The Lost Canadians
What does it mean to be Canadian? A new Citizenship Act will soon be introduced in Parliament, redefining who and what we are as a people. It will affect Canadians for generations to come. Join Don Chapman, on February 27th, 2014 from noon-1pm in the Dodson Room, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre for an engaging discussion that will challenge your views on Canadian citizenship. Does the government ignore the Charter? Were our war dead Canadian? Can you be denied citizenship simply because of your age, gender, or family status? The answers are shocking.
Chapman, finalist of the Nation Builder of the Year award by The Globe and Mail in 2007 and 2008, has been the inspiration and effort behind seven Bills in Parliament, the latest being C-37, which amended the Citizenship Act to give Canadian status to those who either lost it or never had citizenship in the first place, all due to outdated provisions in legislation- some of which remain on the books. Upwards of a million people can now call themselves Canadian citizens as a result. Chapman will deliver a session on The Lost Canadians to faculty, students, and community members. He will also provide background, talk about present-day discrimination, and what it happens when your own country renders.
Freedom to Read Week 2014
Freedom to Read Week
- Not sure what’s been challenged? Check out this list!
- Susin Nielsen: Author of “Word Nerd”
- Kathryn Shoemaker: UBC Professor & Illustrator of “A Telling Time”
- Judi Saltman: UBC iSchool Professor
- 10:00am-12:00pm: Read-a-thon (and information table in IKBLC foyer)
- 12:00pm-1:30pm: Writer panel & mingling
- 1:30pm-3:30pm: Read-a-thon
Sarah Ellis – The Writer as Critic: Inside and Outside the Book
A talk by the award-winning children’s writer, Sarah Ellis. Ellis has always appreciated children’s literature from the multiple perspectives of writer, reviewer, critic, and teacher of children’s literature and creative writing. She will discuss her experience as the insider crafting a story and the outsider striving to put that story into context.
Her fourteen children’s books have won many awards, including the Governor General’s and the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award. Sarah received a master’s degree in children’s literature after a career as a children’s librarian, and is now on the faculty of the Vermont College of Fine Arts. She has also lectured in Japan, Venezuela, England, Ireland and various Canadian and American locations. She received the British Columbia Lieutenant Governor’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2013.
The colloquium is sponsored by the Master of Arts in Children’s Literature Program, offered by the Creative Writing Program, the English Department, the School of Library, Archival and Information Studies, and the Department of Language and Literacy Education.
Bio:
Sarah Ellis (born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) is a Canadian children’s author and librarian. She attended the University of British Columbia where she received her Bachelors of Arts honours in 1973 and a Masters in Library Science in 1975. She also attended the Centre for the Study of Children’s Literature, Simmons College in Boston in 1980. She has been a librarian in Toronto and Vancouver. She has also written reviews for Quill and Quire. Ellis is a strong advocate for children’s literature and she belongs to many different clubs and unions such as the Writers’ Union of Canada, the Vancouver Society of Story Tellers, the Vancouver Children’s Literature Roundtable, Children’s Writers and Illustrators and many more. She has won numerous literary awards, including the Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence, the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award for Odd Man Out, the Sheila A. Egoff Children’s Literature Prize for Odd Man Out, Back of Beyond and The Baby Project, the Mr. Christie’s Book Award and the IODE Violet Downey Award for Out of the Blue and The Several Lives of Orphan Jack, and theGovernor General’s Award for English-language children’s literature for Pick Up Sticks.
Wednesday, February 26, 2014, 12:00 – 1:00 pm, The Dodson Room Level 3, Chapman Learning Commons
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Barbara Kwasnik – The Intent of a Classification: Evaluating Classifications Based on the Concept of "Warrant"
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the School of Library, Archival, and Information Studies (SLAIS). Clare Beghtol uses the concept of “”warrant”” as a means for evaluating classification systems based on how well they fulfill their goals. For example, through the prism of cultural warrant it is possible to evaluate a classification system based on how well it represents the needs of a particular culture. Other warrants include literary warrant, educational or mission warrant, and scientific warrant. I’ll review the traditional criteria for evaluating classifications and add to these criteria some considerations of warrant. The goal is to provide you with a multi-faceted approach to evaluating classification schemes in the context of their potential uses and users.
Biography of the Speaker: Barbara Kwasnik currently serves as Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. She also teaches in the areas of organization of information, theory of classification, and information science. She is especially interested in how classifications intersect with everyday human endeavor — for example, how they are translated from one culture or application to another. The purpose is to help support increasingly diverse contexts. Previous research (with Kevin Crowston) includes investigating whether genre information can help in searching, personal information management, and browsing.
Select Articles and Books Available at UBC Library
Kwasnik, B. (1999). The role of classification in knowledge representation and discovery. Library Trends, 48(1), 22-47. [Link]
Kwasnik, B. (2010). Semantic warrant: A pivotal concept for our field. Knowledge Organization, 37(2), 106-110. [Link]
Kwasnik, B. H., & Crowston, K. (2005). Introduction to the special issue: Genres of digital documents. Information Technology & People, 18(2), 76-88. doi:10.1108/09593840510601487. [Link]
Walker, K., & Kwaśnik, B. (2002). Providing access to collected works. Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 33(3), 211-224. doi:10.1300/J104v33n03_11. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
Bonnie Sherr Klein – I Am Who You Are (Marlee Kline Lecture in Social Justice)
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the Faculty of Law’s Centre for Feminist Legal Studies as part of the Marlee Kline Lecture in Social Justice. Bonnie Sherr Klein is a documentary filmmaker and long-time activist in the feminist and disability movements. In this lecture she shares her lived experience of disability as documented in her journal entries and film. She points out that disability inevitably touches us all, and proposes that human rights for people living with disabilities is not ‘merely’ a justice issue but an opportunity for all of us to be our most human.
This lecture honours the memory of Marlee Gayle Kline, a member of the Faculty of Law from 1989. Professor Kline died in 2001 after a lengthy and determined struggle with leukemia. Her work on feminist legal theory and critical race theory, child welfare law and policy, law’s continued colonialism, and restructuring of the social welfare state is internationally acclaimed. This lectureship not only recognizes Marlee’s rich contribution to the law school community but also reflects her belief in the central role social justice concerns must play in legal education and law.
Select Articles and Books Available at UBC Library
Klein, B. S. (1997). Slow dance: A story of stroke, love and disability. Toronto: Vintage Canada.
Klein, B. S. (1996). An ally as well as a partner in practice. The British Journal of Occupational Therapy, 59(1), 23-24. doi:10.1177/030802269605900107. [Link]
Klein, B. S. (1987). Illusions and realities in the media. Canadian Woman Studies/Les Cahiers De La Femme, 8(1), 71. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
Megan Davies – History in Practice: Community-Informed Mental Health Curriculum
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the School of Nursing. Five decades ago, the Canadian mental health system was turned inside out. Nearly 50, 000 beds were closed in aging provincial asylums, with patients following a new regime of short hospital stays, psychiatric drugs and community services. History in Practice uses the power of education to foster professional and caring attitudes and values in mental health services and to improve the capacity of these services to understand client well-being as related to the whole person, with a history, opinions, and talents and located in a social, economic and political environment. To this aim, researchers worked alongside community experts – people who have received mental health services – to create a diverse set of engaging and intelligent teaching resources for use in post-secondary environments.
Select Articles Available at UBC Library
Mfoafo-M’Carthy, M. (2014). Community treatment orders and the experiences of ethnic minority individuals diagnosed with serious mental illness in the Canadian mental health system. International Journal for Equity in Health, 13(1), 69. doi:10.1186/s12939-014-0069-3. [Link]
Zarfas, D. (1988). Mental health systems for people with mental retardation: A Canadian perspective. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 14(1), 3. [Link]
Kates, N. (2008). Promoting collaborative care in Canada: The Canadian collaborative mental health initiative. Families, Systems, & Health, 26(4), 466-473. doi:10.1037/a0014230. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
IKBLC Address
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Vancouver Address 1
A Vancouver address