Vanier Intercom March 16, 2015
Transcription
Vanier Intercom March 16, 2015
Nursing Students off to Malawi Holocaust & Totalitarianism Study Trip Volume M14, Issue No. 9, March 16, 2015 Intercom is published regularly and serves to inform Vanier staff and teachers of notices and special events. It is posted on the Vanier College Website and distributed electronically. Submissions should be sent to [email protected]. Submissions should be in WORD, and sent as an attachment. No formatting or bullets. Deadline: 4:00 p.m. on the Wednesday preceding publication. Vanier Hosts MusicFest Québec during study week for 16th Year th Performances will begin on Tuesday, March 17 in both the Auditorium and A250, following which the performers will be given a workshop in another venue (A254, B325), ending with a group photo in the Student Mall, which will also house displays by some of the festival sponsors (Groupe Archambault, Twigg Musique, Long & McQuade). These visiting students have been preparing their performances since September and we encourage and applaud their dedication, discipline and team spirit. We thank the Vanier community in advance for welcoming these young visitors and wish them a successful festival. Nadia Turbide, Music Department Scholar in Residence Malawi Nursing Exchange All this week the Music Department will be welcoming 5,798 elementary and high school students from across the province in this year’s MusicFest Québec (March 17-20). Students from as far as Sept-Îles, Mont-Joli, Gatineau and MontTremblant will be performing in 135 ensembles featuring symphony and chamber orchestras, concert bands, choirs and classical guitar ensembles. Several of these ensembles will be representing such anglophone schools as F.A.C.E., Laval Liberty, John Rennie, St. Thomas and Westwood high schools. The panel of twenty judges this year will include four Vanier teachers: Sylvie Allaire (violinist), Philippe Bourque (choir director), Christopher Smith (Concert Band director) and Zaven Zakarian (clarinetist). More than 100 student volunteers will be involved as guides, security, program announcers and entertainers. Since 2011, the Nursing Department at Vanier College has offered third-year Nursing students an opportunity to complete their 160 hour stage course in Malawi, Africa. On March 14th, 6 students accompanied by Nursing teacher, Melodie Hicks, set off on their journey to Lilongwe, Malawi. They carried with them $65,000 worth of medication including antibiotics and anti-malarial drugs. The students are excited that they will be in Malawi for the inauguration of the Mobile Clinic where 5,000 people from 33 villages are expected to be present. The clinic is jointly funded by the Makupo Development Group (led by former employee, Doug Miller) and the Ministry of Health in Malawi. The students will have the opportunity to examine patients and participate in awareness activities such as health promotion and disease prevention at the clinic. th Thursday, March 26 11:30am (Auditorium) – NEW ADDITION “Environmental Chemistry: by sea, land, and air” by Patrick Hayes, Ph.D., Université de Montréal th Friday, March 27 11:30am (Auditorium) “Decoding Life: DNA Barcodes for Species Identification” by Edward Awad, Ph.D., Vanier College Biology Department Activities We invite you to share in their journey by following their blog posts and posting encouraging comments. Also, stay tuned for more information about the Vanier College Nursing Conference, What Difference Does Difference Make?, which takes place on May 8th. Students from the Malawi Nursing Exchange will participate in a panel discussion regarding the longterm impacts of this exchange. This year’s Keynote speaker is former Nursing Exchange student, Kara Redden. Registration for the conference will be available April 7th on the Vanier College website. We hope to see you there! th Tuesday, March 24 2pm (F-540/MSC) Student Science & Technology Fair th Wednesday, March 25 12pm (F-540/MSC) Science Coffeehouse ft. performances th Thursday, March 26 1pm (Student Marketplace) Pi-Day Activities th Friday, March 27 1pm (Student Marketplace) Science, on tourne! Engineering Competition Jennifer Joseph, International Education If you are interested in bringing your class to any of the talks listed above, please send an email to [email protected] to confirm a spot. All classes are welcomed. Math and Science Centre Science Week 2015: Reserve a spot for your class! Do you have any questions? Please feel free to contact us at [email protected] with any inquiries. Furthermore, please encourage your students to visit us. Haritos Kavallos, Math & Science Centre Call for volunteers – Fire Wardens rd th The College is currently looking for volunteers to play the role of fire wardens during emergency evacuations. This year, Science Week will take place from March 23 to 27 . We would need two wardens per floor in the main building (A-K), and one per floor for the G, H and N buildings. Science Talks rd Monday, March 23 10am (Auditorium) “McGill IEEE Student Branch – Opportunities That Await You” by Mohammad Hossain Mohammadi and Ahmad Muannaki, McGill undergraduate students th Tuesday, March 24 10am (Auditorium) “Politics + $$ - science = climate change status quo” by Richard Dugas, Vanier College Sustainability Office th Wednesday, March 25 1:30pm (Auditorium) “Mastering Nature: Using Biotechnology to Investigate Chitosan Production” by Liem Dam-Quang, Honour’s Science student & BioGENIUS participant th Thursday, March 26 10am (Auditorium) “The Strange Paradoxes Found in Mathematics” by Julie Plante, Vanier College Mathematics Department The duties of fire wardens include alerting, directing and providing assistance to occupants during the evacuation of their designated section of a building. As a warden, you would also be invited to proceed to visual inspections of fire exits and extinguishers, and inform Security of any fire safety issues you might have encountered. As a warden, you would need to be (or become) familiar with your assigned area, its occupants, the location of exits and the fire equipment available in the area. You will also be invited to participate in a short training (date to be determined) to ensure you have all the information you need to play this important role in the best and safest manner for all involved. If you would like to be a warden for your area, please contact me at [email protected] or by phone at extension 7030. Thank you! Joanie Robert, Safety and Security Services DIY days, March 23rd and 24th Vanier 2015 Science and Technology Fair: Participants and Projects Do-it-Yourself! In an age of specialization, some students are longing to learn basic skills that will help them better manage their own things and lives. Students involved in sustainability at Vanier have put together a “house” concept in which you can visit different rooms to get tips about how to do and make things for yourself in the bathroom, garden, kitchen, office, bedroom and garage. Experts have been recruited and will give a series of short informal workshops on a variety of subjects including making your own cosmetics and cleaning products, gardening, meditation, getting your bicycle ready for spring, cleaning your computer, and making wholesome, easy and cheap food. rd As you probably know, the Vanier Science and Technology Fair will take place on March 24. Here are the names of the participants and their projects (http://www.vaniercollege.qc.ca/msc/science-week/ ) and it is with pleasure to announce here the names of participants and their projects. 1) Vanier “Biomechanics” Group: Gabriel Alexander, Veselko Bakula, Mathieu Corbett, Anna Gostevcic, Annika Lesage, Osama Rehman and Elizabeth Siciliani together with a group of McGill Engineering students: Abdullah Abdelghani, Imran Jameel, Asal Kaveh, Yely Lapina and Maged Yassin will present a project on: “Biomechanics Study And Creation Of A Prosthetic/Robot Hand”. 2) The “Florescence” group: Michael Pratte, Davindra Singh, Qinyang Du and Maricel Dizon Soriano will present “A Study Of The Photosynthetic Efficiency Of Lima Bean Plants When Grown In A Zero Electrical Field, Non-Magnetic Field And An Emulsifiable Concentrate 0.01% Pyrethrins Pesticide Treated Soil” 3) The “Water quality group”: Eric Zimmermann, Ghassan Maraouch, and Frédéric Abou Azar will present their findings on “The Quality Of Tap Water At Vanier” 4) The “Green Energy” group: Christapor Torossian and Jason Eddrief will present a project on “The Creation Of A LowWind-Speed Windmill” that will be installed at Vanier. th Please come visit, in the Student Mall, March 23 and 24 , 10 am to 2 pm. Richard Dugas, Student Services Services and Maintenance Services and Maintenance can be reached at local 7977 and are located at C-103. Work orders can be processed online through our Vanier College webpage under forms (Online Work Orders). Please complete one to request for light bulbs to be changed, electrical/ventilation problems, broken desks, missing/defective blinds etc. Should you require more information regarding online work orders please contact local 7977. Note: For any emergencies or situations which could affect the health or safety of community members, please contact security at local 7575. Brendan Flynn, Services and Maintenance Vanier Indigenous Circle Part of the Vanier Indigenous Circle’s mission is to increase cultural and linguistic awareness of Indigenous cultures on campus. We will be presenting relevant facts and, since we are on unceded Mohawk territory, Mohawk words. 5) The “Ecologic Island” group from the National College “Mircea the Elder” Constanta, Romania will present their project on “The Design Of An Ecological Island In The Black Sea Europe” Please come and watch our “junior scientists” in action during their presentations on Tuesday, March 24, from 2:00pm to 4:30pm in the Math & Science Centre (F-540). Did you know that Indigenous Peoples in Canada were only given the right to vote in 1960? For more information about their findings and projects please visit: http://www.vaniercollege.qc.ca/student-research-centre/vanierscience-fair/vanier-science-fair-2015/ ó:nen ki wahi, pronounced:: o nuh gee wah hee: means goodbye in Kanien’kéha (the Mohawk language) Haritos Kavallos, Math and Science Center and Gabriel Bulgarea, Physics Department Follow the link to find out more: http://www.usask.ca/diefenbaker/galleries/virtual_exhibit/enfra nchisements_of_aboriginals/ Marya Grant, David Piercey, Lisa Sparkes, & Jacky Vallée Vanier Indigenous Circle Steering Committee Teaching Tip: Already halfway there! Now that we have passed the midpoint in the semester and submitted our mid-term assessments, it may also be a good time to reflect on ourselves as teachers and consider ways that we could hone up our teaching skills. Below are Image courtesy of renjith ten previously published Teaching kirshnan / freedigitalphotos.net Tips that may be helpful. We expect our students to improve as the semester progresses – how about ourselves? By sharpening the pedagogical tools in our teaching toolbox, we can finish the term as strong as, or stronger than, it started. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Maintaining Your Enthusiasm for Teaching Some ideas for you as a teacher to stay motivated so that you can remain keen until the last day of class. Some may even be transferrable to your students! After the Test… What Now? The last order of business before the Study Week may have been a midterm exam. Your students may have seen their mark but not necessarily their work. Here are some strategies on how to improve the debriefing process. Communication Skills in Your Discipline Being able to communicate in the language that is used in your specific discipline, whether it is spoken or written, is crucial to student success in the future. Get ‘em Thinkin’ with Bloom We know that our students can memorize our notes or the text. Here are some activities to help them to understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, or create some material or product at a deeper level. Designing Active Learning Activities If our students are ‘applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating,’ designing some new active learning activities and strategies may be in order! Getting the students to work in dynamic and engaging ways will help them truly learn the material. Participation in Lectures Lecturing is still a powerful teaching tool. Here are some lecturing strategies to increase students’ participation and reduce classroom silence. CATs (Classroom Assessment Techniques) In order to test the effectiveness of our teaching, we should periodically assess our instructional methods with CATs. These can tell us if our pedagogical activities were engaging and if our teaching is effective. 8. The Power of Peer Review Sometimes getting feedback from a peer/student, rather than a teacher, can be a valuable process. Peer feedback can help students receive information from a different viewpoint, as well as give students an opportunity to review and analyze someone else’s work. 9. Evaluating More Fairly: Essays, Papers, Long Answers, Term Projects The end of the semester often seems to appear suddenly and we will be grading end-of-term work. Here are some strategies to make sure that this is done as fairly as possible. 10. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) Here are some UDL ideas and examples of teaching strategies that can benefit all types of learners, whether they face a learning disability or have a preferred learning style. Do you have a favourite Teaching Tip? Do you have any teaching or learning issues or questions and that remain unanswered or unaddressed? Contact us at the PDO anytime! For this and more Teaching Tips, please visit the PDO web page Tim Campbell-Comerford, Jennifer Mitchell, Wilma Brown Pedagogical Development Office French Ciné-Club Would you like a fun way to improve your French? Every Friday at lunch time we’re offering a French Cine-Club during witch we’ll watch French movies from Quebec, France and other French-speaking countries in the world! Our first movie is “Paris, je t’aime”, a French movie about La Ville Lumière, also kwon as the City of Love. Twenty filmmakers bring their own perspective to a wide variety of people and lifestyles in the different neighbourhoods of this mythic city. The movie features well-known actors and actress like Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe, Gérard Depardieu, Natalie Portman, and many more. So don’t miss our first movie “Paris Je t’aime.” It will be presented in three parts, on April 10, 17 and 24, in room D-541 from 12:00 to 1:00 PM. English subtitles will be provided to help your understanding. Bring your lunch and let the fun begin! For more information, please contact Isabelle Rivest, French Department, extension 7853 Isabelle Rivest, département de français News from VTV Vanier College Band Competition Meet the Vanier Cheetahs Cheerleading Team: https://youtu.be/of-QA0_diDY In conjunction with the Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation and the Vanier College Music Department, we will be hosting the Vanier College Band th Competition, which will be taking place on Friday, March 27 at 8:00 pm at Le Rouge Bar (7 Prince Arthur). Bands will be competing head to head for cash prizes. Audience members will be voting in real time using the MyVote mobile app. Bring your friends to vote for your favourite band!!! Watch the full (18 min) VTV interview with Elizabeth May: https://youtu.be/gEn4ta5ECVs Our own Glen Ethier (Coordinator of the Music Department) will be performing as the opening act with his band. Come hear him play, live!! All proceeds will go directly to fund the Vanier College Symposium on the Holocaust and Genocide. Come join the fun!! Tickets are on sale at the Bookstore, online at www.preventinggenocide.org and at the door the night of the event. VTV was happy to give Vanier students the opportunity to interview an important figure like Elizabeth May. They asked her many questions about various topics such as Women's issues, social issues, youth voting, immigration and Canada's position on the environment. Thank you Evangeline Caldwell and Richard Dugas for making this interview possible. Check out a video recap from the BDC Case Competition that took place last month: https://youtu.be/A5T2Gu7j6M0 Marlene Grossman, Psychology Department Vanier Business French Workshop Would you like to feel more confident when you write professional emails, memos and letters in French? Do you want to improve your French speaking skills for your daily professional tasks? If so, come and join this college sponsored workshop on Thursdays from 1:00 PM to 2:00 starting from March 26 to April 16, in room A 313. Please note the date has changed from the last Intercom. These workshops will help you communicate in real-world situations as well give you a quick grammatical review, all in a fun and encouraging atmosphere! Come and join the fun on Thursday, March 26 for our first meeting. We’ll help you to evaluate your French level and offer you a workshop that is designed for your needs. Enjoy! Melodie Le Siège, Vanier Communications For more information, please contact Isabelle Rivest, French Teacher, Vanier College Office K 307; Extension #7853. Isabelle Rivest, département de français Invitation au lancement d’Écrits interculturels 2014-2015 Vous êtes chaleureusement conviés au lancement d’Écrits interculturels 2014-2015, œuvre collective d’étudiants du Collège Vanier qui ont participé au concours d’écriture sur l’interculturel « Ouvrons nos fenêtres »! Le lancement aura lieu le mercredi 25 mars pendant la pause universelle, de 12 h à 13 h 30, au B-325. Les noms des gagnants seront dévoilés et les prix remis aux finalistes. Venez faire un tour et entendre les auteurs lire leurs chefs-d’œuvre! Des rafraîchissements seront servis! Rachel Jobin et Josée Tamiozzo, Département de Français 23rd Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium rd The 23 Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium will be taking place th April 13-17 . Our speakers list in now available at the end of the Intercom. Please note some highlights… Important update regarding competition to choose new slogan for Vanier College The selection committee has reviewed the over 400 entries that were submitted as part of the slogan competition. The committee has chosen eight finalists. These entries will now be subjected to a vote via an on-line poll on Omnivox. The choice that receives the most votes will subsequently become the new slogan for Vanier College and will appear on select official college documents. A total of $450 in prizes will be awarded to the top three entries. All members of the Vanier community, including full-time and part-time students, staff and faculty, are invited to vote. Voting th will start on Friday March 13 2014 as of noon and will continue th until Sunday March 29 2014 at midnight. To cast your ballot simply log on your Omnivox account and click on Surveys and Votes service or click on 1 survey or vote not completed in your What’s new section (upper right corner) of your Omnivox account main page. Of Many a film produced by Chelsea Clinton, out of New York University, follows an Imam and a Rabbi on an interfaith journey following Hurricane Katrina. It is a hopeful narrative of two communities coming together. This film has been shown at the United Nations and is stopping here for the Canadian debut. The Imam and Rabbi featured in the film will be present for the viewing. Holocaust Survivors including Hermann Gruenwald, Yehudi Lindeman, Paul Herczeg, Eva Kuper, and Al Gilbert. Jack Jedwab will be discussing racism in the Canadian context. Morton Weinfeld will be speaking on the topic of Anti-Semitism in Canada. Hedi Berger who offers a 40 minute interactive video presentation that chronicles her mother’s experiences during the Holocaust. Jacky Vallée will be discussing the persecution of gay people before, during and after the Holocaust. The eight finalists are: Your Future Starts Here Learning Today, Leading Tomorrow Your Pathway To Success Be Part Of It Make Your Own Mark Imagine The Endless Possibilities Education For Life Take The Challenge, Shape Your World st The contest winners will be announced Tuesday March 31 2014. Darren Becker, Communications and Corporate Affairs Nakuset will be discussing the residential school system for Aboriginal people in Quebec Please book your classes early to ensure space at: [email protected] Marlene Grossman, Psychology Department Capsule de français Bonjour à tous et à toutes! Vous désirez vérifier vos connaissances en français? Rien de plus facile avec les capsules linguistiques. Voici les réponses de l’exercice de la semaine dernière : 1. Josée et Hélène allaient dans des endroits TELS que cette carrière. 2. Le pilote prenait de TELLES précautions qu’il nous inquiétait. 3. Que faire avec de TELS cheveux. 4. Je cherchais des associations TELLES que Kiwanis ou Richelieu. 5. De TELS gestes n’ont pas leur place ici. Bravo à tous ceux et celles qui ont participé au concours! Cette semaine, l’exercice est de niveau avancé. Voici une nouvelle règle et l’exercice correspondant : L’accord du mot « même » « Même » peut être adjectif, pronom, nom et adverbe. Lorsqu’il est adjectif ou pronom, il s’accorde en genre et en nombre avec le mot auquel il se rapporte. Par exemple : « Vous aimez les mêmes activités. » « Nous avons fait le travail nous-mêmes. » « Ce sont les mêmes qui arrivent en retard. » Lorsqu’il est adverbe, le mot « même » signifie : « aussi » ou « jusqu’à ». Il est alors invariable. Par exemple : « Ces enfants sont gentils, même polis envers les personnes âgées. » « Même ceux qui éprouvent des difficultés réussissent ce cours. » « Il est joyeux, même les jours de pluie. » Exercice 1. Nous avons les ___________ goûts. 2. ___________ les plus studieux ont quitté l’école pour aller à la plage. 3. Pendant tout l’été, vous verrez les ___________ visages à la télévision. 4. Ce sont les ___________ qui ont cambriolé les banques l’an dernier. 5. ___________ les autres garçons lui semblaient sans intérêt. Remplissez le coupon de participation suivant. Apportez vos réponses avant le vendredi 20 mars 2015 à Isabelle Rivest, Département de français, soit par courrier interne, soit dans l’enveloppe que vous trouverez sur la porte du bureau K 307. À la fin de la session d’automne, un prix au goût de la France sera décerné à la personne ayant apporté le plus grand nombre de bonnes réponses. Bonne chance à tous et à toutes! Isabelle Rivest, département de français Coupon de participation Nom_______________________________________________________ Adresse courriel/email_________________________________________ Numéro de téléphone_________________________________________ List of speakers at the 23rd Annual Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium Our World, Our Responsibility: Your Action April 13-17, 2015 CANADIAN DEBUT, Auditorium, April 14, 1-2:30 PM Set against the dramatic backdrop of violence in the Middle East and the tension between Jewish and Muslim students on college campuses, Of Many focuses on the surprising and transformative relationship between an orthodox rabbi and imam, who serve as university chaplains in New York City. Through a series of voyages to communities struck by catastrophe, we witness young religious Jews and Muslims working together and overcoming long-standing divides. Timely and humorous, this short documentary offers an inspiring and hopeful narrative in the face of a seemingly irreconcilable conflict. www.ofmanyfilm.com Rabbi Yehuda Sarna and Imam Khalid Latif will be available after the screening to answer questions. 23rd Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium Holocaust Survivors Hermann Gruenwald Born into privilege in Hungary, Hermann Gruenwald's idyllic childhood came to an end in 1944 when he and his family were sent to Auschwitz. During incarceration, Mr Gruenwald’s instinct for survival helped him live through three concentration camps. In the book After Auschwitz he recounts his story not only as a witness to history but as a human actor determined to make his way in whatever situation he finds himself. Mr Gruenwald paints his life story onto the larger canvas of some of the great conflicts and movements of the twentieth century. He offers a vivid portrayal of growing up affluent and Jewish in class-conscious Hungary in the interwar period and of the initial promise and disillusioning reality of Hungarian communism.With his wife, also a survivor, Mr Gruenwald immigrated to Canada in 1950 to rebuild his life. His budding business instincts quickly took over and the same toughness and determination that kept him alive in Europe served him equally as well in Canada. While his Holocaust experience is never far from his thoughts, Mr Gruenwald's instinct to succeed is as much a part of his story as his survivors tale. Please request booking into your classes. Yehudi Lindeman Born in Holland in March 1938, during the week of the German invasion and occupation of Austria know as the Anschluss, Yehudi Lindeman was four years old when he went into hiding. “It was the beginning of an itinerant existence that would take me to at least fifteen different locations, none of them stable or permanent. I stayed at several other farms, both poor and prosperous, at a dentist’s house, a flower shop, a butter factory, the list goes on and on, and I don’t even remember all of them. only sense of stability I felt was when yet another stranger, some young man or woman (a courier working for the resistance, no doubt), would take me once again to a new place of hiding, usually on the back of a bicycle." Please request booking into your classes. Paul Herczeg When the Nazis came for him, 15-year-old Paul Herczeg was a fifthgeneration Hungarian Jew, very assimilated into the life of suburban Budapest. During dark, hopeless days in the camps, an important incentive to survive was to be able to tell the world afterward what happened, as well as to honour and remember those who didn't make it. Paul Herczeg provides his eyewitness, first-person account of history in an effort to help tomorrow's leaders avoid repeating the horrors of the past. Please request booking into your classes. 23rd Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium Eva Kuper Born at the start of WW II in Warsaw, Poland, Eva survived the war by a series of miraculous events involving luck, coincidence and the courage and faith of several individuals, both family members and virtual strangers. She immigrated to Canada with her family in 1949 where she grew up "practically Canadian" with the history of the Holocaust always there in the background. She was educated at Sir George Williams University and Concordia, spending the major part of her work life in education and educational administration. Eva has taught children and adults in a variety of settings from pre-school centres and schools to Vanier College and Concordia University, was Principal of one branch of Jewish Peoples' and Peretz Schools. She has also led workshops on a range of topics dealing with human development and education. In this talk, Eva will present the film Hidden Children, Unknown Heroes (2009). Please request booking into your classes. Al Gilbert Mr. Gilbert is going to speak about his experiences of escape and survival from Belgium to England in 1940. He survived the war years in England and emigrated to Canada with his family in 1947. Please request booking into your classes. Others Heidi Berger Heidi Berger, is an award-winning producer, who created an exciting educational tour to present a unique, 40-minutes interactive video presentation to high school and university students, and adults, that chronicles her mother’s experiences during the Holocaust. Please request booking into your classes. Jacky Vallée Jacky Vallée teaches anthropology at Vanier College and is a co-founder of the Open Door Network and the Vanier Indigenous Circle. His areas of interest include Indigenous societies, gender and sexuality, and activism - especially regarding Indigenous, LGBTT2IQA (lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender/transsexual/TwoSpirit/Intersex/Queer/Asexual), and autistic rights. 23rd Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium This talk will address the social, political and ideological contexts of the persecution of people perceived as gay before, during and after the Holocaust and the ways in which the symbol of the Pink Triangle has been reappropriated today among many communities formed by sexual minorities in western societies. Please request booking into your classes. Corrie Sirota Corrie Sirota MSW, PSW is a Clinical Social Worker in private practice, who has worked with numerous schools and organizations helping address the issue of bullying. This workshop will focus on empowering individuals, who find themselves in bullying situations as well as provide techniques and strategies for bystanders so that they can support those being targeted by bullying behavior. Please request booking into your classes. Gina Roitman Gina is a writer and poet. Author of "Tell Me a Story, Tell Me the Truth," she has published short stories, reviews and poems. She is also co-producer and the subject of the documentary, "My Mother, the Nazi Midwife, and Me," and has had several of her stories air on CBC Radio One. Please request booking into your classes. Nakuset Thursday, April 16th 2:30-3:45, Auditorium Nakuset Nakuset, the Executive Director of the Native Women's Shelter of Montréal, is Cree from Lac la Ronge, Saskatchewan. She is the co-president of the Montréal Urban Aboriginal Community Strategy Network. Her most recent accomplishment include creating, producing and hosting the television series “Indigenous Power”, as well as being voted “Woman of the Year” by the Montreal Council of Women. Nakuset is dedicated to improving the lives of urban aboriginals. Morton Weinfeld April 15, 10:00-11:15, Amphitheatre Antisemtism in Canada Professor Weinfeld holds the Chair in Canadian Ethnic Studies, and directs the minor program in Canadian Ethnic Studies. He is the winner of the 2013 Marshall Sklare Prize for outstanding career contributions to the field by the Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry. Among his recent publications are an edited collection The 23rd Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium Jews in Canada, with Robert Brym and William Shaffir, 2nd edition, (Oxford, 2010); Like Everyone Else But Different: The paradoxical success of Canadian Jews (McClelland and Stewart, 2001) which was featured in One Hundred Great Jewish Books, by Rabbi Lawrence Hoffman (Blue Bridge, 2011), Still Moving: Recent Jewish Migration in Comparative Perspective, with Daniel Elazar (Transaction, 2000); Ethnicity, Politics, and Public Policy, with Harold Troper (University of Toronto Press, 1999), and Who Speaks for Canada? with Desmond Morton (McClelland and Stewart, 1998). He has published Old Wounds: Jews, Ukrainians and the Hunt for Nazi War Criminals in Canada (with Harold Troper), Viking/Penguin, 1988, a case study of ethnicity and public policy. In 1989 he published Trauma and Rebirth: Intergenerational Effects of the Holocaust (with John J. Sigal), Praeger, 1989. He wrote The Social Costs of Discrimination in Canada, a research report for the (Abella) Royal Commission on Equality in Employment, 1983. Current research and thesis supervision interests are in areas of ethnicity and public policy, notably the role of minority-origin professionals in various policy domains. Professor Weinfeld has taught undergraduate courses on the sociology of ethnic relations, Jews in North America, an undergraduate seminar in Canadian ethnic studies and graduate seminars on the sociology of ethnic conflict, and social inequality and public policy. Jack Jedwab April 16, 9:30-10:45 Auditorium Racism in a Canadian Context Jack is the Executive Vice-President of the Association for Canadian Studies and the Canadian Institute for Identities and Migration. Holding a Ph.D. in Canadian History from Concordia University, he taught at Université du Québec à Montréal and McGill University. He taught courses on the history of immigration in Quebec, on ethnic minorities in Quebec, on official language minorities in Canada and on sport in Canada. He also wrote essays for books, journals and newspapers across the country, in addition to being the author of various publications and government reports on issues of immigration, multiculturalism, human rights and official languages. Benedikt Baratsits-Gruber This multi-media educational programme is concerned with the need to oppose the worldwide threat engendered by ignorance, indifference, discrimination, racism, and moral cowardice. The theme, Abuse of Power is addressed with specific reference to Austria’s role in the Holocaust and the subsequent view of Austrians as the first victims of Nazism. 23rd Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium The role of the Internet in disseminating information is contrasted with the media during the time of the Shoah. In addition to the immediacy of the information on the Internet, reference is made to its destructive potential for fomenting and proliferating hatred in this digital age. The need to think critically underscores the dialogue. Addressing the difference between fact and fiction in order to comprehend propaganda underscores the programme. Discussion Topics • • • • • • the role of media in shaping and creating images of national identity; the influence of media in creating and prioritizing social issues; the effects of immigration policies on refugees and would be immigrants; minority and ethnic rights; the moral responsibility of individuals and the collective responsibility of governments; to examine the standards which societies apply when addressing how much “tolerance” is acceptable? For example, do Western societies allow the female genital mutilation of young women? Is it acceptable for a Sikh student to wear the ceremonial dagger (kirpan) in school? • to address the distinction between advertising and propaganda. Please request booking into your classes. Commemoration Wednesday, April 15, 12-1:30, Boardroom Vanier Music students Candle lighting Students from the course “Holocaust and Totalitarianism” Benedikt Baratsits-Gruber: My World, My Responsibility: My Action Commemoration prayers 23rd Annual Vanier College and Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Foundation Symposium
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