early childhood
  • childhood studies
  • K-12 and postsecondary education
  • psychoanalysis, sexualities, feminist studies, queer theory
  • cultural studies
  • philosophy
  • arts
  • ethnographic research
  • literacy and linguistics
  • global and international relations and perspectives
  • sustainability and environment
  • mathematics, science, technology
  • media and communications
  • alternative education
  • other

Proposals must be submitted no later than Wednesday, Jan. 18, using the GRSC Proposal Submission Form.

For submission guidelines and conference details, visit gsrc.info.yorku.ca.

Questions about the Graduate Student Research Conference and the proposal submission process can be sent to gradconf@edu.yorku.ca.

YFile’s Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, July to September 2016

As a new year emerges, YFile looks back on 2016 and offers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series, and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for July to September 2016, as chosen by YFile editors.

July

The Member of the Order of Canada medalThree York University faculty appointed to the Order of Canada
Faculty of Health Distinguished Research Professor Ellen Bialystok, Faculty of Education Professor Stephen Gaetz and Osgoode Hall Law School Professor David Vaver were among the 113 new appointments to the Order of Canada. In total, some 13 individuals with connections to York were named to the Order of Canada.

AGYU bioplan forest offers a living testament to the power of art and nature
A variety of saplings that were part of a Bioplan forest developed for the Art Gallery of York University’s exhibit “What We Lose in Metrics” were transplanted to a site near the Stong Pond on the Keele campus. The forest is now a permanent part of the University’s landscape and future ecology.

Professor Roberto Perin earns Glendon Principal’s Research Excellence Award
Glendon Professor Roberto Perin was the recipient of the 2016 Principal’s Research Excellence Award, an honour given annually by Glendon to recognize full-time faculty members who have made an outstanding contribution to research in the past three years.

DonaldIpperciel19
Donald Ipperciel

Dual degree will offer York University’s Glendon College students the best of Canada and France
A new partnership between Glendon College and the emlyon business school in France will offer students the opportunity to combine liberal arts with business education, earn two university degrees and benefit from internships in France, Canada or other countries where French is an official language.

York U, partners receive $15M in federal funds to build health technologies
York University, along with partners Southlake Regional Health Centre and the University Health Network, received $15 million in federal funds to develop new patient-centred health technologies. The announcement was made July 21 by Navdeep Bains, minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development, and the minister responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for southern Ontario (FedDev Ontario).

August

Lions to represent Canada at Rio 2016
Current and former Lions headed to Rio to compete in the 2016 Olympic Games. Named to Team Canada were Lions thrower Brittany Crew, Lions boxer Arthur Biyarslanov, former Lions sprinter Khamica Bingham, former Lions taekwondo competitor Melissa Pagnotta and honorary degree recipient and tennis player Daniel Nestor.

Former Glendon Principal Kenneth McRoberts named to France’s National Order of Merit
Professor Kenneth McRoberts, former Principal of York University’s Glendon College, was named to France’s National Order of Merit and appointed to the rank of Knight during a ceremony on April 25 at the French Consul General’s residence in Toronto.

 Modified schematic of the hypothesized functional connections mediating the trans-saccadic integration of visual information from Dunkley et al. (2016)
Modified schematic of the hypothesized functional connections mediating the trans-saccadic integration of visual information from Dunkley et al. (2016)

York research finds new brain mechanism for perception during eye movements
York University researchers have shown, for the first time, areas of the brain that are sensitive to whether an object looks the same, or different, after making an eye movement. The study was conducted out of Professor Doug Crawford’s Visuomotor Neuroscience Lab.

CIHR grants $2.16M to fund two York research projects
Two research projects led by York University received a combined $2.16 million in funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). Michaela Hynie and Jonathan Weiss, both from the Department of Psychology in the Faculty of Health, were selected to receive grants in the latest round of CIHR funding decisions.

York University ranked #1 in the world in quality of business ethics research
In a study published in the Journal of Business Ethics in July 2016 titled  “A Citation Analysis of Business Ethics Research: A Global Perspective,” York University ranked as the No. 1 academic institution in the world in terms of quality of business ethics journal publications.

September

The OSIRIS REx Laser Altimeter (OLA) undergoing testing
The OSIRIS REx Laser Altimeter (OLA) undergoing testing

York U celebrates successful launch of OSIRIS-REx
OSIRIS-REx – the first-ever sampling mission by NASA to the distant asteroid Bennu – was successfully launched into space on Sept. 8 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.

World-leading vision research program receives Canada’s premier grant
York University’s world-class expertise in vision research received a $33.3 million Canada First Research Excellence Fund grant that will support the Vision: Science to Applications (VISTA) program.

York University researchers receive total boost of $7M in SSHRC awards
Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan paid a visit to York University’s Keele campus in September to announce $163 million in Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada funding. More than 25 research projects at York University received a total boost of $7 million of the federal funding.

Image shows Professors Puri and Sandilands who are Trudeau scholars
Poonam Puri (top) and Catriona Sandilands

Two York U professors among five Canadian scholars honoured as 2016 Trudeau Fellows
Professors Poonam Puri and Catriona Sandilands were named as two of only five scholars across Canada to be awarded prestigious research fellowships by the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation this year.

Bee expert recognized for outstanding contributions to entomology in Canada
At the International Congress of Entomology on Sept. 25, York University Professor Amro Zayed in the Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, received the 2016 C. Gordon Hewitt Award from the Entomological Society of Canada.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, October to December 2016.

Grad students invited to submit proposals for research conference

Graduate students are invited to submit a proposal for Visions, Collaborations, & Transformations: The First Annual York University Graduate Student Research Conference in the Social Sciences & Humanities. This conference is a special multidisciplinary event that aims to connect participants within the social science communities at York University and beyond. The York Graduate Student Research Conference (GSRC) will take place on April 6 and 7.

150can-featuredCanada will celebrate the 150th anniversary of Confederation in 2017. The York GSRC will focus on the Canada 150 themes identified by the Government of Canada: the environment, diversity and inclusion, Indigenous people, and youth. Proposal submissions are for panel presentations, and approximately 15 minutes will be allocated to each presentation.

Topics can include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Canada’s past, present, future
  • social justice, diversity and equity
  • experiential learning, participatory methods, community-situated learning
  • (de)colonizing theory and practices
  • urban education
  • disability studies
  • early childhood
  • childhood studies
  • K-12 and postsecondary education
  • psychoanalysis, sexualities, feminist studies, queer theory
  • cultural studies
  • philosophy
  • arts
  • ethnographic research
  • literacy and linguistics
  • global and international relations and perspectives
  • sustainability and environment
  • mathematics, science, technology
  • media and communications
  • alternative education
  • other

Proposals must be submitted no later than Wednesday, Jan. 18, using the GRSC Proposal Submission Form.

For submission guidelines and conference details, visit gsrc.info.yorku.ca.

Questions about the Graduate Student Research Conference and the proposal submission process can be sent to gradconf@edu.yorku.ca.

YFile’s Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, April to June 2016

Bergeron Centre

As a new year emerges, YFile looks back on 2016 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for April to June 2016, as chosen by YFile editors.

April

Bergeron Centre
Bergeron Centre

York U celebrates the official opening of the Bergeron Centre for Engineering Excellence
The traditional image of an engineering school filled with bespectacled students toting calculators in pocket protectors was officially vanquished on Friday, April 8, with the opening of the Bergeron Centre for Engineering Excellence at York University.

Glendon team competes in Translation Games and brings home first place
The Glendon team began preparing for the games in the fall of 2015 with the help of several faculty members, and this training paid off. Glendon took first prize for their team translation of a song into French. Individual team members also placed third and fourth in the annual competition.

NSERC awards $1.65M to York-led research partnership
An academic-industry partnership led by York University has received a total of $1,650,000 through the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada’s Collaborative Research & Training Experience Grants Program.

Lillian Meighen Wright Centre

York U celebrates opening of Lillian Meighen Wright Centre in Costa Rica
A shining example of York University’s leadership in partnering with international communities to build a better world and advance its global impact was celebrated April 25 with the official opening of the Lillian Meighen Wright Centre, the landmark building of York’s EcoCampus in Costa Rica.

Schulich launches one-year Master of Management degree program
Schulich School of Business announced a new 12-month Master of Management degree program, the first of its kind in Canada. It will officially launch this fall with the start of classes.

York scientists partner with industry on $1.7M grant for drug development
Faculty of Science researchers, Professors Derek Wilson, Sergey Krylov and Chun Peng, have received a Collaborative Research & Development Grant from the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada to advance the R&D of biopharmaceuticals. The funding is valued at more than $1.7M, including industrial and in-kind contributions.

May

Project led by York prof receives Minister’s Award for Environmental Excellence
A provincial project spearheaded by Faculty of Environmental Studies Professor Lewis Molot was recognized with a prestigious award. The Ontario EcoSchools project is a recipient of the 2015 Minister’s Award for Environmental Excellence.

Two York faculty earn Pioneer of Change Award
A prestigious distinction that honours immigrants as nation builders will highlight the work of two York faculty members during the 2016 Pioneers for Change Award Gala: Ananya Mukherjee-Reed, dean of the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, and Marat Ressin, founder of the York Entrepreneurship Development Institute.

Mobile Water Kit
Mobile Water Kit

York U invention a breakthrough in rapid detection of E. coli
An invention by York U researchers was a breakthrough in rapid detection of the deadly E. coli bacteria in water. The hydrogel-based rapid detection system reduces the time it takes to detect E. coli from a few days to just a couple of hours.

Cinespace family donation gives York U students unparalleled studio experience
The AMPD Motion Media Studio @ Cinespace will give students the opportunity to explore cinematography, 3D gaming, motion-performance capture, virtual reality, interactive image mapping and digital post-production.

Six emerging and established researchers newly appointed York Research Chairs
Professors Nantel Bergeron, Ellen Bialystok, Chun Peng and Stepan Wood were appointed Tier 1 York Research Chairs. Professors Jimmy Huang and Amro Zayed were appointed Tier 2 York Research Chairs. The York Research Chairs program serves as an internal twin for the Canada Research Chairs program.

June

Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell

York University receives $1M gift from Carswell Family Foundation for graduate student scholarships
On Tuesday, May 31, York University announced and celebrated a $1-million gift from Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell and the Carswell Family Foundation. The gift will establish Carswell Scholarships for graduate students in the Faculty of Science and the Lassonde School of Engineering.

York-led research team developing ‘Active Data’ technology for new ways to use greener electricity
The team led by School of Information Technology Professor Stephen Chen will develop Active Data-based technologies, which will give utility companies the opportunity to balance the grid with flexible user demand. The technology is based on a simple premise of using green energy to do things that need to be done at a time when green energy is abundant.

An artist's view of a newborn giant planet. Image by Mark A. Garlick
An artist’s view of a newborn giant planet. Image by Mark A. Garlick

Newborn giant planet found orbiting an infant sun
The discovery of a giant planet known as a hot Jupiter orbiting an infant sun represents a major step forward in understanding how planetary systems form and evolve, says an international team of astronomers including some from York University.

York University researchers awarded more than $5.6M by NSERC
The Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada announced Thursday, June 23, that 32 researchers at York University have been awarded more than $4.9 million in NSERC grants, while 10 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows have received a total of $700,000 in funding for scholarships and fellowships.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, July to September 2016.

YFile’s Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, January to March 2016

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2016 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series, and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for January to March 2016, as chosen by YFile editors.

January

Ice sheet
Above: An image of the coast of Greenland showing the ice sheet. Image: Wikimedia Commons

Climate change altering Greenland ice sheet and accelerating sea level rise, says York U prof
The Greenland ice sheet has traditionally been pictured as a bit of a sponge for glacier meltwater, but new research has found it is rapidly losing the ability to buffer its contribution to rising sea levels, says  York University researcher William Colgan.

Ten individuals with connections to York University appointed to the Order of Canada
York University honorary governor Helen Vari (LLD [Hons.] ’03), honorary degree recipients Lloyd Axworthy (LLD [Hons.] ’15), Jack Cockwell (LLD [Hons.] ’01), Wade Davis (LLD [Hons.] ’14) and Rohinton Mistry (DLitt [Hons.] ’03), and York alumni Joseph Boyden (BA ’91), Rudy Buttignol (BFA ’82), Barbara Hall (LLB ’78), Fiona Amaryllis Sampson (DJur ’05) and Faye Thomson (BFA ’77) are among the 69 Canadians to be honoured with Canada’s highest civilian honour – the Order of Canada.

Bilateral articulation agreement promotes accessibility to postsecondary study programs in French
York University’s Glendon College and College Boreal have signed a bilateral articulation agreement with a view to promoting excellence in learning and expanding training opportunities. The agreement also seeks to enhance accessibility to postsecondary study programs in French and mobility between their two institutions.

Myles Lamont, "Canada's New Noah" for 2013, with an echo parakeet chick. The echo parakeet is an endemic Mauritian species, which Wildlife Preservation Canada helped save from extinction in the 1980s and 1990s.
Myles Lamont, “Canada’s New Noah” for 2013, with an echo parakeet chick

FES partners with Wildlife Preservation Canada to provide experiential learning in species recovery
A new partnership between the Faculty of Environmental Studies and Wildlife Preservation Canada provides experiential learning opportunities in species recovery programs for at-risk animals. York U students gain hands-on experience working with at-risk birds, reptiles, amphibians and pollinators.

YU Experience Hub created as a nexus for experiential education at York University
The new YU Experience Hub will support experiential education initiatives by identifying opportunities for collaboration and offering services to address common needs, including engaging with stakeholders, offering shared services and workshops as needed, and developing new community partnerships.

York U biology professor awarded prestigious research medal
York University biology Professor Carol Bucking has been awarded the the Society for Experimental Biology President’s Medal for her research and developments in animal biology and physiology. The prestigious medal is awarded annually to young scientists for outstanding research. 

February

York U researchers help create first map of Greenland ice sheet movement
York U researchers are among a team of scientists that has created the first map showing how the Greenland ice sheet has flowed over time. The map shows that ice in the interior is  moving more slowly toward the edges now than it has, on average, over the past 9,000 years.

From camps to campuses: Students changing students’ lives through WUSC
Students at York University are making positive contributions to the global refugee crisis through the on-campus chapter of the World University Service of Canada (WUSC). WUSC supports and sponsors student refugees, and this fall will assist five new students with their resettlement in Canada and at York U.

Curiosity is a car-sized robotic rover exploring Gale Crater on Mars as part of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory mission (MSL).[3] As of February 16, 2016, Curiosity has been on Mars for 1255 sols (1289 total days) since landing on August 6, 2012. Image: NASA
Curiosity is a car-sized robotic rover exploring Gale Crater on Mars as part of NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory mission
Lassonde research team selected by NASA to provide support to the Curiosity mission
Lassonde professor John Moores and his research team have been selected by NASA to provide Scientific and Operations support to the Mars Science Laboratory Mission (Curiosity). The Lassonde team will be part of the mission through 2020 as they help plan out what the $2.5 billion Mars Rover will do each day.

York University gains six new and two renewed Canada Research Chairs
York Professors Peter Backx, Rosemary Coombe, Christopher Kyriakides, Deborah McGregor, Doug Van Nort, Sean Tulin, Graham Wakefield and Jianhong Wu are among the 305 new and renewed Canada Research Chairs at 53 Canadian degree-granting postsecondary institutions announced by Minister of Science Kristy Duncan on Feb. 9.

York University research leaders recognized at annual celebration
York University research leaders were recognized on Feb. 24 for their outstanding achievements during the fourth annual York U Research Leaders celebration. The evening was dedicated in memory of Lassonde Professor Nick Cercone, who was posthumously recognized for his research achievements.

March

From left: Minister
Minister Responsible for Francophone Affairs Madeleine Meilleur, York President and Vice-Chancellor Mamdouh Shoukri, York Vice-President Academic and Provost Rhonda Lenton and Glendon Principal Donald Ipperciel

Glendon celebrates its 50th anniversary with a special designation under the French Language Services Act
The Province of Ontario has designated the Glendon campus as a French-language service provider through a partial designation of York University under the French Language Services Act. The move reaffirms Glendon’s role as a distinct faculty dedicated to Francophone and bilingual programming.

York U political science students recognized for top achievement at Model Arctic Council
Samantha Craig-Curnow, Veronica Guido, Val Muzik and Darren Zanussi are all fourth-year students in the Department of Political Science in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies at York University. They recently came away with accolades for their standout performances at the recent Model Arctic Council at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Professor Sandra Whitworth receives the ISA-Canada 2016 Distinguished Scholar Award
The International Studies Association (ISA) – Canada Distinguished Scholar Award committee has nominated York University political science Professor Sandra Whitworth as the ISA-Canada 2016 Distinguished Scholar.

Faculty of Graduate Studies Dean Barbara Crow’s place in Canadian history
For Barbara Crow, dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies at York University, the opportunity to make history arrived with her appointment as an expert panel member to facilitate public consultation for nominations for a new banknote featuring an iconic Canadian woman that will be issued in 2018.

philliphoffmanberlin
Philip Hoffman shooting at the Berlin Wall, 1987

York Professor Philip Hoffman named a Governor General’s Award laureate
Professor Philip Hoffman is among eight winners of the 2016 Governor General’s Awards in Visual and Media Arts. The award recognizes outstanding career achievement in categories including artistic achievement in visual and media arts, fine craft, and outstanding contribution.

York U team receives close to $1M in funding for mental-health care virtual community for students
A York University research team will receive funding and in-kind contributions from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and industry partners to research and develop support for the mental health needs of students through a Mindfulness Virtual Community.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, April to June 2016.

York U researchers rewrite the plot on gender inequity in gaming

Rewriting the plot featured image
Game researcher Stephanie Fisher
Stephanie Fisher

New research led by doctoral student Stephanie Fisher with Faculty of Education Professor Jennifer Jenson, director of the Institute for Research on Digital Learning, examines some of the ways in which girls are set up as subordinate, in relation to boys and men, by and within the digital games industry.

Faculty of Education researcher Jennifer Jenson
Jennifer Jenson

What is unique about their investigation, which takes place under the umbrella of feminist interventionist research, is that it goes beyond recording the inequity. Digging deeper, the researchers profile how, and under what circumstances, girls push back on these imposed positions when engaging in game development.

“This research shows how participants are not helpless victims,” Fisher explains. “Rather, the girls in our study critically considered gender roles in games as well as different aspects of their own identity. They exercised autonomy to resist negative positioning. We were interested in supporting girls as producers, not just as consumers of digital games.”

“We were interested in supporting girls as producers, not just as consumers of digital games.” – Stephanie Fisher

In mainstream digital games culture − where the games are primarily developed and marketed for boys and men − sex-based stereotypes are routinely displayed and reinforced. This effectively normalizes the male-dominated system.

The repeated imagery of girls and women in games are instrumental to maintaining gender-based oppression. Characteristics of female imagery in these games include the following:

  • Pinkification: In games where pink signifies anything feminine. This reinforces gender-based play and functions as a barrier for female participation.
  • Marginalization: In most, if not all, aspects of games culture, women are on the sidelines as quest givers or objects of affection or conquest.
  • Sexualization: Women are portrayed as sex objects that exist for the pleasure of male gaze. This undermines attempts by women to participate as equals.
  • Exclusion: It is not uncommon for women to be explicitly excluded from gaming tournaments on sexist grounds.
  • Gender-based harassment: In the past, this has included highly publicized, coordinated campaigns that target feminist critics.

Game development camp places girls at the top of the pecking order

This is the context in which Fisher and Jenson set up their experiment. In the summer of 2011, they ran three game-development camps around York, through two existing on-campus summer youth programs. They, with their team, worked with 39 kids (23 boys and 16 girls) between the ages of 11 and 16.

Fisher and Jenson's study participants
Study participants

The researchers created a unique environment as the kids developed computer games using Game Maker: critical thinking spaces designed to encourage participants to challenge cultural norms on what games are “appropriate” for girls and boys to play, to talk about their gaming experiences, and to take risks in their play and designs.

“We designed and enacted a ‘crash course’ that raised awareness of and questioned the status quo, put girls at the very top of the pecking order and intentionally placed female staff in positions of authority,” Jenson explains.

What kind of games would the kids develop? How would the kids make gender-based decisions about the games they were creating? Primarily interested in the girls participating in the study, Fisher and Jenson focused on how the girls constructed their identity as game developers.

Girls begin to counter stereotypes 

The researchers collected data using methods such as short surveys, interviews, researcher observations and analyses of student-produced media. They discovered that the girls created games that fell into three categories:

  1. Pink or ‘girly’ games: Most girls created games that reinforced the status quo and in this, they saw themselves as ‘good girls.’ “This is how these participants chose to mark themselves as girls in a space that is dominated by boys,” Fisher explains.
  2. Educational games: Eighty per cent of the girls created a game that included math problems. Why? Being a good student was part of their identity, and they were familiar with this genre.
  3. Gender-neutral games

Despite the environment ─ an empowered space designed to disrupt the gender order ─ the girls reinforced stereotypes. “Our findings show that it’s not enough to provide opportunities for youth to work with digital tools,” Jenson concludes. “Masculine values have an impact on the stories that girls will tell through game development.”

“Masculine values have an impact on the stories that girls will tell through game development.” – Jennifer Jenson

However, the girls were receptive to encouragement to think outside the box. They discussed inequalities that they had personally noticed. After talking about the lack of representation of girls who enjoy “boy” hobbies, one girl changed the sex of the main character in her skateboarding game from male to female. She began to think of her game as something that flies in the face of industry norms, an example to counter stereotypes of “what girls can do (too).”

Game camp participants
The game camps focused on getting girls to ask questions and recognize that it is possible for them to act in ways they never imagined

“It’s about pushing boundaries, getting these girls to ask questions and recognize that it is possible for them to act in ways they never imagined,” Fisher emphasizes. “If a space does not exist where the girls can act from a powerful position, then they will learn to question why that is.”

This research was funded by a Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada grant. The article “Producing alternative gender orders: a critical look at girls and gaming,” was published in Learning, Media and Technology (2016).

To read more about Jenson’s work, visit her website.

By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University, muellerm@yorku.ca

Exceptionality Fair highlights issues of equity for students with disabilities

Exceptionality Fair
Exceptionality Fair

The 93 class members of EDFE 1300 (Section B), Inclusion, Disabilities and Education, held an Exceptionality Fair on Nov. 28. The purpose of the event was to familiarize teacher candidates with the special considerations regarding working with students with behavioural, communicational, intellectual, physical or multiple exceptionalities in general education classrooms.

autism poster board
A poster board highlights the different considerations for working with children with autism

Teacher candidates, working alone or with colleagues in small groups, developed and presented stand-alone visual displays that focused on students with a specific exceptionality. A total of 35 stations, each including an Internet-based presentation and handouts as well as other resources, were available for class members to visit.

The presentations focused on the types of teaching strategies and adaptations (accommodations and modifications) that general education teachers can use to level the playing field for students with disabilities in their classes. Social and academic concerns were also considered.

The Faculty of Education is known for its emphasis on principles of equity, diversity, community and collaboration. This collaborative project brought issues of equity for students with disabilities to the forefront for the community of learners that made up EDFE 1300. The Internet-based presentations and handouts will be made available to all class members via Moodle to use as a resource in future pre-service and in-service teaching.

VP Academic announces Canada150@York projects

Vice-President Academic and Provost Rhonda Lenton announces the results of a call for applications for funding of Canada 150 @ York projects:  

Dear colleagues:

Earlier this year, President Shoukri and I issued a call for applications for funding for projects to contribute to the celebration here at York of Canada’s 150th anniversary in 2017. The call invited faculty, staff and students to submit proposals for innovative projects – conferences, workshops, symposia, installations, cultural events, and so on – that would explore Canada’s past and look to its future, while highlighting York University and Canada 150 themes relating to the environment, diversity and inclusivity, Indigenous people, and youth.

I am delighted to report that a large number of outstanding applications for funding were received, and funding totaling over $400,000 has now been awarded to the following individuals (faculty, staff and students) in support of their projects:

  • Patrick Alcedo: Choreographing Filipino-Canadian Identities
  • Stacy Allison-Cassin: Music and Belonging in Canada at 150: A Wikipedia Campaign
  • Solange Belluz: French Language Olympic Games
  • Stacey Bliss and Josefina Rueter: Visions and Collaborations: First Annual York University Graduate Student Research Conference in the Social Sciences and Humanities
  • Ines Buchli: Citizen 150
  • Colin Coates: The Confederation Debates
  • Andrea Davis: The Evolving Meanings of Blackness in Canada
  • Leesa Fawcett and Anna Zalik: Ocean Frontiers: An Interdisciplinary Workshop and Public Event
  • Ian Garrett: Climate Change Theatre Action
  • Alana Gerecke and Laura Levin: “Moving Crip and Mad” Workshop
  • Jodie Glean and Lorne Foster: Race Inclusion and Supportive Environments @ 150
  • Eve Haque and Amar Wahab: Teaching Against Islamaphobia
  • Sarah Howe and Nilay Goyal: Innovate TO150
  • Donald Ipperciel and Francis Garon: Canada’s Constitutional Challenges After 150 Years: The Next Phase
  • Adrienne Johnson and Anna Zalik: Conference: The Past, Present and Future of Canada and the Global Extractives Complex
  • Eva Karpinski: Lives Outside the Lines: Gender and Genre in the Americas – A Symposium in Honour of Marlene Kadar
  • Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston: Imagining Canada’s Futures with Romani Refugees
  • Sean Kheraj: What Did Confederation Accomplish? Historical Perspectives on 150 Years of Canada
  • David Koffman: No Better Home for the Jews…than Canada
  • Jacqueline Krikorian: Translation of Two-Volume Edited Collection of Scholarship on Confederation for 150th Anniversary
  • Christopher Lortie: Open Science Canada Podcast Series
  • Christopher Lortie and Sapna Sharma: Environmental Data Synthesis Week
  • Anne MacLennan: Connecting Canada
  • Marcel Martel: OHFA “Ontario 150” Provincial Fair
  • Philip Monk and Emelie Chhangur: Migrating the Margins: Uploading the Toronto of Tomorrow
  • Shani Ocquaye and Tristan Davis: Know Your Worth: A Youth Empowerment Conference; and The 5th Annual Lincoln Alexander Award Ceremony
  • Debra Pepler: Mobilizing Youth to Create a Caring and Respectful Canada: Hear Our Voices
  • Rebecca Pillai Riddell and Jock Phippen: Celebrating Canada’s 150: Science on Ice – Transdisciplinary Scientific Perspectives on the North
  • Maggie Quirt and Tania Das Gupta: And Social Justice for All: Indigenous Youth, Indigenous Voices – Spring 2016 Symposium
  • Julie Rahmer and Marc Wilchesky: Career Success Symposium for Students with Disabilities
  • Leslie Sanders and Philip Kelly: Unity in Diversity: Fusion of Communities in Canada
  • Tom Scott and Kalina Grewal: Communicating at an Interdisciplinary Level
  • Marlis Schweitzer: Interdisciplinary Workshop: “Over There: how we went to war in Europe”
  • Lorne Sossin and Jamil Jivani: Creating Opportunities Summit
  • Noel Sturgeon: Ahead by a Century and a Half: Envisioning Just Transformations in a Changing Climate
  • Danielle Thibodeau: Law in Action Within Schools (LAWS)
  • Brandon Vickerd: Going Public: New Ways of Thinking about Public Art Symposium
  • Sue Winton: Life in the University: Past, Present and Future – Faculty of Education Event Series in Recognition of Canada 150
  • Jenny Wustenberg, Daphne Winland, Michael Nijhawan, and Duygu Gul Kaya: Workshop: Unsettling Canada at 150: Memory Discourses in Transnational Contexts
  • Xueqing Xu and Jessica Tsui-Yan Li: Retrospect and Prospect: Symposium on Chinese Canadian Literature and Media

Colleagues are invited to contact the project leads for more information about their initiatives, and a fuller description of projects will be posted on the Provost’s website.

We look forward to the celebration of Canada’s Sesquicentennial next year and encourage all members of the York community to participate in these funded events and the many others that will be mounted to mark this significant milestone in Canada’s history.

Rhonda Lenton
Vice-President Academic & Provost

York prof makes advances in hearing project for northern youth

Deaf education image
Deaf education image

A $300,000 prize awarded earlier this year to a team of audiologists, educators and community members from Ontario and Nunavut, including York U Faculty of Education Professor Pam Millett, has made some impressive advances.

Professor Pam Millett teaching kids about hearing loss in Ulaajuk School in Pond Inlet in May of this year
Professor Pam Millett teaching kids about hearing loss in Ulaajuk School in Pond Inlet in May of this year

The prize, which is a share of the $1.5-million Arctic Inspiration Prize, was awarded for the work Millett and her colleagues did on their Better Hearing in Education for Northern Youth (BHENY) project that demonstrates their knowledge to action plans that advance the health, wellness and quality of life of Canada’s Northern peoples and communities.

The project addresses the issue of hearing loss in 13 communities in Nunavut’s Qikiqtani region through the provision of technology, education and professional development for teachers and parents, and the enhancement of inter-agency and community partnerships.

At least 40 per cent of children in Nunavut have hearing loss, many due to complications from ear infections that are rarely seen in the south. Access to timely healthcare, as well as geography, make it difficult for families to seek out consistent treatment to prevent these complications.

Since being named as one of the winners of the Artic Inspiration Prize in January of 2016, members of the Bheny project have been hard at work.

To date, Bheny has:

  • installed 68 sound field systems in four schools – in the communities of Pond Inlet, Pangnirtung, Igloolik and Iqaluit;
  • trained 80 teachers/school support teachers, 25 student support assistants and five student support teachers in the use and maintenance of the systems;
  • presented Hearing Fairs for approximately 1,100 children and their parents, to learn about hearing and hearing care;
  • engaged in a variety of knowledge mobilization activities and new project initiatives related to professional development for student support teachers and student support assistants, and hearing screening; and
  • received a further $150,000 in funding from the Hear the World Foundation for the purchase of sound field systems in more communities in Nunavut.

The project will also see six more schools that will have every classroom outfitted with sound field systems by June of 2017.

The project includes partnerships with teachers and administrators from Qikiqtani School Operations, and the team’s long-term goal is to expand the project across the entire Nunavut region.

About the Arctic Inspiration Prize

Founded in 2012 by Arnold Witzig and Sima Sharifi, the Arctic Inspiration Prize recognizes and promotes the extraordinary contribution made by diverse teams in the gathering of Arctic knowledge, and their plans to implement this knowledge to real world applications for the benefit of the Canadian Arctic, Arctic Peoples, and therefore Canada as a whole. To date, 11 teams have been awarded prizes totaling $4.5 million.

Teacher candidates use drama to explore sustainability and global citizenship

Faculty of Education teacher candidates at the Regent Park site participated in a drama workshop in November to explore sustainability issues and global citizenship through a social justice lens.

teacher-candidate-workshopThe workshop,  presented by Sarah Papoff from the Council of Drama and Dance Educators (CODE), provided teacher candidates with an opportunity to explore how to use drama in teaching practice(s) as a creative and effective way to explore global issues with their students.

“We explored how and when we might use particular drama conventions that lend themselves to this work,” said Course Director Vidya Shah. “We then unpacked systemic ideas like power and privilege through dramatic games and activities inspired by the work of Augusto Boal and Theatre of the Oppressed.”

Teacher candidates participated in drama activities including flocking, mirroring, and image theatre to explore the intersections of colonization, racism and environmental degradation in the context of the proposed pipeline in Standing Rock, North Dakota.

“Through photos, discussions, and theatre, Sarah led us into the world of Standing Rock,” said Katharine Lewis, a teacher candidate. “At points, I felt like I was actually there. Our group created tableaus based on real scenes from the area of the proposed North Dakota Pipeline, which was much more difficult and complex to do than I thought it would be.”

Throughout the workshop, York students also discussed how notions of multiple and contradictory perspectives, environmental activism and solidarity could influence change in specific global issues.

“Sarah’s presentation was phenomenal. Her energy, passion and commitment to student learning was evident throughout the workshop,” said Colleen Weir, another teacher candidate. “She got us on our feet and inspired us to (re)consider the vital role the arts can play in all areas of the curriculum. Thanks to Sarah, I used ‘flocking’ to kick-start our unit on forces causing movement. My students loved it!”