Field biology modules give undergrads hands-on experiential learning

Undergraduate students studying biology at York University will have the opportunity to do hands-on field biology learning and research – an experience they would not otherwise have in a regular course at university.

York is one of 15 universities that participates in the Ontario Universities Program in Field Biology (OUPFB), and the Department of Biology in the Faculty of Science has organized several modules for the OUPFB.

Students doing field work

Modules run for approximately two weeks, and students from participating universities are able to take courses hosted by other institutions, giving them a broad selection of field courses to choose from.

This year, Laura McKinnon, a biology professor from Glendon, will teach the course “Ecological Monitoring in an Urban System”.

This field course will be based in the secluded Don River setting of Glendon Campus, which is part of Toronto’s extensive ravine system. The course combines short in-laboratory instructional sessions with daily field excursions to natural areas in the GTA, where students will master ecological sampling techniques. Students will complete a group research project at the end of the course.

Students doing field work in Belize

York’s Department of Biology has organized some exciting courses in the past. For instance, biology Professor Alex Mills, who currently serves as associate dean of students in the Faculty of Science, has previously run courses titled “Field Ornithology” (May 2012) and “Canadian Shield Biodiversity” (August 2014), both of which were based at Algonquin Park.

Mills also led a course called “Tropical Ecology” (February 2014), in which he took a group of students to Belize. The students spent seven days at the Belize Foundation for Research and Environmental Education, and explored lowland tropical rainforest and completed an on-site field research project. In the final days of the trip, the students travelled to the South Water Caye Marine Reserve for guided reef tours and ecology.

“I am really lucky to be able to teach undergraduates in the field,” said Mills. “Lecturing builds a foundation of knowledge, but there is nothing more delightful than teaching a small group of students in the field, where they learn in a natural setting. Rates of learning are very steep during an intensive two-week field course, and levels of engagement often soar.”

In August 2016, biology Professor Christopher Lortie led a field course at the University of California Rancho Marino Reserve, which is home to multiple ecosystems and habitats, including rocky beaches and coastal grasslands and shrubs. He runs the course every two years, and during the course, Lortie and his students camp there for two weeks to conduct research on native and invasive grasslands.

Students conduct a field assessment

The purpose of the course is to teach experimental design and the principles of field ecology research and to collect meaningful evidence associated with major ecological issues.

“A really important component of research and education is experiencing not just the challenges, but also the beauty and the dynamic nature of these ecosystems,” said Lortie. “If only every course could be this experiential. For ecology and environmental sciences, environmental studies, even organismal work, if you can get outside, that’s the best thing.”

The modules give undergraduate students an opportunity to experience what it is like to be a field biologist, and courses are offered on an international scale.

For course outlines or more information, visit the OUPFB website at www.oupfb.ca/universities.html or contact York’s OUPFB coordinators Dawn Bazely at dbazely@yorku.ca or Patty Lindsay at patlind@yorku.ca.

OUPFB courses are just one category of field courses coordinated by York’s Department of Biology. To learn about all field course offerings, visit http://science.yorku.ca/biology/fieldcourses/.

Schulich announces state-of-the-art expansion: The Graduate Study & Research Building

A state-of-the-art expansion to the Schulich School of Business complex is under construction on the northeast side of the current building and is the centrepiece of the Leading Change Campaign.

The new Graduate Study & Research Building was designed by award-winning international architectural firm Baird Sampson Neuert and is expected to open in the spring of 2018.

An artist’s concept drawing of the Graduate Study & Research Building, part of the Schulich School of Business complex at York University’s Keele campus

The 67,000-square-foot structure will stand as one of the most environmentally sustainable and socially responsible academic buildings in North America. It will house a number of Centres of Excellence in areas of management education, where Schulich is a global leader. These include Schulich’s Centre of Excellence in Responsible Business, the Centre for Global Enterprise and the newly established Brookfield Centre in Real Estate & Infrastructure.

James McKellar, director of the Brookfield Centre in Real Estate & Infrastructure

“This will be a landmark building in terms of sustainability and education,” said James McKellar, director of the Brookfield Centre in Real Estate & Infrastructure. “But more importantly, it will establish us as leaders in management education. It is a concrete statement of what we believe in.”

Other features of the building include: a 27-metre-high solar chimney to maximize natural ventilation and use of renewable energy; green roofs featuring a range of vegetation; a media production centre; 10 research labs; picturesque central courtyard; a spacious graduate student lounge; a fitness and wellness centre; rainwater recapture systems and much more.

Leading Change is Schulich’s comprehensive fundraising and alumni engagement campaign. Over the next five years, Schulich will be Leading Change through campus expansion, research and discovery, innovative thinking, student success and alumni engagement.

As part of the Leading Change initiative, the Schulich Foundation has delivered a powerful boost to the fundraising effort for the building. Until June 30, it will match every dollar donated by alumni towards the new building, up to a total of $5 million.

To learn more about the new building or the Leading Change Campaign, visit schulichleadingchange.ca.

Kristin Morrison appointed assistant vice-president of development

Vari pond

Jeff O’Hagan, vice-president advancement, issues the following announcement:

I am very pleased to announce that the search for a new Assistant Vice-President, Development has reached a successful conclusion.

Kristin Morrison

After an extensive international search that attracted a number of excellent candidates, I am delighted that Kristin Morrison has accepted my invitation to take on this important position.

Kristin is an outstanding advancement professional with more than 20 years of experience who has served as the Acting Assistant Vice-President since January 2017. She came to York in January 2016 to serve as Director of Major Gifts.

Kristin has broad advancement experience with a focus on major gift fundraising, campaigns, and annual and planned giving. From 2008 to 2016, Kristin served as Campaign Director with Toronto General & Western Hospital Foundation (TGWHF) where she led the successful fundraising efforts for a number of medical departments.

Prior to TGWHF, Kristin worked for Ketchum Canada Inc. from 2002 to 2008 as a Consultant and Campaign Director. In this role, she was a fundraising and campaign consultant for numerous organizations including Ryerson University, Laurentian University, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Milton District Hospital, and Huntsville District Memorial Hospital.

Earlier, Kristin worked for the St. Joseph Health Care Foundation in London, Ontario as a Major Gift Officer and Development Officer, and served as the Supervisor of a Joint Venture Call Centre for two hospital foundations in London. Kristin began her fundraising career at Queen’s University, where she worked as a student caller.

Kristin is a graduate of Queen’s University and achieved her CFRE designation in 2014.

I look forward to Kristin’s leadership in supporting our efforts to meet and exceed our $500 million fundraising goal for Impact – The Campaign for York University.

Please join me in congratulating Kristin on taking on this important role.

York alumna Lucy Fromowitz appointed Vice-Provost Students

Vari Hall from the exterior
Vari Hall

Rhonda Lenton, vice-president academic and provost, issues the following announcement to the York University community:

Lucy Fromowitz

I am pleased to inform members of the York University community of the appointment of Ms. Lucy Fromowitz as Vice-Provost Students; her appointment will take effect July 1, 2017.

We are delighted that Ms. Fromowitz will be returning to York University after an absence of 16 years; some members of the York community may recall that she held several positions here at York from 1978 to 2001, including Director of Alumni Affairs and Director of Admissions. She is also a York alumna, holding a BA in English and an LLM from Osgoode Hall Law School.

From 2001 to 2007, she held the position of Vice-President, Student and Community Engagement at Centennial College, where she provided leadership in relation to a broad range of student and community services and contributed to strategic planning for the division and the College. She undertook a restructuring of the division to better meet the needs of a diverse student population.  She also held responsibility for community outreach (including providing opportunities for under-served populations), strategic enrolment planning, student support and success strategy, and internationalization strategy.

In her most recent position as Assistant Vice-President, Student Life at the University of Toronto since 2008, Ms. Fromowitz has led the creation of a new division of Student Life, with 14 departments, the development of a unified vision and strategy for the division, and the realignment of responsibilities to support institutional goals. She spearheaded the implementation of university-wide programs to enrich student life, enhance student navigation, and remove barriers to full participation; and established and implemented a cohesive strategy for programs and services to support student learning and development within a learning outcomes framework.

We are very pleased that Ms. Fromowitz will be bringing these outstanding experiences, qualifications and skills to York University as our next Vice-Provost Students. She will provide key leadership in advancing our institutional priorities around the enhancement of student engagement, experience, and success – including the coordination of advising and student services and supports and the promotion of communications with undergraduate and graduate students – and strategic enrolment planning and recruitment. She will also collaborate with colleagues across the University to promote a safe and healthy campus environment for all community members.

I look forward to welcoming Ms. Fromowitz back to York University and to working closely with her and colleagues in the Division of Students and across the University in the coming years to continue to advance our academic priorities.

Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies hosts two-day graduate student conference

Graduate students from across the country will come together at York to explore themes of inequality, colonialism, racism, sexism, and other social and economic disparities that exist in Canadian society during a two-day graduate student conference hosted by the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies.

The conference, titled “Transgressing the Nation-state: Constructs of Canadian Identity,takes place on April 20 and 21. It received sponsorship from York’s  Department of Political Science and Faculty of Graduate Studies.

The conference features graduate student research presentations from across Canada, and many York faculty members will be participating as panel discussants.

Complementing the topic of the conference is the fifth annual Robarts Lecture in Canadian Studies, which takes place at 6:30pm on Thursday, April 20 in 519 Kaneff Tower.

Bonita Lawrence

This year, Bonita Lawrence will be delivering a powerful and challenging talk, “Canada at 150: Where is the ‘Truth’ in the Reconciliation Process?” Lawrence (Mi’kmaw) is an associate professor in the Department of Equity Studies, where she teaches Indigenous studies. Her research and publications have focused primarily on federally unrecognized Indigenous communities, urban and non-status Indigenous identities, Indigenous-African relations, and Indigenous justice.

In addition to a number of book chapters and articles, she is the author of Fractured Homeland: Federal Recognition and Algonquin Identity in Ontario (UBC Press, 2012) and “Real” Indians and Others: Mixed-Blood Urban Native People and Indigenous Nationhood, (Nebraska and UBC, 2004), and is co-editor, with Kim Anderson, of a collection of Native women’s scholarly and activist writing entitled Strong Women Stories: Native Vision and Community Survival.

All are welcome to attend a reception before the lecture in 519 Kaneff Tower at 5:30pm for refreshments, light fare and music by the Liam Stanley Trio. Registration for this event is free and open to the York community.

Visit yorkrobartsgraduateconference.org for more details.

President’s Sustainability Leadership Awards to be presented on Earth Day

EARTHdayFEATURED
EARTHdayFEATURED

York University’s 2017 Earth Day celebration will take place on Friday, April 21 from 11am to 12pm in the main floor lounge of the Bergeron Centre for Engineering Excellence.

The event will feature the presentation of the 2017 President’s Sustainability Leadership Awards, along with some announcements about sustainability initiatives at York University. Local, Fair Trade and organic refreshments will be served and faculty, staff and students are welcome to attend.

Created to celebrate the many champions of sustainability at York, the President’s Sustainability Leadership Awards recognize students, faculty and staff who are contributing to making the University a leader in sustainability among postsecondary institutions. This is the fourth year of the awards, with 15 awards given out over the past three years.

Following the event, community members are invited to participate in the annual 20-minute campus clean-up event at the Keele and Glendon campuses. The campus clean up starts at 2pm.

More information on the campus clean up, including a map of meeting spots, can be found here.

York U professor captures stitches in time

Knowledge is Power, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009
Knowledge is Power, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009
Knowledge is Power, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009
Knowledge is Power, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009

An invitation from a neighbor at her rural retreat on Canada’s east coast was the impetus for the latest research-creation project of Visual Art &Art History Professor Katherine Knight. It’s been a decade-long undertaking, culminating in an exhibition currently on view at the Textile Museum of Canada in downtown Toronto.

Sunporch at 'Caribou Hilton', photograph by Katherine Knight, 2006
Sunporch at ‘Caribou Hilton’, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2006

“In 2006, my neighbor, Jane Webster, invited me to view her collection of 19th-century needlework mottos that she had installed in the ‘Caribou Hilton’, an old house adjacent to her home overlooking Caribou Harbour in Pictou County, Nova Scotia,” said Knight. “Nothing prepared me for the beauty of walls crowded with rows of stitched messages, familiar and yet distant from contemporary life. The words called out with a singsong echo of women’s lives and hours spent diligently stitching. The mottos connected me to lost stories, to the house that contained them, and to Caribou Harbour itself.”

Bedroom, Caribou Hilton series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2006
Bedroom, Caribou Hilton series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2006

Webster had gathered 173 decorative mottos, displaying them in groupings in various rooms of the house. Knight, an award-winning photographer and filmmaker, photographed them on location and then individually, and published an online inventory at www.cariboumottos.ca.  She shares her artistic and scholarly research on these evocative materials in the multi-dimensional documentary exhibition Katherine Knight: Portraits and Collections, now at the Textile Museum.

The exhibition, curated by Sarah Quinton, is an homage to both Webster (who died in 2009) and her collection, and the time and place that gave rise to it. Through photos, video and audio recordings, Knight brings to life a handicraft that was all the rage 150 years ago, and offers viewers an intimate glimpse into domestic life and society in 19th century rural Nova Scotia.

What is Home Without a Mother in Law, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009
What is Home Without a Mother in Law, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009

Portraits and Collections resonates with the spirit of the mottos’ anonymous makers through spoken word and musical experiences. At the core of the installation is the multi-media work Forget Me Not, featuring Knight’s recording of the voices of four generations of girls and women from Pictou County as they recite the needlepoint mottos.

Adding another dimension and enhancing the human connection are new audio recordings of some of the traditional hymns and popular songs of the period that inspired many of the needlework texts and images. These songs – performed by York music students, soprano Marta Woolner, mezzo-soprano Kristen De Marchi and baritone Ray Billiald, and recorded by Cinema & Media Arts student Nicolas White in 2016 – are integrated into Knight’s 12-minute film for the exhibition, scored by Jonas Bonetta.

One of the songs the students recorded is the comic ditty, “What is home without a mother-in-law”, composed by A.P. Nutt with lyrics by Grace Carleton, published in 1874.

“Through the Caribou Motto series and other ongoing projects, I observe and celebrate the landscape and narratives of Caribou Harbor, Nova Scotia, drawing attention to a rural community and the landscape that anchors my creative practice,” Knight said.

The Old Oaken Bucket, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009
The Old Oaken Bucket, Caribou Motto series, photograph by Katherine Knight, 2009

Knight will give a public talk about her approach to interpreting objects in collections on Wednesday, April 19 at 6:30pm (free with gallery admission). Portraits and Collections is a companion exhibition to Kind Words Can Never Die: A Personal Collection of Victorian Needlework, curated by Anna Richard.

Knight’s research and development work for Portraits and Collections is supported by the SSHRC and the Ontario Arts Council. The show is a Primary Exhibition of the 2017 Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. It runs at the Textile Museum of Canada, 55 Centre St. to June 25.  For information about gallery hours, admission and directions, visit the Textile Museum website.

Carswell Scholars Program celebrates student research and donor impact

From left to right, Vice-President Advancement Jeff O’Hagan, Dr. Allan Carswell and Diane Carswell

An event on April 11 spotlighted the fruits of the 2017 Carswell Scholars’ labours, with presentations that demonstrated the power of funding to accelerate research. Scholarship recipients gathered in the Life Sciences Building to present their research goals and findings to Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell, who funded the scholarship program.

From left to right, Vice-President Advancement Jeff O’Hagan, Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell and Diane Carswell

In May 2016, Carswell and the Carswell Family Foundation’s $1 million gift created a permanent endowment and expendable fund to establish the Carswell Scholarships for graduate students in the Faculty of Science and the Lassonde School of Engineering.

Ray Jayawardhana, dean of the Faculty of Science, and Richard Hornsey, interim dean of the Lassonde School of Engineering, spoke about how the Carswell Scholarships benefit their students.

Ray Jayawardhana

“We’re thrilled to celebrate the impact of this tremendous gift supporting and nurturing the scientific potential of graduate students,” said Jayawardhana. “As one of our faculty members and a pioneering researcher, Allan understands the value of research, both in pushing the boundaries of human knowledge and improving lives through practical applications. Thank you to the Carswell family for their inspired gift for today’s – and tomorrow’s – graduate students.”

Richard Hornsey

“Lassonde graduate students are working on solving some of our greatest challenges while exploring their passions and conducting truly meaningful research,” said Hornsey. “Thanks to Allan Carswell’s generous gift, more of our bright and young talent will have the support they need to take the necessary leaps into worlds yet undiscovered.”

The recipients – six from engineering and six from science – engage in a breadth of research initiatives, including the mathematical modelling of HIV infection and radar modelling of planetary surfaces. The scholarships further their research by alleviating financial loads and enlarging their projects’ scope.

“It feels really good to have my work validated by such a prestigious scholarship,” said Amanda Liczner, PhD student in the Department of Biology, whose research focuses on bumblebee habitat restoration in Southern Ontario. “As a graduate student, having support to complete my research lessens my financial worries. My research involves travelling to sites across the province, which is expensive. This scholarship expands my options, enabling me to increase my site visits, address more questions and conduct more exciting research. My project will now have a greater impact than what I’d originally envisioned.”

“I’m very honoured to have been awarded the Carswell Scholarship in recognition of my research endeavours,” said Dylan Hickson, PhD student at Lassonde who is working on physical models of planetary bodies to supplement terrestrial radar data using highly accurate, complex permittivity measurements. “This scholarship allows me to further invest my efforts into conducting research and will offset costs associated with further research opportunities. In my time as a graduate student at York I’ve developed a passion for research, and the Carswell Scholarship will enable me to pursue a career as a planetary scientist.”

Amanda Liczner
Dylan Hickson
Matthew Burns

Carswell offered the recipients words of wisdom and advice for the future.

“Education is a life-long experience,” he said. “In your careers, you will need to be creative and flexible. You need creativity because life sends you a continuing set of challenges that are opportunities to do new and better things, and flexibility because it’s not so much what happens in life that matters, but how you deal with what happens.”

The event also honoured Carswell and the Carswell Family Foundation’s long-standing support of York University. In 2004, Optech, a global firm founded by Carswell during his tenure at York, established the Optech Lab and a unique-in-Canada course on laser physics and atom trapping with a $125,000 donation. In November 2016, Carswell’s $2-million gift created a partnership between York and the Regent Park School of Music (RPSM) to establish a research chair in music education and support the RPSM’s programming in the Jane-Finch community.

Vice-President Advancement Jeff O’Hagan publicly welcomed Carswell and the Carswell Family Foundation into the White Rose Society Chancellor’s Circle, a program that recognizes donors who have contributed $1 million or more to York University, by presenting him and his daughter, Diane Carswell, who was also in attendance, with commemorative pins.

“One of our main objectives at the Carswell Family Foundation is to support education,” said Ms. Carswell. “The diversity of the research here today is impressive, especially because it straddles scientific, engineering and medical fields. We know that finances can be challenging for students. It’s gratifying to help them, so they can focus more on their research and learning.”

The 2017 Carswell Scholars are: Karene Brown, Matthew Burns, John Campbell, Amanda Liczner, Angie Raad and Richard Thai (Faculty of Science); and Mehdi Abbasi, Mehdi Aghelinejad, Ahmed Fergala, Dylan Hickson, Hakki Karaimer and Khaled Youssef (Lassonde School of Engineering).

Up and away part two: York U spectrometer flies high

The balloon carrying the instrumentation took off from Alice Springs on Sunday, April 9

Alice Springs, Australia was the setting for a successful flight of a stratospheric balloon operated by Centre National d’Études Spatiales (CNES). The balloon carried six Canadian payloads, including one from York University. The mission took place April 9, began at

The mission took place April 9, began at 4:47am local time (3:17pm EDT) and landed about 100 kilometres (km) from the launch site at 17:15pm (3:45am EDT). The balloon carried the instrumentation 37km into the atmosphere.

Photo of York team with the instrument developed at York University contained in a special gondola before the flight. From left: Mike Voutsogiannakis, Ganesh Ramkumar, and Prof. Jinjun Shan.

Carried aloft in the payload was the Imaging Fabry-Pérot Spectrometer from York University. Development of the instrument was led by Jinjun Shan, professor of space engineering in Lassonde School of Engineering at York University. Professors Gordon Shepherd and Chris Sioris, also from Lassonde, are co-investigators on the project.

This is the second flight for this instrument; the first flight took place last September in Kruna, Sweden. The Fabry-Pérot spectrometer is unique says, Shan, because it can obtain very high spectral resolution measurements. It views sunlight that is absorbed and scattered by the atmosphere and reflected by the Earth’s surface.

Why is this important? Shan says the measurements obtained provide information on aerosols, surface pressure and surface albedo (the fraction of solar energy [shortwave radiation] reflected from the Earth back into space).

The small dot in the upper part of the screen is the balloon

Since last flight in Sweden, Shan and his team have made some modifications to the instrument in order to get better observation results. Their work is supported by the Canadian Space Agency, under its Flights for the Advancement of Science and Technology (FAST) program in 2016.

The instrument was able to conduct measurements during the entire 12-hour flight. Preliminary analysis of the observation data showed that the performance of the instrument has been greatly improved.

Mission control

Stratos, the Canadian Space Agency’s (CSA) stratospheric balloon program, was created in 2011 through the CSA’s collaboration with CNES. The program gives Canadian scientists the opportunity to test and validate new technologies and to perform scientific experiments at an altitude where only balloons can be operated.

For more information, go to http://asc-csa.gc.ca/eng/sciences/balloons/campaign.asp.

FES engages high school students in Change Your World event

More than 1,000 high school students across 14 school boards in Ontario heard words of encouragement and inspiration on becoming the next generation of environmentally active citizens during Change Your World (CYW) 2017, an event hosted by York University’s Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES).

The event, held April 6 at the Keele campus, had the largest turnout to date, and headlined April’s Earth Month festivities at York.

Sarika Cullis-Suzuki
Jennifer Meness

The day-long conference transformed Vari Hall Rotunda into a theatre in the round for the event’s opening ceremonies. After a land acknowledgement and opening prayer offered by Jennifer Meness, York U PhD candidate from the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan First Nation in Ontario, FES Dean Noël Sturgeon introduced the event’s keynote speaker Sarika Cullis-Suzuki, an environmental activist, marine biologist and board member of the David Suzuki Foundation.

Cullis-Suzuki spoke to the packed house, and challenged the group to find their own individual ways to make an impact in their everyday lives and to look for ways to “come together” to make change. She offered a reminder to simply “get started.”

Her words of encouragement and inspiration kicked off the event that aims to empower students to make a positive impact on their world and to learn about opportunities in environmental and social justice action.

“Change Your World inspires high school students to imagine themselves as active agents in a world full of challenges,” Sturgeon said. “For these students, experiencing York and FES as a source of this inspiration is wonderful to see. I am particularly proud of all our alumni and community partners who organized workshops for the students and their teachers.”

As an expression of the Faculty’s commitment to cutting-edge environmental well-being and social justice, the conference included a diverse set of workshops on topics that opened the minds of the Grade 9 to 12 delegates and their teachers.

Workshops were offered by community organizations including the Toronto Zoo, Sustainable Youth Canada, Toronto Youth Food Policy Council, TREC Education, Taking It Global, Alternatives Journal and many more.

More than 30 sessions were also delivered, including those by: Selina Young (MES ’07), Ministry of Indigenous Relations & Reconciliation; Susana Goncalves (BES ’14), Credit Valley Conservation; Jeremy Biden (BES ’14), The Planning Clinic; Coreen Jones (MES ’04) and Sarah Bale (MES ’16), EcoSource; and Elanor Waslander (MES ’06), Ontario EcoSchools.

Steve Lee

After a day of exploring possibilities to make change, delegates gathered for closing ceremonies in the Vari Hall Rotunda. These final words of inspiration included the Foundation for Environmental Stewardship Director and 3 Percent Project lead, Steve Lee.

Lee, a 24-year-old youth policy advisor to the United Nations, received enormous cheers from the crowd when he emphasized the power youth have right now and the opportunity they have make a difference more than any other generation before them.

FES acknowledges the support of all campus-wide units, as well as its staff and student team that contributed to the success of the event.