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McDowell Foundation funding opportunity for educators interested in Action Research

Wednesday, November 12th, 2014

Letters of Intent Application deadline: December 8, 2014

McDowell Foundation Invites Educators to Apply for Funding!

McDowell Foundation is inviting teachers and others involved in the education community, with or without prior classroom action research experience, to submit a letter of intent. The letter of intent process provides support and guidance in developing successful, meaningful and achievable school teaching and learning studies in your own area of interest. This first step will prepare you to write a full grant application.

Please use the letter of intent as a way to communicate your classroom or school study idea and action plan. The Foundation provides financial support, guidance and release time to assist you with your action research study. The call for letters of intent form will assist you with the development of your respective letter of intent application. The Research Awards Guide and Ethical Guidelines are resources that will help answer specific questions you may have when applying for a full grant application, the second step in our application process.
http://www.mcdowellfoundation.ca/main_mcdowell/awards_grants_opp/res_opport.htm

The SSHRC Partnership Development Grant is now available on the SSHRC website.

Thursday, November 6th, 2014

The SSHRC Partnership Development Grant is now available on the SSHRC website.

Partnership Development Grants support new and existing partnerships between academic researchers, businesses and other partners that advance knowledge and understanding on critical issues of intellectual, social, economic and cultural significance. The grants allow partners to design and test new approaches to research and its real-world applications, and foster valuable research relationships and networks across sectors.

The duration of the grants are 1-3 years and up to $200,000 is available in funding.

DEADLINES
Nov 24 – internal deadline for submission to the Office of Research, Innovation, and Partnership
Dec 1 – deadline for submission to SSHRC

Details are at: http://www.sshrc-crsh.gc.ca/funding-financement/programs-programmes/partnership_development_grants-subventions_partenariat_developpement-eng.aspx

If you are considering submitting an application, please contact Michelle Beitel (michelle.beitel@uregina.ca, 306-337-2479) as soon as possible for assistance with your submission.

Message from the Provost: Consultation regarding Deanship of the Faculty of Education

Friday, September 12th, 2014

12 September 2014

Dear colleagues in the Faculty of Education,

Thank you for meeting with me earlier this afternoon to discuss the upcoming national search for a Dean of Education. My sense of the Faculty’s thinking is as follows:

Timing: Launch national search as soon as practicable

External consultant: not needed

Search Advisory Committee (SAC): similar or identical structure to last year’s 10-person SAC: 3 elected faculty members from the Faculty of Education; 1 undergraduate Education student; and 1 graduate Education student; 1 APT or CUPE member from the Faculty; 1 appointed member of Deans’ Council; 1 external representative from the profession; 1 support person from HR; and myself as Chair. The election of faculty members would be carried out via the Dean’s Office as soon as possible; APT and CUPE staff would decide whom they wish to nominate; the student organizations would do the same; I will appoint a member of Deans’ Council; and I will approach an external representative nominated by the Faculty. I would like to have the SAC in place no later than the end of September. Responsibility and support for the search process will be in the Provost’s Office. The search will be governed by the provisions of University policy at http://www.uregina.ca/policy/browse-policy/policy-EMP-010-030.html .

Position profile: Faculty members to review the profile (attached) and provide suggestions to SAC about changes, if needed. SAC will redraft and provide final version to Faculty for information and any final input.

Please let me know if you have concerns or questions about any of these points. I look forward to working with you, and with a new SAC, to seek out and hire the best possible Dean for the Faculty of Education.

Sincerely,

Tom

Thomas Chase
Provost and Vice-President (Academic)

Rochelle Fenwick

Faculty Administrator
General Office (ED 384.1)
Faculty of Education
Ph: 585-4505
Fax: 585-4880

Deadline Approaching for HRI Research Fellowships!

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2014

Humanities Research Institute Annual Fellowships, 2014-15

The Humanities Research Institute announces the 2014-15 Humanities
Research Fellowships to faculty members at the University of Regina and
federated colleges. Full-time continuing faculty are eligible to apply.

The HRI supports research in traditional humanities disciplines as well
as in philosophical, historical, and ethical, contexts
across academic disciplines. The humanities are not conceived as a
specific group of subject areas but include all forms of study that
examine the human condition. Humanities researchers are engaged in
questions that address human
thought, experience, and creativity.

Fellows will be expected to conduct research, be active participants in
the HRI community, present their research at an
HRI-organized event, and organize an activity or series of activities as
part of the HRI’s programming (e.g., a lecture, seminar series, or
similar).

Up to three $4,000 research awards will be granted for the period July
1, 2014-June 30, 2015. Additional funds,
up to a maximum of $1,000, will be provided to fellowship holders to
assist with the organization of the activity/activities. This activity
need not be directly linked to the proposed research (e.g., the activity
could be an invited lecturer who discusses interpretive dance and the
proposed research is on developing theatrical lighting theories).

Application Criteria

-Specific research aims, activities, and outcomes that can be achieved
during tenure of the award should be identified.
These may be linked to longer-term research projects: the relationship
between the one-year award and the larger project should be made clear.

-A detailed budget is required. Expenses supported are those typically
associated with the conduct of research. Ineligible
expenses include: equipment; travel for the purposes of dissemination
(e.g., to present at conferences) or to attend conferences and academic
meetings; and publication-related costs.

-For projects in non-traditional humanities disciplines, the
relationship to the humanities must be clearly articulated.

-The proposed activity (lecture, seminar series, or similar) must be
outlined, including an estimated budget. Other
sources of funding (department, faculty, or other source) above the
$1,000 provided by the HRI should be detailed.

Formal Application Process

Applications must be combined into a single file and be provided in PDF
format and must include:

1. a curriculum vitae;
2. a detailed statement of the research proposal. Maximum two pages;
3. a descriptive title and abstract of 75 words;
4. a budget, with justification where necessary. Maximum one page; and
5. a description and budget for the activity/activities (lecture,
seminar series, etc.). Maximum one page.

Incomplete applications will not be considered.

To be submitted to the HRI at humanities.research@uregina.ca.

Due Date: June 6, 2014

Term of Fellowship
The term of the fellowship will normally be one year. The fellowship
will commence July 1, 2014.

Further information about the HRI and current HRI Fellowship holders can
be found on our website: www.humanitiesresearch.org.

Questions can be directed to:
Dr. Christian Riegel
Director, Humanities Research Institute
christian.riegel@uregina.ca
305-359-1219.

2nd Annual TPC Poetry Slam – February 25, 2014

Wednesday, February 5th, 2014

The Faculty of Education invites faculty and students from the University community including First Nations University of Canada, SUNTEP, Campus For All, and Campion and Luther Colleges to submit an original poem for the 2nd Annual Teaching Preparation Centre Poetry Slam scheduled for:

Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Room 228, Education Building
(Teaching Preparation Centre – TPC)
12:00 – 1:30 p.m.

Complimentary refreshments!

Please e-mail your poem to Marie.Bidd@uregina.ca by February 20, 2014; be sure to include your name (as you would like it to appear on the program), your Faculty and your contact e-mail address.

Poetry will be judged by a panel of judges at the Poetry Slam and prizes awarded. All poetry submissions will be on Exhibit in the Teaching Preparation Centre for the month of April – National Poetry Month and/or appear on the Faculty of Education TPC website.

The University community is invited to attend to support the poets at this event.

Volunteers are needed for lighting, sound, creating posters, and greeters for door and refreshments; please contact Marie at 306.585.5496, at Marie.Bidd@uregina.ca or just drop by the TPC!

Marie Bidd
Library Assistant, TPC Library
Teaching Preparation Centre, ED228
University of Regina
3737 Wascana Parkway
Regina SK S4S 0A2
Tel: 306.585.5496
Email: Marie.Bidd@uregina.ca

CALL FOR PAPERS RACE, ETHNICITY AND EDUCATION

Monday, January 27th, 2014

The journal Power and Education (www.wwwords.co.uk/POWER
) is publishing a special issue on
race and ethnicity for educators, educational organisations, learners
and educational researchers, to appear in early 2015. Race and ethnic
diversity are conditions under which education takes place but these
also operate as curricula foci that educators address in the everyday
practice of teaching and learning. This volume seeks to encourage
contributions from a wider range of globally diverse places,
particularly the global South. Published debates around education, race
and ethnicity in Europe have largely been dominated by a focus upon
formal learning settings within the wealthier nation states and
commentators from within those contexts (see Archer & Francis, 2007;
Byrne, 2009; Gillborn, 1995, 2009; Heath & Brinbaum, 2007; Leonardo,
2009; Reay, 2009; Troyna, 1993). However, wider educational debates in
the poorer parts of Europe and the global South, struggle with issues
of race that seem perennial and deep-seated, in particular, in a
European context, around the education of Roma communities and
educational responses to new migrants (Delanty et al, 2011; Essed,
1991; Fekete, 2004; Pisani, 2012). We welcome contributions around
these topical issues. As the voices of researchers working in Southern
countries are seldom heard in relation to education, race and ethnicity
we would like to encourage contributions from those working in these
areas.

This special issue of Power and Education will address the role race
and ethnicity play in educational contexts around the globe, with a
particular focus on the power inherent in education and educators to
promote or deny issues of racial equality. Contributions are invited
that engage with all aspects of race and ethnicity within formal and
informal educational settings as they impact on children and/or adults
and on students and/or teachers. Contributions should specifically
address issues of power and/in education and the journal will consider
papers engaging with all power paradigms.

Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:
– Theoretical aspects of race, ethnicity, power and pedagogy
– Further and Higher Education issues
– Researching race and ethnicity in educational settings
– The role of critical pedagogy in relation to race, ethnicity and
education
– How social policy frames issues of race in school settings
– The impact of race on learners and educators in terms of later
outcomes
– Issues of educator recruitment and retention in relation to race and
ethnicity
– Language: how do we communicate, in whose language and how does this
impact on relations of power?

We encourage works that explicate these types of issues and
particularly welcome papers that encompass global perspectives,
comparative cross-cultural approaches and papers that address issues
from Southern countries. Papers are welcome from all educational
disciplines. Papers should be approximately 7,000 words and should be
submitted by 15th July 2014. Authors will be informed of the outcome of
the review process by 15th September 2014; revised papers will need to
be received by the editors by 31st October 2014. Reviews of relevant
books are also encouraged (please read guidelines and send those to
lbristol@csu.edu.au marked ‘for special edition on race and ethnicity’).

Information on how to submit papers can be found at
www.wwwords.co.uk/power/howtocontribute.asp
Questions about
this special issue and the journal should be sent to the guest editors
via the journal’s website.

The Guest Editors of this Special Issue are:
Dr Julia Bennett, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies, Manchester
Metropolitan University, UK
Dr Geraldine Lee-Treweek, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies,
Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
Professor Saloshna Vandeyara, Head of the Humanities Department,
Pretoria University, South Africa

Power and Education (www.wwwords.co.uk/POWER
) is an international peer-reviewed
journal promoting critical studies of contemporary educational practice
and challenging the complicit practices and assumptions of mainstream
educational research. The journal is committed to providing a
distinctive and comprehensive body of knowledge focusing on the
relationships between the concepts of power and education in their
broadest senses. Innovative and provocative work stimulating debate
around the analysis, construction, deployment and discourses of power
in educational practice, research and theory is particularly
encouraged, as is work exploring forms of presentation and
representation.

Articles previously published in Power and Education include:
Bey Sharif (2010) Teaching and Cultural Domination: re-examining
trajectories of traditional African sculpture through critique, Power
and Education, 2(3), 309 321.
Charlier, Jean-Émile, Croché, Sarah (2011) The Bologna Process: a tool
for Europe’s hegemonic project on Africa, Power and Education, 3(3),
304 316.
Jansen Hans, Watts Michael F. (2011) The Power of the Code: publication
and research paradigms, Power and Education, 3(1), 52 63.
Pillow Wanda S. (2012) Sacajawea: witnessing, remembrance and
ignorance, Power and Education, 4(1), 45 56.
Pisani Maria (2012) Addressing the ‘Citizenship Assumption’ in Critical
Pedagogy: exploring the case of rejected female sub-Saharan African
asylum seekers in Malta, Power and Education, 4(2), 185 195.
Trouki Evie (2012) The Challenge of Cultural Diversity in Greece:
reflections on ‘Intercultural Education Schools’’ (IES) strategy for
creating inclusive learning environments, Power and Education, 4(2),
219 229.

References
Archer, L & Francis, B. (2007) Understanding Minority Ethnic
Achievement: the role of race, class, gender and ‘success’, London:
Routledge.
Byrne, B. (2009) ‘Not just Class: towards an understanding of the
whiteness of middle-class schooling choice’, Ethnic and Racial Studies,
32(3), 424 441
Cole, M. (2009) The Color-Line and the Class Struggle: a Marxist
response to critical race theory in education as it arrives in the
United Kingdom, Power and Education, 1(1), 111 124.
Delanty, G. Jones, P. & Wodak, R. (eds) (2011) Identity, Belonging and
Migration. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.
Essed, P. (1991) Understanding Everyday Racism An Interdisciplinary
Theory London:Sage
Fekete, L. (2004) Anti-Muslim Racism and the European Security State,
Race and Class. Vol 46. No.1.
Gillborn, D. (2009) Who’s Afraid of Critical Race Theory in Education?
A Reply to Mike Cole’s ‘The Color-Line and the Class Struggle’, Power
and Education, 1(1), 125 131.
Heath, A. & Brinbaum, Y. (2007) Guest editorial. ‘Explaining Ethnic
Inequalities in Educational Achievement’, Ethnicities, 7(3), 291 305
Leonardo, Z. (2009) Race, Whiteness, and Education. Abingdon: Routledge
Reay, D. (2009) ‘Making sense of white working class educational
underachievement’, in Sveinsson, K. P. (Ed.) Who Cares about the White
Working Class? London: The Runnymede Trust, 22 27.

SYMPOSIUM JOURNALS
PO Box 204, Didcot, Oxford OX11 9ZQ, United Kingdom
Check out www.symposium-journals.co.uk for the contents
of our journals, with abstracts and full texts of all articles,
instructions for contributors, together with complete
editorial, bibliographical and subscription information.

Are universities maximizing social media for learning?

Thursday, December 5th, 2013

Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/5764/2/

Social media platforms represent a great way for universities to engage with students. Used well, they can help build trust, relationships, visibility and be a great two-way communication tool to help learning. The Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education has recently published a special issue on this fascinating topic – Exploring socially mediated spaces for learning:
——————————————–

Articles in this issue

A (closer) look at collaboration using wikis
Mauricio Vasquez, Richard E. Potter
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294908/5/

The value of social media: are universities successfully engaging their audience?
Krista Ann Voss, Anil Kumar
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294909/6/

Watch an author video about this article on our Education community page:
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/71582867/59/

Creating a virtual academic community for STEM students
Lisa B. Elliot, Benjamin Rubin, James J. DeCaro, E. William Clymer, Kathy Earp, Michele D. Fish
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294910/60/

eTextbook access, usage, and beliefs: implications for adoption in higher education
Aimee deNoyelles, Ryan Seilhamer
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294911/86/

Changing faculty use of technology – one cohort at a time
Sabrina Kramer, Spencer Benson
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294912/87/

Virtual-team-community-of-practice (VTCoP) theory can inform online course delivery
Elly Philpott, David Pike
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294913/88/

Shaping the learning environment of first-year students: Combining collective space with collective learning
Najma Agherdien
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294914/89/

The use of iPocket coach in business education
Tulay Girard, Rachel C. Litzinger, Mark M. Lennon
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294915/90/

How social-media enhanced learning platforms support students in taking responsibility for their own learning
Lisbet Pals Svendsen, Margrethe Smedegaard Mondahl
http://listmanager.emeraldinsight.com/t/34357/26472559/85294916/91/

New Book “Green Care: For Human Therapy, Social Innovation, Rural Economy, and Education”

Thursday, December 5th, 2013

https://www.novapublishers.com/catalog/index.php

Critical Ethnic Studies Association Update

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2013

See http://us7.campaign-archive1.com/?u=63732d131a563864c821247ed&id=ca1dc260d4&e=fe35a6c577

Thank you all who participated and attended CESA’s second conference, “Decolonizing Intellectual Legacies and Activist Practices.”

We were so thrilled that nearly 1100 participants gathered this past September in Chicago, IL to engage in critical conversations on the future intellectual work and activist practices. CESA sends a special thank you to the Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy at the University of Illinois Chicago for hosting the conference, local and international conference organizers, and conference volunteers.

We will send an announcement when plenary sessions are available on our website. Stay tuned!

** CESA’S SPOT LIGHT: MEMBERSHIP
————————————————————
We’re almost there! Online membership is coming soon! At this year’s conference we launched onsite membership with much excitement and interest. In the upcoming weeks, you will be able to join CESA online. CESA Membership Includes:
• Electronic and print copies of the Critical Ethnic Studies Association Journal
• CESA’s e-newsletter with important membership related information including programming announcements, conference updates, previews of upcoming Journal issues, and action alerts on topics, issues, and campaigns affecting our work as activists, scholars, teachers, artists, and media-makers
• Discounts on conference registration & related events and programming
• Online membership access to CESA’s forthcoming social media blogs and forums in Spring 2014
The duration of membership is one year. Membership is open to activists, students, cultural workers, movement makers, scholars, and anyone who supports the movement behind Critical Ethnic Studies. Again, stay tuned for our online membership launch!

** CESA’s NEWS BLOG
————————————————————
CESA is excited to share upcoming calls for paper announcements, news, events, and opportunities on our news blogs. Check out NAES call for papers below and visit our blog!

National Association for Ethnic Studies
Conference Call for Proposals–
RESEARCH AS CEREMONY: DECOLONIZING ETHNIC STUDIES
April 3-5, 2014
Oakland, California | Mills College

Ethnic Studies today is threatened by the corporatization of the university and co-option by neo- liberal, “post-racial,” “post-feminist” rhetoric. The 2014 National Association for Ethnic Studies conference seeks to restore and renew our critical purpose and commitment to self-determination, social justice and intersectional praxis. We as scholars, activists, tribal leaders, grassroots organizers, and community-based organizations see research justice as a critical, intersectional praxis that can unlock the power and knowledge of our own communities both within and outside of academia. In this spirit, we envision NAES 2014 as ceremony, an interdisciplinary space of creativity, struggle, and solidarity where academia, politics, community, arts, spirituality, and culture converge. We will convene a national Ethnic Studies Congress along with Talking Circles, Teach-Ins, and Workshops for exchange of ideas, research, and knowledge and presentations among community-based organizers, scholars, tribal leaders, youth leaders, policymakers, and others.

Proposal Submission Deadline: Abstracts will be accepted until 11:59 pm CST on December 15, 2013.
To Submit a proposal, please go to, http://criticalethnicstudies.us7.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=63732d131a563864c821247ed&id=7143cf5181&e=fe35a6c577

SIDRU Research Fund Competition

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2013

This is a call to the Faculty of Education for applications to the Annual SIDRU Research Fund Competition. These funds are adjudicated and awarded to research exploring theory and practice in three broad areas: Field Experience and Professional Development, Partnerships and Community-Based Projects, and the “General” Fund.

It is expected that 3 applications, one from each category, will be awarded a modest maximum of $3,500 each.

Assessment will be based on the soundness of the research methodology, the reasonableness of the timeline proposed and the appropriateness of the proposed budget and the merit of the research topic.

A complete application will include a summary paragraph, a project description, a budget, and a proposed timeline. Applications should be submitted electronically and sent to James.McNinch@uregina.ca

DEADLINE for applications is January 10, 2014. Successful applicants will be notified by January 24, 2014.


Contact: Office of Research & Graduate Programs in Education, Faculty of Education, University of Regina,
                3737 Wascana Parkway Regina, Saskatchewan   S4S 0A2   CANADA

p: 306-585-4502  e: w: http://www.uregina.ca/education/offices-centres/edgrad/index.html

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