UPEI announces Athletes of the Week, January 4-10

The UPEI Panther Subway Athletes of the Week for the week of January 4-10 are Katie Donahoe, Women’s Basketball, and Mason Wilgosh, Men’s Hockey.

UPEI Athletics and Recreation recognize student-athletes on a weekly basis for their hard work and dedication to their respective sports. The UPEI Athletes of the Week are also nominated to Atlantic University Sport and Canadian Interuniversity Sport for possible recognition in the region and/or country.

Who:  Katie Donahoe, Women’s Basketball; and Mason Wilgosh, Men’s Hockey

What: UPEI Panther Subway Athletes of the Week

When: Week of January 4–10, 2016

Where: University of Prince Edward Island

Why:  Donahoe, a fifth-year guard and Kinesiology student from Riverview, New Brunswick, scored 7 points on 50% shooting in the Panthers 67-53 loss to the CIS #4 ranked Saint Mary’s Huskies on Saturday night. Donahoe also had 8 assists, 5 rebounds, and 3 steals in 40 minutes of playing time while providing outstanding defence.

Wilgosh, a fourth-year forward Bachelor of Arts student from Winnipeg, Manitoba, was the consummate team leader on the weekend. During Friday’s 5-4 overtime loss to St.FX, the team captain led a third period comeback with 3 assists to tie the game after being down 4-0. On Saturday night, Wilgosh scored the winning goal in overtime to give the Panthers a 2-1 win over Dalhousie. Wilgosh played more than 60 minutes between the weekend’s two games, helping the Panthers earn an important 3 points in the standings.

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation

  • Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
  • Proud member of the AUS and CIS
  • Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place and UPEI Turf
  • Home of Panther Sports Medicine
  • Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas

UPEI Women's Basketball set to Shoot for the Cure

UPEI Athletics and Recreation will host the ninth annual Shoot for the Cure fundraiser this Friday, January 15 when the Women’s Basketball Panthers take on the Acadia Axewomen. The tip-off time is 6:00 pm.

Shoot for the Cure is a fundraising initiative of the CIS Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) that raises money for the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation and other related charities. The national campaign, launched in 2007, has collected over $886,000 in donations.

The entire Panther team is involved in the local UPEI effort, led by captains Tamara Tompkins, Katie Donahoe, and Anne Kiberd.

“We’re so excited to be hosting this fundraiser as we all know someone who has been affected by breast cancer,” says Tompkins.

“On behalf of UPEI Women’s Basketball, I invite everyone to come out to watch great basketball action and help us with this worthy cause,” she adds. “There are numerous ways to give at the game—you can buy Shoot for the Cure t-shirts, pick up a treat at our bake sale, or bid on some terrific donated prizes at our silent auction.”

For the fifth year in a row, all 47 CIS women's basketball schools are participating in the program. This year's edition of Shoot for the Cure could prove the most special to date, thanks to the fast approaching $1,000,000 benchmark and the launch of a new coast-to-coast project, the Pink Ball Journey.
At the 2015 CIS women’s basketball championship in Quebec City last March, the WBCA presented a cheque for $102,312.05 to the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. An additional $23,049.71 was amassed by universities that elected to donate their fundraised money to local or provincial organizations, bringing the overall Shoot for the Cure total for the 2014-15 season to $125,361.76.

Everyone is encouraged and welcome to attend!

 

UPEI math alumna invested into Order of Ontario

UPEI alumna Monica Elaine Campbell, Class of ’78, was invested into the Order of Ontario yesterday by the Honourable Elizabeth Dowdeswell, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario and Chancellor of the Order of Ontario.

Campbell, who lives in Ottawa, grew up on PEI and moved to Ontario after graduating with her Bachelor of Science, Honours in Mathematics (Minor in Biology). It is believed that Campbell was the first profoundly Deaf student to graduate from UPEI, a remarkable feat at a time when technological supports were limited. She took all her notes through lip reading.

The Order of Ontario recognized Campbell as “a pioneer in the development of palliative care services for the Deaf in Ontario. She has worked tirelessly to break down communication, cultural, and institutional barriers that have long limited Deaf people's access to end-of-life care.”

UPEI President and Vice Chancellor Alaa Abd-El-Aziz said, “On behalf of all of the entire UPEI family and friends network, I congratulate our alumna, Ms. Campbell, on her investiture to the Order of Ontario. We are so very proud of her success and contributions to society.”
 

UPEI Panther Subway Athletes of the Week, January 11-17

The UPEI Panther Subway Athletes of the Week for the week of January 11-17 are Marie-Soleil Deschenes, Women’s Hockey and Dut Dut, Men’s Basketball.

On a weekly basis, UPEI Athletics and Recreation recognizes these talented student-athletes for their hard work and dedication to their respective sports. UPEI Athletes of the Week are then nominated to Atlantic University Sport and Canadian Interuniversity Sport for possible recognition in the region and/or country.

Who:  Marie-Soleil Deschenes, Women’s Hockey, and Dut Dut, Men’s Basketball

What: UPEI Panther Subway Athletes of the Week

When: Week of January 11–17, 2016

Where: University of Prince Edward Island

Why: Deschenes, a fourth-year Bachelor of Science student from Île-Perrot, Quebec, backstopped the Women’s Hockey Panthers to two huge victories on the weekend. The Panthers broke a 12-game losing streak and are back in the hunt for a playoff position. During the Panthers 1-0 win over Dalhousie and 2-1 win over CIS sixth-seed Saint Mary’s, Deschenes was selected 1st Star and stopped 53 of 54 shots with a 98.2 save percentage.

Dut, a fourth-year Bachelor of Arts student from Ottawa, Ontario, led the Panthers to two important victories over the Acadia Axemen on the weekend. During the Panthers’ 101-83 and 92-90 wins, Dut recorded 46 points on 16/25 shooting from the field, 27 rebounds, and 2 blocked shots. He was 3/6 from three point range and 11/12 from the foul line.

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation

  • Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
  • Proud member of the AUS and CIS
  • Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place and UPEI Turf
  • Home of Panther Sports Medicine
  • Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas 

Island Mobility, Migration and Population Issues: a public symposium

The current dynamics of population change in Prince Edward Island will be the subject of a public symposium at UPEI. The event begins at 7:00 pm, January 21 in the Alex H. MacKinnon Lecture Theatre, Room 242, Don and Marion McDougall Hall.  The storm date is January 22.

Population change has always been at the core of the development of small islands, and it is no different on Prince Edward Island. Every day, the public media deliver news about some aspect of population: youth outmigration, rural depopulation, an aging workforce, temporary foreign workers, refugees, wealthy immigrant investors, or numerous other trends. The symposium will provide an opportunity for the public to hear about and contribute to the debate on several of the population issues that are crucial to the future of Prince Edward Island.

This event is sponsored by UPEI’s Institute of Island Studies, in conjunction with UPEI Research Services.

Speakers:

Dr. Jim Randall is a geographer by training and a professor in the Island Studies program at UPEI. He is also Chair of the Institute of Island Studies and Co-ordinator of the Master of Arts in Island Studies. Dr. Randall will provide an overview of the major population changes taking place on PEI from a “small islands” perspective.

Katie Mazer is a PhD Candidate in Geography at the University of Toronto. She researches the movement of workers between the Maritimes and natural resource industries 'out west.' Ms. Mazer’s presentation will focus on Islanders going west and migrant workers coming into the province through the Temporary Foreign Worker Program. Looking at government policies and economic forces that pressure people to leave home for work, her presentation asks: Why do so many workers have to go so far to make a living?

Tony Wallbank is a retired business owner and draft-horse enthusiast who has spearheaded the upcoming migration of two communities of Amish farmers from southern Ontario to eastern Prince Edward Island. The first Amish settlers will arrive next spring. He will tell us about the Amish, explain why they find rural PEI attractive, and review some of the challenges in this process of community resettlement.

Members of the public are cordially invited to attend. Admission is free. Following the presentations, there will be ample time for discussion and questions from the floor.

For further information, contact Laurie Brinklow, Co-ordinator, Institute of Island Studies at brinklow@upei.ca or 902-894-2881.

Water acts and poetry

Water is a precious necessity that shapes and sustains our lives, yet current and potential watershed problems are a serious challenge on PEI and globally. The Island is the only Canadian province to rely solely on groundwater for drinking water. To ensure the continual sustainability and potability of our water, province-wide hearings are currently being held for the Water Act.

In a timely visit to PEI, Dr. Rita Wong—professor, watershed researcher, activist,  and poet—will deliver the inaugural UPEI Don Mazer Arts and Science Lecture February 4 at 7:00 pm in the Alex H. MacKinnon Auditorium, room 242, of UPEI’s Don and Marion McDougall.

Dr. Wong’s talk, entitled “Humble Autonomy: Renewing Culture through Participatory Water Ethics,” will focus on Vancouver, with ample time afterward for the audience to discuss parallels with PEI. A reception with refreshments will follow.

In addition to research presentations on watershed issues, Dr. Wong uses poetry to reflect on human relations with water. Her poetry book Undercurrent reminds humanity that “we are water bodies,” and that we need to honour this reality.

UPEI is also honoured to to be host Dr. Wong on February 5 at 7:30 pm for a public reading of her poetry, in the Dawson Lounge (Room 520) in SDU Main Building. The reading is sponsored by the UPEI faculties of Arts and Science, with funding from the Canada Council for the Arts.

Dr. Wong grew up in Calgary. She is currently an associate professor in Critical and Cultural Studies at Emily Carr University in Vancouver. Living and working in Vancouver, she became interested in water ethics because she learned how many salmon streams have been buried and lost to urban development. She lives on the path of a buried salmon stream that she and her neighbours aim to reconnect with and bring back to memory and daylight.

In the earlier part of her career, she was known for her work in Asian Canadian studies and her inter-disciplinary research. For this work, Dr. Wong received a doctoral fellowship from the Social Sciences and Humanity Research Council of Canada. As her focus has shifted more on water issues as a cultural nexus, she has also received a major SSHRC research-creation grant for this collaborative work with filmmaker Dorothy Christian.

She has won the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize and the Asian Canadian Writer’s Workshop Emerging Writer Award, and is renowned for examining relationships among contemporary poetics, social justice, ecology, and decolonization.

Dr. Wong’s water talk and poetry reading come at a vital time for development of PEI’s understanding of water ethics and sustainability. As many Islanders work to modernize our water laws, those who want to gain new perspectives on water’s value will have the opportunity to listen to one of Canada’s important investigators of participatory water ethics and watershed issues.

The UPEI Don Mazer Arts and Science Lecture is presented by the UPEI faculties of Arts and Science.

UPEI Alumni Association marks annual Reunion Weekend celebrations, August 4 – 6

Join members of your alma mater by attending the various exciting events throughout reunion weekend on our beautiful and vibrant UPEI campus. The Alumni Association will be releasing a full schedule of events in the very near future. Nominations for the Distinguished Alumni and Inspiring Young Alumni Awards, which will be presented during Reunion Weekend and must be received by May 30, 2016. To nominate an individual, visit upei.ca/alumni.

Accommodations on campus are available at a preferred alumni rate of $85 per night for an Andrew Hall double suite. Book today by calling 902-566-0952.

For more information on Reunion Weekend 2016, visit the alumni webpage or contact Kathy Weatherbie in the UPEI Alumni Office at 902-566-0687. 

Panthers partner with Bell Let’s Talk Day

Atlantic University Sport (AUS) and Bell Aliant have joined forces for the sixth annual Bell Let’s Talk Day on January 27. Everyone is invited to join the conversation with 2,200 student-athletes from 11 Atlantic universities to help end the stigma around mental illness.

“By partnering with Atlantic University Sport, Bell Let’s Talk is reaching student-athletes all across Atlantic Canada to encourage conversations about mental health,” said Dan McKeen, Bell Senior Vice President and Vice Chair, Atlantic. “Increasing awareness and improving attitudes about mental health is the key to reducing the stigma around mental illness that keeps so many from seeking the help they need.”

This sentiment is shared by UPEI Panthers men’s soccer coach, Lewis Page: “Stepping out of the silence and talking about mental health is so important in fighting stigma. The Bell Let’s Talk campaign lets student-athletes and coaches know that it’s ok to reach out and talk, it’s ok to ask for help, and it’s ok to help others.”

 

 

“While competition and rivalry is the nature of sport, Bell Let’s Talk Day is a great opportunity for all our schools and teams to come together in support of mental health,” said AUS executive director Phil Currie. “The slogan we developed with Bell Aliant for this partnership is ‘One Team For Mental Health’ and that really encompasses what we’re doing.”

Mental illness is an issue that hits home for many students and their peers with suicide accounting for 24% of all deaths among 15-24 year olds.

Bell Let’s Talk Day AUS men’s hockey games

With 4 AUS men’s hockey games taking place in 3 provinces on Bell Let’s Talk Day, fans around the conference are invited to come out and show their support on January 27.

The first few hundred fans at each game will receive a Bell Let’s Talk toque. Stations will be set up at each venue where fans can participate by creating personalized speech bubbles, taking photos to share on social media and signing banners to show their support.

Bell Let’s Talk spokesperson and well-known entertainer Mary Walsh will take part in a ceremonial puck drop at the Saint Mary’s and Dalhousie game hosted at the Halifax Forum.

  • Saint Mary’s Huskies visit the Dalhousie Tigers at the Halifax Forum at 7 pm.
  • The StFX X-Men visit the Acadia Axemen in Wolfville at 7 pm.
  • Moncton Aigles Bleus visit the UPEI Panthers in Charlottetown at 7 pm.
  • The St. Thomas Tommies visit the UNB Varsity Reds in Fredericton at 7 pm.

“The hockey games on Bell Let’s Talk Day will let all students who struggle with mental illness hear loud and clear that they have our support and can always ask for help,” said Luke Madill, captain of the Dalhousie Tigers men's hockey team.

AUS mental health video

Student-athletes from all 11 campuses have stepped forward to share their personal experiences with mental illness in a video which will be viewed conference-wide starting January 18 on the Bell Aliant FibreOP YouTube page.

“The AUS video delivers a powerful message that athletes experience mental health issues like anxiety and depression like everyone else,” said Hannah Currie, member of the UNB Varsity Reds women’s basketball team. “Hopefully hearing athletes speak out about mental health will give others courage to open up and reach out for help without fear.”

Dr. Karen Murphy, Memorial University athletic director, agrees: “It’s fantastic to see student–athletes come together to support all students on our respective campuses. This initiative is starting important conversations about mental health in classrooms, residences and sport facilities on campuses across the Atlantic provinces.”

Join the conversation to drive mental health funding

On Bell Let's Talk Day, for every text message, wireless and long distance call made by Bell Aliant and Bell Canada customers, every tweet using #BellLetsTalk, and every Facebook share of the Bell Let's Talk Day image at Facebook.com/BellLetsTalk, Bell will donate 5 cents more to mental health programs. After the first 5 Bell Let’s Talk Days, Bell has committed a total of $73,623,413.80 to support mental health initiatives across the country.

Bell Let's Talk promotes Canadian mental health with national awareness and anti-stigma campaigns, like Clara's Big Ride for Bell Let's Talk and Bell Let's Talk Day, and significant Bell funding of care and access, research, and workplace initiatives. To learn more, please visit Bell.ca/LetsTalk.

About Bell Aliant
Part of BCE Inc. (TSX, NYSE: BCE), Canada's largest communications company, Halifax-based Bell Aliant provides residential, business and government customers across Atlantic Canada with advanced communications services including FibreOP TV and Internet, satellite TV, wireless, home phone, data, video and value-added business services. For more information, please visit BellAliant.ca

About Atlantic University Sport
Atlantic University Sport is responsible for governing interuniversity sport in Atlantic Canada. The conference is comprised of 11 member institutions and over 2,000 student-athletes who compete annually for 18 conference championships in 10 different sports, including basketball, cross country, football, hockey, rugby, soccer, swimming, track & field, volleyball & curling. It is the mission of Atlantic University Sport to enhance the educational experience of students in university through sport programs offered by member institutions working in partnership. Learn more at www.atlanticuniversitysport.com.

Media Contacts:

Phil Currie
Executive Director
Atlantic University Sport
902-425-4235
pcurrie@atlanticuniversitysport.com

Katie Burgess
Bell Aliant
902-487-6198
katie.burgess@bellaliant.ca

UPEI puts math, stats, and computer science to work

The University of Prince Edward Island announced today the launch of the UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences. The new School, and its related suite of majors, offers the region’s most comprehensive undergraduate programming in mathematics, computer science, and statistics.

The UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences was created based on the growing need for university graduates to be educated in developing sophisticated mathematical and statistical techniques aligned for market needs; managing and extracting knowledge from unprecedented volumes of data; and integrating mathematical and statistical methods with powerful analytical software and technology tools.

UPEI will begin accepting applications immediately to the new UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences for students who want to begin their studies in September 2016.

“Guided by our university’s Strategic Plan, UPEI is committed to developing transformative programming that provides our students with the knowledge, skills, and hands-on learning which will enable them to reach their full potential in both the classroom and the community,” said UPEI President and Vice-Chancellor Alaa Abd-El-Aziz.

“After strong consultation with educational, industry, and government partners, UPEI has created the UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences with a focus on applied areas of mathematics, computing, and statistics,” added Abd-El-Aziz. “This exciting development will prepare our graduates to readily contribute to solving complex problems in data-intensive sectors—such as insurance, pension, investment planning, banking and finance, government service delivery, and supply chain-based organizations— that require highly quantified and analyzed decision making. The performance of these sectors impacts each of us in our daily lives, and contributes to growth of our region.”

“UPEI believes the growth of students with expertise in mathematical and computational sciences creates tremendous opportunities to benefit our students’ personal and professional development, the growth of industry within our region, and PEI’s overall education system,” says Dr. Gordon MacDonald, Interim Associate Dean of the new school and 2015 Atlantic Association of Universities Distinguished Teacher recipient. “The absence of such expertise impedes growth at all levels—from an individual’s potential to that of our communities.”

“I am very proud to be working with such a forward thinking leader as our President and with colleagues who put great effort into making a dream a reality,” said Dr. Debbie MacLellan, UPEI Dean of Science. “I look forward to continuing to work with this team as we make the new UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences the best in the country.”

Students enrolled in the UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences gain a strong foundation in mathematics, computer sciences, and statistics in their first two years of study before developing expertise through a major in mathematics, computer science (specialization option in video game programming), statistics, actuarial science, analytics (specialization options in business analytics or data analytics), or financial mathematics in the last two years of their degree.

“I congratulate UPEI as this initiative is another example of post-secondary programming that will help strengthen our university and provide us with a well-trained and knowledgeable workforce,” said Minister of Workforce and Advanced Learning Richard Brown. “The explosion of data produced by the digital economy means that graduates will be in high demand and lead to countless and diverse career opportunities for them.”

More about the UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences:

  • Developed to address growing need for university graduates educated in: developing sophisticated mathematical and statistical techniques aligned with market needs; managing and extracting knowledge from unprecedented volumes of data; integrating mathematical and statistical methods with powerful analytical software and technology tools; and creating technology needed to enable our world.
  • The role of technology and data is ever-changing and rapidly evolving at an unprecedented rate; as a result, society needs more professionals capable of analyzing and interpreting sophisticated data so effective, responsible decisions can be made.
  • Majors offered include: mathematics, computer science (specialization option in video game programming), statistics, actuarial science, analytics (specialization options in business analytics or data analytics), and financial mathematics.
  • Graduates will pursue strong careers with insurance, pension, investment planning, banking and finance, supply chain-based and ‘big data’-intensive organizations, as well as in government, NGOs, education, and research—virtually any organization that has complex problems and challenges!
  • Four-year degree program (which falls under a Bachelor of Science) begins September 2016.
  • UPEI School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences is accepting applications NOW!

AVC bacteriology professor wins SAVMA award

Dr. Anne Muckle is fascinated by bugs, but not the kind that we see crawling on the ground or flying around our heads. She is interested in bacteria, those “tiny but mighty” bugs—good and bad—that live in our external and internal environments.

An associate professor at the Atlantic Veterinary College at UPEI, the quiet-spoken Muckle has guided hundreds of veterinary students through the intricacies of bacteriology. For her dedication to teaching and to her students, she has been awarded the Student American Veterinary Medical Association’s (SAVMA) 2016 Community Outreach and Education Award.

Through this award, students at veterinary colleges in Canada and the United States publicly acknowledge how faculty members, clinicians, and other people in the veterinary profession have gone above and beyond their professional responsibilities and duties to interact with, and make a difference in, the community—from local to global.

Muckle was nominated for the award by SAVMA member Veronique Savoie-Dufour, a student in AVC’s Class of 2018.

"Dr. Muckle is the sort of professor you dream of as a kid,” says Savoie-Dufour. “She is not only incredibly knowledgeable in bacteriology, but she has an ease of explaining key concepts and their importance. Her upbeat personality makes it a joy to attend each of her classes, and she encourages active learning, requesting students to participate and ask questions.”

Muckle’s presentations are concise and easy to understand, Savoie-Dufour says, and she adds an element of fun to her classes, using humour to help students learn and retain the material she is teaching. As well, Muckle expresses genuine concern for her students.

“Whether it is in class or in the lab, her openness is engaging, and every student feels very comfortable approaching her for help.”

Savoie-Dufour, who also works in Muckle’s lab, considers her professor to be a role model.

“I have learned so much from her, both in class and my time working in her lab.… I am forever grateful to her for not only imparting important information for my veterinary career but also inspiring me, giving me a glimpse of what I aspire to be one day … a veterinary professor.”

Muckle says her goal as a teacher is to optimise her students’ learning and to make a difference in their education—to give them a basic understanding of bacterial and fungal disease relevant to veterinary medicine. She credits three people with helping her to improve her presentations and teaching style: Dr. Mike Collins, University of Wisconsin’s School of Veterinary Medicine; Dr. Alfonso Lopez, now professor emeritus at AVC; and Dr. Susan Dawson, AVC Dept. Biomedical Sciences. In particular, she is indebted to Sally Goddard, educational consultant, AVC Office of Academic and Student Affairs, for her advice and support in developing "The Bare Bones Lecture."

Muckle will accept her award at the 2016 SAVMA Symposium in March at the Iowa State University College of Veterinary Medicine in Ames, Iowa.