Sponsored by the School of Library, Archival, and Information Studies (SLAIS) and the Academic Librarians in Public Service (ALPS) of the British Columbia Library Association, this event features a panel of librarians, who will discuss how to navigate a career in academic libraries. Panelists will discuss some of the common pitfalls for new librarians, strategies for integrating into an organization, and mapping a career path. The panel is especially useful for library school students looking at prospective careers paths, new hires who are just stepping into the field, or experienced librarians starting employment in academic libraries. Join us to hear five academic librarians engaged in a lively and reflective discussion on navigating a career in academic libraries.
Panelists discuss some of the common pitfalls for new hire librarians, strategies for integrating into an organization, and mapping a career path, with comments drawing from their personal experiences. This discussion will be of interest to a broad spectrum of librarians, from new hires to those in mid-career or those planning a move to another institution or sector. A Q&A period will also follow the second half of this event.
Panelists:
Dean Giustini is a Reference Librarian at the Biomedical Branch Library, Gordon and Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre at UBC.
Teresa Lee is the e-Resource and Access Librarian at Woodward Library at UBC.
Janis McKenzie is the Head of Information and Instruction at SFU.
Julie Mitchell is the Managing Librarian at the Chapman Learning Commons at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre at UBC.
David Pepper is the Director of Library Services at BCIT.
April 18, 2012 – 6.00PM to 8.00PM
Lillooet Room, 301, at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
A panel of librarians will discuss how to navigate a career in academic libraries. Panelists will discuss some of the common pitfalls for new librarians, strategies for integrating into an organization, and mapping a career path. The panel is directed at library students looking at prospective careers paths, new hires who are just stepping into the field, or experience librarians starting employment in academic libraries. Join us to hear four librarians engaged in lively and reflective discussion on navigating a career in academic libraries.
Panelists discuss some of the common pitfalls for new hire librarians, strategies for integrating into an organization, and mapping a career path, with comments drawing from their personal experiences. We hope this discussion will be of interest to a broad spectrum of librarians, from new hires to those in mid-career or those planning a move to another institution or sector. There is a Q&A period during the second half.
April 18, 2012 – 6.00PM to 8.00PM
Lillooet Room, 301, at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Raw in its emotionalism and bold in its theatricality, C.E. Gatchalian’s latest play, Falling in Time (Scirocco Drama, 2012) is set in Vancouver in 1994 and tells the story of four individuals across two continents and over a span of more than forty years. The lives of these characters miraculously intertwine in an uncompromising meditation on war, masculinity, sexuality, personal boundaries, and love.
C.E. Gatchalian is a playwright, fiction writer, poet, editor, and teacher. His published works include: Motifs & Repetitions (Midpoint Trade Books, 2003), which was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award;Broken (New Bard Press, 2006), a suite of one-act plays, Crossing & Other Plays (Lethe Press, January 2011), and Falling in Time (Scirocco Drama, 2012). He has also published a chapbook of poetry calledtor/sion (Ranson Works Press, 2005). The winner of the 2005 Gordon Armstrong Playwright’s Rent Award, he has been Playwright-in-Residence at Playhouse Theatre Company and the Firehall Arts Centre in Vancouver, and Writer-in-Residence at the Berton House Writers’ Retreat in Dawson City, Yukon. His work has been produced on stages in Vancouver, Toronto, Winnipeg and New Zealand, as well as on CBC Radio and the Bravo Channel. He lives in Vancouver, BC.
C.E. Gatchalian will be reading at the Lillooet Room of the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre on May 10, 2012 at 2.00PM-3.00PM.
First Wives Club: Coast Salish Style (Theytus Books, 2010), is a poignant and powerful collection of short stories that provide revealing glimpses into the life experiences of an Aboriginal woman, a university professor, an activist and a single mother. With lyrical eloquence, Lee Maracle takes the reader on a deeply stirring and emotional journey that is at times humorous and heart-wrenching but not soon to be forgotten.
Lee Maracle is a member of the Stó:lo Nation and was born in North Vancouver. She is the author of numerous critically acclaimed literary works including: I Am Woman, Bobbi Lee – Indian Rebel, Ravensong,Sojourners & Sundogs, and Daughters are Forever. She has edited a number of anthologies including My Home As I Remember. She received an Honorary Doctor of Letters from St. Thomas University and the Before Columbus Foundation’s American Book Award. Lee currently teaches at the University of Toronto.
As part of UBC’s Sustainability initiative, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, in partnership with Common Energy UBC, Oxfam UBC, and the UBC Commerce Undergraduate Society’s Sustainability Committee present “Chew On This,” a week-long series of lectures, panel discussions, and workshops. Common Energy UBC is a student-run organization of diverse and forward-thinking individuals working to incorporate sustainability into all aspects of the UBC community. It aims to affect real change by building strong networks and working proactively with the University, while fostering leadership and engaging peers through innovative programming. Oxfam UBC is an organization committed to developing innovative ways to support Oxfam’s important aid and relief work, and to raise awareness of global poverty. The UBC Commerce Undergraduate Society‘s Sustainability Committee works to provide opportunities for Sauder students to educate themselves on what sustainability means in the context of business and motivate students to integrate sustainability into their professional and personal lives. As well as using the CUS as a model for how sustainability can be implemented into the operations and strategic thinking of an organization.
The purpose behind this week is to open a dialogue about sustainable food on campus and engage students through a variety of different forums. This is an opportunity for students, faculty, and staff to engage in an open discussion around these topics which are growing increasingly important as the world’s population continues to grow and the effects of climate change on food production begin to show.
Each evening examined Sustainable Food and Food Security from a different perspective:
Monday: The Business Case Behind Sustainable Food
February 13, 2012 – 4.00pm to 6.00pm at the Lillooet Room, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Annie Moss and Randy Hooper, founders of Discovery Organics and Chef Steve Golob from Place Vanier Residence will discuss the business case behind sustainable food and the cost and benefit of eating local, organic. Speakers will discuss the business case behind sustainable food. Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre.
Tuesday: Taking a Bite Out of Your Campus
February 14, 2012 – 4.00pm to 6.00pm at the Lillooet Room, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Sprouts is a 100% volunteer and student-run organization at UBC that connects us to our food and the people who grow it. Sprouts volunteers will lead this hands-on approach to food mapping to learn where our food comes from and how we access it at UBC and in Vancouver.
Wednesday: Food Security, Eh? A Panel Discussion on Sustainable Food in a Canadian Context
February 15, 2012 – 4.00pm to 6.00pm at the Lillooet Room, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
A diverse group of panelists shared their research and thoughts on the topic of Canada and what it means to have sustainable food in Canada. Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. Speakers include:
Panelists include:
Dr. Andrew Riseman, Associate Professor of Applied Biology and Plant Breeding in the Faculty of Land and Food Systems; co-chair of the Campus Academic Plan committee working to guide the future of the UBC Farm.
Dr. Sean Smukler, Assistant Professor of Applied Biology and Soil Science; Junior Chair, Agriculture and the Environment; research working with farmers to assess impacts of farm management practices.
Dr. James Vercammen, Professor in both the Faculty of Land and Food Systems and the Sauder School of Business; research focussing on food and resource economics.
Will Valley, Project Coordinator, Think&Eat Green@School; member of Inner City Farms. Will’s research interests include the analysis and application of community-engaged scholarship and food system education
Sophia Baker-French, Registered Dietician; MSc Candidate in Human Nutrition; previous Research Assistant with Think and Eat Green @ School; prior coordinator at the UBC Farm School Tours program.
Thursday: Hungry for Change Banquet
February 16, 2012- Doors at 6pm at Thea’s Lounge. Tickets $5.
Oxfam UBC’s most well-known event has connected with Chew On This: A Week of Perspectives on Sustainable Food to bring together students, faculty, and staff for an eye-opening conversation and delicious meal. This night is meant to satisfy the appetites for learning through interesting speakers and engaging conversations.
Drop-ins are welcomed but if possible, please register in advance so that organizers can prepare an appropriate amount of food to be served.
Webcast sponsored by Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. Alanna Mitchell is a Canadian journalist and author. Her literary non-fiction wins praise for its ability to describe complex ideas in plain language. Mitchell’s subjects are science, education and human behaviour and she is known for her strong narrative style. Sea Sick is the first book to explain how the global ocean — 99 per cent of the planet’s living space — is undergoing vast chemical changes at the hand of man and why that matters. In a nutshell, some of the carbon dioxide we are putting into the air by burning fossil fuels is being absorbed by the ocean. That reverts it to a state it has not been in for millions of years: more acid, warmer, and more prone to vast oxygen-deprived dead zones. At risk is the very structure of life in the ocean and therefore, on the planet as a whole. UBC Reads Sustainability is supported by AMS Sustainability, the UBC Sustainability Initiative, and the Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology, and webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre).
Relevant Books and Articles at UBC Library
Jones, J. A. A., & International Geographical Union. Commission for Water Sustainability. (2010). Water sustainability: A global perspective. London: Hodder Education.
CROXALL, J. P., & NICOL, S. (2004). Management of southern ocean fisheries: Global forces and future sustainability. Antarctic Science, 16(4), 569-584. doi:10.1017/S0954102004002330 [Link]
Anon. (2012). Global ocean-based industries to focus on sustainability. Australian Maritime Digest, (218), 11-11. [Link]
On Wednesday, March 21, 2012, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre hosted a symposium called Addressing injustice: UBC’s Response to the internment of Japanese Canadians students, which examined UBC’s role and response to the internment of 76 Japanese Canadian students during the Second World War, and how those issues resonate today. The March 21st symposium examined UBC’s role. Participants also examined related ethical issues to connect issues of justice and responsibility in what happened 70 years ago to issues that still resonate today. You can view the webcast here. A 32 minute video directed by Alejandro Yoshizawa featuring the stories of six Japanese Canadians who were UBC students in 1942 was shown. Seventy years after Japanese Canadian UBC students were forcibly removed and exiled from the B.C. coast, UBC is examining its own role in this injustice with a symposium.
Although the Canadian government implemented the internment policy, the role and responsibility of UBC regarding its Japanese Canadian students remains an uncomfortable question. Many U.S. universities protested the inclusion of Japanese American students in the forced removal, tried to place their students at other universities or supported the completion of their degrees during the internment.
This was not the case at UBC. Even before internment, Japanese Canadian students in the university’s Canadian Officers Training Corps (C.O.T.C) had their commissions stripped by the university’s Senate Committee on Military Education. Two UBC faculty members, Henry Angus and E.H. Morrow, were among the few who spoke out against the injustice.
Symposium speakers included:
Mary Kitagawa, an active member of the Japanese Canadian community who led the campaign for UBC honorary degrees
Stan Fukawa, community historian, will speak about what life was like at UBC for Japanese Canadian students before the war
John Price, University of Victoria history professor, will speak about the larger contexts for the forced removal of Japanese Canadians in 1942
Henry Yu, UBC history professor, will address issues of justice and responsibility both in the past and present and why an awareness of history is a crucial element of citizenship and civic participation for all Canadians
Selected poems will be read on the World Poetry Café Radio Show, CFRO, 102.7 FM in Vancouver British Columbia. If possible they will be included in the World Poetry Peace Poem e-anthology.
Webcast sponsored by Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Common Energy UBC’s NOW (No Other World) Forum. Dr. Juanita Sundberg brings the insights of feminist geography and the sensibilities of an ethnographer to bear on the cultural politics of nature conservation. Dr. Sundberg’s work seeks to foster conversations between feminist theory, critical race theory, post-humanism, political ecology, and Latin American studies. In this webcast, Dr. Sundberg discusses why the environmental movement is dominantly female and strategies on building a community of climate activists.
Relevant Books and Articles at UBC Library
Sundberg, J. (2014). Decolonizing posthumanist geographies. Cultural Geographies, 21(1), 33-47. doi:10.1177/1474474013486067 [Link]
Sundberg, J. (2006). Conservation encounters: Transculturation in the ‘contact zones’ of empire. Cultural Geographies, 13(2), 239-265. doi:10.1191/1474474005eu337oa [Link]
Sundberg, J. (1998). NGO landscapes in the Maya biosphere reserve, Guatemala. Geographical Review, 88(3), 388-412. [Link]