Performance Indicators for Governance, 2019
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03B EX-Proposal to Establish a Dept
FOR ENDORSEMENT PUBLIC CLOSED SESSION AND FORWARDING TO: Executive Committee SPONSOR: Cheryl Regehr, Vice-President & Provost CONTACT INFO: 416-978-2122, [email protected] PRESENTER: Same as above CONTACT INFO: DATE: June 7, 2021 for June 14, 2021 AGENDA ITEM: 3(b) ITEM IDENTIFICATION: Proposal to Establish a Department: Centre for Critical Development Studies (EDU:B) to the Department of Global Development Studies, University of Toronto Scarborough JURISDICTIONAL INFORMATION: Under section 5.1 of the Terms of Reference, the UTSC Campus Council is responsible for the “Establishment, termination or restructuring of academic units,” and “Name changes of academic units.” Section 5.2 of the Terms of Reference provides that Governing Council approval is required for the “Establishment, disestablishment or restructuring of academic units.” Pursuant to Section 5.1 of the Academic Board Terms of Reference, the Board has responsibility for the “establishment, termination or restructuring of academic units.” GOVERNANCE PATH: 1. UTSC Academic Affairs Committee [For Concurrence] (April 27, 2021) 2. UTSC Campus Affairs Committee [For Recommendation] (May 3, 2021) 3. UTSC Campus Council [For Recommendation] (May 20, 2021) 4. Academic Board [For Recommendation] (May 27, 2021) 5. Executive Committee [For Endorsement and Forwarding] (June 14, 2021) 6. Governing Council [For Approval] (June 24, 2021) Page 1 of 6 Executive Committee, June 14, 2020 Proposal to convert the Centre for Critical Development Studies (EDU:B) to the Department of Global Development Studies, UTSC PREVIOUS ACTION TAKEN: On April 27, 2021, this proposal was recommended for concurrence with the UTSC Campus Affairs Committee, by the UTSC Academic Affairs Committee. On May 3, 2021, this proposal was recommended for approval by the UTSC Campus Affairs Committee. -
IN the NEWS Universities Are Enriching Their Communities, Provinces and the Atlantic Region with Research That Matters
ATLANTIC UNIVERSITIES: SERVING THE PUBLIC GOOD The Association of Atlantic Universities (AAU) is pleased to share recent news about how our 16 public universities support regional priorities of economic prosperity, innovation and social development. VOL. 4, ISSUE 3 03.24.2020 IN THE NEWS Universities are enriching their communities, provinces and the Atlantic region with Research That Matters. CENTRES OF DISCOVERY NSCAD brings unique perspective to World Biodiversity Forum highlighting the creative industries as crucial to determining a well-balanced and holistic approach to biodiversity protection and promotion News – NSCAD University, 25 February 2020 MSVU psychology professor studying the effects of cannabis on the brain’s ability to suppress unwanted/ unnecessary responses News – Mount Saint Vincent University, 27 February 2020 Collaboration between St. Francis Xavier University and Acadia University research groups aims to design a series of materials capable of improving the sustainability of water decontamination procedures News – The Maple League, 28 January 2020 New stroke drug with UPEI connection completes global Phase 3 clinical trial The Guardian, 05 March 2020 Potential solution to white nose syndrome in bats among projects at Saint Mary’s University research expo The Chronicle Herald, 06 March 2020 Trio of Dalhousie University researchers to study the severity of COVID-19, the role of public health policy and addressing the spread of misinformation CBC News – Nova Scotia, 09 March 2020 Memorial University researchers overwhelmingly agree with global scientific community that the impacts of climate change are wide-ranging, global in scope and unprecedented in scale The Gazette – Memorial University of Newfoundland, 12 March 2020 ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT and SOCIAL WELL-BEING According to research from the University of New Brunswick N.B.’s immigrant retention rates are high during the first year and then 50% leave after 5 years CBC News – New Brunswick, 13 February 2020 Impact of gold mine contamination is N.S. -
Student Power in World Evangelism (Urbana 1970) David Howard
Student Power in World Evangelism (Urbana 1970) David Howard http://www.urbana.org/_articles.cfm?RecordId=624 World evangelism - Why? How? Who? These are the questions we are concerned with during Urbana 70. As we seek solutions, we will naturally be looking at the world around us and at the future that lies ahead. For unless we can understand the world we live in, we will be in a poor position to talk about evangelizing that world. By the same token, unless we can understand what produced the world we live in - that is, where we came from and why we stand at this particular juncture in history - we can scarcely hope to understand our present age. I am well aware that it is in vogue today to call this the Now Generation. We are intensely concerned with the here and now. We want to be where the action is today, not where it was yesterday, nor where it will be tomorrow. Yesterday is gone forever, and who knows if tomorrow will ever come? So I can live only in and for today. From one standpoint, this is a noble aspiration. However, proper focus on the present requires a proper focus on the past from which we have come and on the future to which we are heading. A man is not only lost when he does not know where he is going; he is also lost when he does not know where he has come from. The very mention of the word history may already have caused some of us to turn off our hearing aids. -
“Diagnosing an “Unholy Alliance”: the Radical Black Evangelical Critique of White Evangelical Nationalism”
SHARP, BLACK THEOLOGY PAPERS, VOL. 4, NO. 1 (2018) “Diagnosing an “Unholy Alliance”: The Radical Black Evangelical Critique of White Evangelical Nationalism” Isaac Sharp* ABSTRACT Largely forgotten by black theology and evangelical studies scholars alike, the “radical black evangelical” movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s was organized primarily as an explicit critique of and alternative to a white evangelical culture shot through with racism. This paper argues that a number of these “new black evangelical” thinkers—figures like Tom Skinner, William Bentley, and William Pannell—not only diagnosed the un-interrogated white cultural assumptions of mainstream U.S. American evangelicalism, they also offered trenchant critiques of white evangelicalism’s entanglement with U.S. American civil religion. Such critiques, I will further suggest, presciently prefigured much of the contemporary “identity crisis” in U.S. American evangelicalism by more than four decades. INTRODUCTION In thE first Edition of thE first voluME of Wilmore and ConE’s landMark Black Theology: A Documentary History, 1966-1979, in his Essay, “ThE NEw Black EvangElicals,” Ronald C. PottEr explained that, sometiMe during the late 1960s, a “new breed of Black Evangelicals” had EMerged, laMEnted that, “to date little if anything has bEEn written about thE history, thEology, and current debate among” this group, and aiMed to rEMedy this oversight. Recognizing that, despite holding thEologically EvangElical bEliefs, thE vast Majority of thE “MainlinE Black churchEs” wEre -
225 KENNETH NEIL, Department of Biology, Dalhousie University
VOLUME 32, NUMBER 3 225 Fig. 1. Eulythis mellinata F. Female from Armdale, Halifax, Nova Scotia. 31 July 1972. J. Edsall. 3.5X. America at Laval (Isle Jesus), Quebec on 10 July 1967 (l male), 24 June 1973 (1 female), 1 July 1973 (1 male) (Sheppard 1975, Ann. Entomol. Soc. Quebec 20: 7), 28 June 1974 (1 male), 7 July 1974 (1 female), 29 June 1975 (l female), 18 June 1976 (1 male) and 24 June 1976 (1 male) (Sheppard, 1977, pers. comm.). The introduction of Eulythis mellinata in Nova Scotia was almost certainly recent as the specimen was collected in an area which has been intensively collected for the last 30 years, yet this is the only specimen which has been taken to date. The occur rence of the moth in two widely separated localities in eastern Canada indicates well established populations, and its occurrence in other eastern North American localities should therefore be expected. A photograph of the adult has been included to aid in identification. KENNETH NEIL, Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 32(3), 1978, 225-226 OCCURRENCE OF THYMELlCUS LlNEOLA (HESPERIIDAE) IN NEWFOUNDLAND The recent rapid spread of the European Skipper, Thymelicus lineola (Ochsen heimer) in North America, particularly in the northeastern part of the continent, evi- 226 JOURNAL OF THE LEPIDOPTERISTS' SOCIETY dently has excited considerable interest (Burns 1966, Can. Entomol. 98: 859-866; Straley 1969, J. Lepid. Soc. 23: 76; Patterson 1971, J. Lepid. Soc. 25: 222). As far as Canada is concerned it is now listed (Gregory 1975, Lyman Entomol. -
BY the NUMBERS 2020 Table of Contents
BY THE NUMBERS 2020 Table of Contents ■ Chapter 1 Undergraduate Studies | 5 ■ Chapter 2 Graduate Studies | 19 ■ Chapter 3 Community | 31 ■ Chapter 4 Research | 53 ■ Chapter 5 Awards & Rankings | 79 ■ Chapter 6 Advancement & Communications | 99 ■ Chapter 7 Financial & Physical Resources | 109 ■ Chapter 8 Data Sources | 115 We wish to acknowledge this land on which the University of Toronto operates. For thousands of years it has been the traditional land of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca, and most recently, the Mississaugas of the Credit River. Today, this meeting place is still the home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island and we are grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land. FACULTY AT A GLANCE Read U of T Engineering’s Impact Report 2020 at uofteng.ca/ annualreport Researchers from the lab of Professor Warren Chan (BME) pose in the lobby of the Terrence Donnelly Centre for Cellular & Biomolecular Research. The team is working on a new approach to rapid, point-of-care testing for COVID-19, just one example of the many ways U of T Engineering researchers have leveraged their expertise in the fight against the pandemic. PHOTO: ALEXANDROS SKLAVOUNOS Comparison of U of T Engineering with Ontario and Canada, 2018–2019 U of T U of T U of T % of % of Engineering Ontario Ontario Canada Canada Undergraduate Enrolment (FTE) 5,273 36,732 14.4% 88,278 6.0% % Women 34.4% 23.8% 21.9% Degrees Awarded 1,057 7,648 13.8% 16,725 6.3% % Women 27.5% 20.6% 21.0% Master's (MEng, MASc and MHSc) Enrolment (FTE) 1,296 7,624 17.0% 17,450 7.4% Degrees Awarded 751 3,796 19.8% 7,768 9.7% % Women 27.2% 24.6% 25.2% Doctoral (PhD) Enrolment (FTE) 849 3,676 23.1% 9,653 8.8% Degrees Awarded 143 583 24.5% 1,576 9.1% % Women 33.6% 25.0% 24.9% Faculty Tenured and Tenure-Stream 237 1,635 14.5% 3,798 6.2% % Women 20.3% 17.7% 15.9% Major Awards Major Awards Received 10 29 34.5% 61 16.4% Research Funding NSERC Funding for Engineering $35.4M $156.6M 22.6% $378.8M 9.4% Footnote: Enrolment and degrees awarded are based on the 2018 calendar year. -
Surviving and Thriving with Mental Illness
Surviving Thriving at NSCAD With a Mental Illness: A Student-Created Comprehensive Guide Sandy Escobar Copyright @ 2013 by Sandy Escobar No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to Sandy Escobar 201 Parkview Avenue Toronto, ON M2N 3Y9 or consult the email: [email protected] Every resonable attempt has been made to identify owners of copyright. Errors or omissions will be corrected in subsequent ditions. Printed in Canada Author: Sandy Escobar Design: Kim Minkyung In brief… Hello, fellow students! This is a guide to using the resources at NSCAD, Dalhousie university and the surrounding Halifax area to best manage your mental illness, support your overall mental health, or find help if you find yourself feeling mentally unwell and have to figure out what to do about it. I am a fourth year NSCAD student who has done fairly well academically and socially at the same time as having a mental illness. You can, too! You are not alone! It is estimated that one in five Canadians will have a mental illness at some point in their lives, and that it affects 10-20% of youth. There are a bunch of us at NSCAD that have had or have a mental illness. Even though a lot of people prefer to go incognito about such things, due to ridiculous stigma. -
Mortgage-Sized Debt the New Normal for Medical Students
NEWS Tuition fees: the two solitudes 458 And the vaccine winner is … 460 Mortgage-sized debt the new normal BMA targets racism 460 for medical students Counterfeit drugs in Florida 461 UK coroners face reform 461 Canada’s medical students are taking a “I married a fellow resident 3 weeks crash course in financial management ago — she is starting her second year in New WHO director general 462 because many are graduating with debts psychiatry and I had my first day in oto- Pulse: What rural bliss? 463 that look more like mortgages than stu- laryngology today,” says Dr. Benjamin News @ a glance 464 dent loans. Hoyt, a Dalhousie University graduate. The students, particularly those at- “Between the 2 of us we have $212 000 tending medical school in Ontario, say in debt, and our monthly interest pay- they have been caught in a perfect finan- ments are more than $900.” Andrea Page says economically disad- cial storm: rising tuition fees, reduced “I got my tuition bill on Friday,” adds vantaged students aren’t the only ones government support, the replacement of Andrea Page, a member of the class of facing difficulty. She managed to avoid grants with loans, and increasing re- 2006 at Western. “It’s for $15 339.62, debt before medical school by working 2 liance on lines of credit. with $10 880 due by Aug. 20. The maxi- jobs during the summer and school year, “Debt has become the stressor in mum available through OSAP [the On- but she cannot do that now because of medical school,” says Dr. -
Atlantic University Common Data Set Dalhousie University 2014
ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY COMMON DATA SET DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY 2014 Dalhousie Analytics http://www.dal.ca/analytics TABLE OF CONTENTS A. General Information ................................................................................................................... 4 A1. Address Information ................................................................................................................................. 4 A2. Credentials Awarded ................................................................................................................................. 4 A3. Degrees Conferred by Program ................................................................................................................ 5 A4. Male Enrolment by Program .................................................................................................................... 6 A5. Female Enrolment by Program ................................................................................................................. 7 A6. Total Enrolment by Program ..................................................................................................................... 8 A7. Full-time Enrolment by Immigration Status .............................................................................................. 8 B. Admission .................................................................................................................................... 9 B1. Registrants by Degree .............................................................................................................................. -
Cape Breton University Faculty Association Collective Agreement
Cape Breton University Faculty Association Collective Agreement Bloodying Lemar overrakes some loners after fructiferous Dominic universalized flashily. Shuffling Angel encamp no stigmatics perambulating wordlessly after Cyril durst out-of-hand, quite dilatory. Culminant Alton overlay denotatively. These compatible during the way of windsor building not to test of agreement faculty association collective agreement outlines au that Genesis partnered with groups such as the Canadian Acceleration and Business Incubation Association, the Government of Canada, Refugee and Immigrant Advisory Council, and the Association for New Canadians. Laurentian University and the union representing striking faculty have reportedly reached a tentative agreement. Vancouver couple Sima Sharifi and Arnold Witzig to support the Arctic Inspiration Prize. NWT Education Department Assistant Deputy Minister Andy Bevan. The point of a contract is to provide a limitation, to limit flexibility, if by flexibility is meant the right of management to manage without any control whatever. Ottawa Hospital to train its student leaders to spot the signs of drug overdose and respond quickly. The work because he had been negotiated at science would not imposed by stepping into the same assignments changed to focus on tenure committee in collective agreement faculty association. Whelan explained that the program was developed in response to student demand. The collegial system diffuses responsibility for particular topics over various groups of faculty. Before long, the Black Cafeteria workers at Duke were on the picket line, and Duke students boycotted classrooms in sympathy. As a CPA myself, this is a very important development for the Goodman School of Business and the Accounting program at Brock. -
'73 Christian Fellowship at Urbana
jers ectivé Newsletter of the Association for the Advancement of Christian Scholarship Vol. 8, No. 1 - January/February, 1974 I) CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP AT URBANA ‘73 by Nanci VanderPlaats Though members of the AACS and related organizations have long been struggling to support a distinctly Chris tian scholarship usually separate from the secular aca demic world, we do well to remember that there are.more Christian students at secular colleges and universities than at Christian or Bible colleges. Many of these students have been brought to Christ through the witness of Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, and now depend on their I-V chapter for all the Christian nurture they re ceive aside from, possibly, the institutional church. Because IVCF is carrying out this important task in Christ’s body, six members of the Evangelical Committee for Social Action (ECSA) and two ICS students attended Urbana ‘73, IVCF’s tenth convention which had as a theme this year “Missions”. Our purposes were to meet a few of the fifteen thousand students who attended, to hear the speakers who represented a wide range of thought in the evangelical world, to explore some personal voca tional opportunities which were represented at the con vention, and to find out where ECSA, AACS, Wedge, VANGUARD, Patmos, etc., could both contribute to and learn from the work of IVCF. The keynote speaker for the first half of the convention’s theme on “Jesus Christ: Lord of the Universe”, was Samuel Escobar, already known to many in the ICS commu nity. He’s a Toronto resident and frequent speaker as director of Canadian Inter-Varsity. -
FINAL REPORT ENABLING DIVESTMENT from FOSSIL FUELS: Characterizing Divestment Awareness and Support at Dalhousie University
FINAL REPORT ENABLING DIVESTMENT FROM FOSSIL FUELS: Characterizing Divestment Awareness and Support at Dalhousie University (Weiskel, 2015) Winter 2017 Emily Bibeau, Rachel Bridgehouse, Kiley Burke, Coleman Kettenbach, Lorenz Magaard-Romano, Nicole Slattery EXECUTIVE SUMMARY A team of students at Dalhousie University has come together to develop a comprehensive research report on the state of divestment from fossil fuels at their University. Divestment campaigns have recently become popular across Canadian universities. More specifically, student led divestment advocacy groups are gaining traction in the public eye. Developing advocacy groups is a tool used by young people to voice their concerns and take steps towards combating climate change. Divest Dal is Dalhousie University’s student led group that pushes for the University to divest its holdings from the fossil fuel industry. In November of 2014, Dalhousie University announced that they would not be divesting from fossil fuels, even after copious efforts from Divest Dal to sway the decision (Dalhousie, n.d.). This team was curious to explore the reasoning behind this decision and what could be done differently. Based off of these inquiries, our team of students decided to explore the state of awareness at Dalhousie University amongst the student body. To find the answer, a non-probabilistic research style was used as well as questionnaire analysis. The study required both the major and year of study of each participant with their consent. This research was carried out by surveying participants in student buildings across Dalhousie’s Studley campus. Our study found that the majority of the sampled student body was unaware of the Divest Dal movement.