Monday, September 27, 2021

Monday, September 27, 2021

Editor:
Brandon Sweet
University Communications
bulletin@uwaterloo.ca

Register for the Safeguarding Science workshop

A graphical illustration of cybersecurity with floating lock icons.

ݮƵ faculty, staff, and students involved inresearch using biological, chemical, radiological, or nuclear materials or technology are invited to join Public Safety Canada (PSC) for the Safeguarding Science workshop.

This online workshop will take place on Wednesday, October 6 (1:30 to 3:45 p.m.).Please register to receive a link to the eventwhich be held on Microsoft Teams.

The purpose of the workshop is to provide information and guidance to Canadian researchers on possible threats to their research and how to mitigate them. More information can be found on the.

ݮƵ rises in employability rankings

Two students leave co-op interviews with the Tatham Centre in the background.

By Natalie Quinlan.This article was originally published on ݮƵ News.

The University of ݮƵ has risen to 24thin the world and top 5 per cent among participating institutions for the 2022 QS Graduate Employability Rankings. With an overall improvement of one spot from 2020 (no rankings were released in 2021), ݮƵ saw year-over-year gains across all indicators including:

  1. 69thin employer reputation (from 78th)— Based on more than 75,000 responses asking employers to identify those institutions from which they source as the most competent, innovative and effective graduates.
  2. 43rdin alumni outcomes (from 49th)— More than 40,000 of the world’s most innovative, creative, wealthy, entrepreneurial and/or philanthropic individuals were asked to establish which universities are producing world-changing graduates.
  3. 61stin student connections (from 69th)— Comprised of two parts, this indicator establishes which universities are collaborating successfully with global companies to produce citable, transformative research, while also considering work-placement related partnerships that are reported by institutions and validated by the QS research team.
  4. 16thin partnerships with employers (from 19th)—This indicator involves summing the number of distinct employers who are actively present on a university’s campus, providing motivated students with an opportunity to network and acquire information in a recent 12-month period.
  5. 74thin graduate employment rate (from 94th)— Measuring the proportion of graduates in full or part-time employment within 12 months of graduation to gain an understanding of how successful universities are at nurturing employability.

This year, 786 institutions were included in QS rankings’ evaluations, up from 758 in the 2020 edition. In total, results from the top 550 universities (10 per cent more than previously) were published.

Considered responses were captured from more than 75,000 employers, over 40,800 mapped degrees and affiliations spanning 29,000 high-achievers, nearly 170,000 employers’ connections with graduates, and evaluated more than 310,000 work placement partnerships for 2022.

ݮƵ Institute for Sustainable Aeronautics will take off October 5

A jetliner flies with the Moon in the background.

The Faculty of Environment is inviting members of the University community tojoin them virtually on October 5for the launch of the ݮƵ Institute for Sustainable Aeronautics (WISA).

WISA will be the world’s leading hub for sustainable aviation and aerospace research, technology, and education. By facilitating direct partnerships with industry, government, and academia WISA mobilizes the research and innovation capacity of all six faculties at the University of ݮƵ to drive meaningful and lasting impact.

The launch will also feature a panel discussion with decorated astronaut ColonelChris Hadfield, Dean of EngineeringMary Wells, Director of WISASuzanne KearnsandThomas Lagaillardefrom NAVBLUE as they discuss how the ݮƵ Institute for Sustainable Aeronautics is helping to build a sustainable future in Aviation. Moderating the panel discussion will beBessma Momani, professor in Political Science and senior fellow at the Centre for International Governance and Innovation (CIGI).

Sustainable aeronauticsis a rapidly growinginterdisciplinary field thatencompasses all types ofair transport, includingaviation, aerospace, andspace.Researchersat WISAdevelop innovativesolutions, tools, and practicesto create a viable future forair transport.

The virtual event takes place on October 5 from 1:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.

How you can support WUSA's Stock the Bank Challenge

Stock the Bank Challenge participants in a group photo with their collection of goods.

The ݮƵ Undergraduate Student Association (WUSA) Food Support Service has started planning for its third annual FallStockthe Bank Challenge and will be transitioning the event from an online format back to the original on-campus version of the event.

Stock the Bank is a month-long challenge in November where self-formed teams compete against one another in an effort to raise the most amount of non-perishable food items or money for WUSA's Food Support Service. These items will go directly to supporting the users who access the service for food and essentials.Post-secondary students are one of the fastest growing groups of food bank users across Ontario. Since Fall 2020, the service has distributed over 250 hampers to University of ݮƵ affiliates.

Teams can be as large as an entire faculty, a small group of friends, or even a general office or store. At the end of the challenge, the winners will receive a sharable prize among team members and the coveted Golden Can Award in recognition of their efforts.

The collection campaign will run from November 1 to December 1and teams will be able to organize a drop off their items directly to the Food Support Service office, or arrange a pickup with Food Support Servicevolunteers.

You can join the challenge'salready-confirmed teams like the W Store, the Student Success Office, andWUSAin theon-campus event.If you would like to confirm a preliminary interest in participating in Food Support Service’sStockthe Bank Challenge, please contact the Food Support Service atfoodsupport@wusa.caorwith your team.

Don’t have a team but still want to help? Partner up with your favourite UݮƵ team to help them win against their rivals.There’s always a way to participate withStockthe Bank.

UWSA info session today; UWAG exhibition; other notes

University of ݮƵ Staff Association logo.

The second of twoUniversity of ݮƵ Staff Association (UWSA) information sessionsabout how staff can get involved in the Board of Directors takes place today at 12 noon on Teams.Thecall for nominationsfor the 2021-2022 elected Board positions is open until October 29, 2021.

TheUniversity of ݮƵ Art Gallery (UWAG) is showcasing two new exhibitionsby artists Rah and Amanda Rhodenizer that run from September 16 to December 8.

Rah: SuperNova

Three otherwordly characters acting as a judging panel sitting behind a desk.

SuperNovais a multidisciplinary video installation informed by Rah’s experience as a Canadian-Iranian exilic and diasporic artist. Featuring a series of characters that she has performed as over several years including Fatimeh, Oreo and Coco, these carefully conceived personas pointedly deconstruct ethnic and gender stereotypes. InSuperNova, the three fictional personas appear together for the first time as contestants on an American Idol-style galactic talent competition adjudicated by a panel of extraterrestrial judges—all portrayed by the artist. While parodying the tropes endemic to reality television, Rah’s characterizations are a pastiche of racialized stereotypes as well as a pointed critique of Western popular cultures exoticization of the other; from the self-aggrandizing Oreo, to the questionable authenticity of Fatimeh, to the non-binary posthuman Coco who communicates through waacking, a hybrid dance style that emerged from queer and racialized communities in the 1970s.SuperNovais framed by a futuristic screening kiosk that takes the shape of the kind of stargate or warp portal found in science fiction that further suggests the offer of a journey towards an unknowable future.

SuperNovawas commissioned by theCarleton University Art Galleryand curated by Heather Anderson in 2019. The installation will also be exhibited at A Space in 2022.

is a media and performance artist who has exhibited extensively both nationally and internationally at spaces including: Images Festival, Carleton University Art Gallery, Miami Art Basel, Nieuwe Vide (Netherlands), Art Basel (Switzerland), Cable Factory (Helsinki, Finland), Kunst Am Spreeknie (Berlin), Kunsthaus Graz Museum (Austria), Williams College Museum of Art (MA, USA) and Onassis Cultural Center (Athens, Greece). She has been the recipient of numerous awards and residencies including: Chalmers Arts Fellowship, Canada Council, SSHRC Canada Graduate Scholarship, ArtSlant Georgia Fee Residency (Paris) and the Studio Das Weisse Haus Residency (Vienna).

Amanda Rhodenizer: O’er the Western Hills

An illustration of a woman standing at a window.

Borrowing its title from a Homer Watson drawing (c. 1875), the paintings inO’er the Western Hillswere inspired by representations of settler life found in early Canadian ad campaigns that depicted idealized, anonymous women and a romanticized life “on the frontier”. Each painting was conceived in collaboration with the subjects, who appear in their chosen work attire as either actively engaged in work or caught during an introspective moment in the early morning or late afternoon. Students, temp workers, teachers and retirees from a range of specialized STEM fields are represented: fire safety, water quality, wetland conservation, contaminated site remediation, regenerative permaculture, as well as ethics and justice, accessibility and outreach, and astrophysics. Despite their many professional accomplishments, the lived experiences and day-to-day reality of these members of the science community remains largely dominated by masculinity, whiteness, hetero-cis-normativity, and other privilege. The exhibition is not intended as a recruitment campaign for Women in STEM, but rather as a collection of portraits of female and non-binary workers sharing their experiences as we collectively advance toward the unknown.

paintings draw inspiration from her family’s connection to folk art, antiquated tourism campaigns, and contemporary real estate practices in Canada. She holds an MFA from the University of ݮƵ, and a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Orillia Museum of Art & History, Kitchener-ݮƵ Art Gallery, and Art Mûr. Recent projects include “The Larger Forgetting” a collaboration with poet Laurie D. Graham, and “Parallel Play” a solo exhibition at ARTsPLACE in Annapolis Royal.

To book an appointment to visit both exhibitions. Bookingsare currently available Wednesday and Friday from 12 noon to 5:00p.m. and limited to 5 visitors at a time.Exhibition documentation will be posted on the UWAG website on September 30.

Linkof the day

When and Where to get support

Studentscan visit theStudent Success Officeonline for supports including academic development, international student resources, leadership development, exchange and study abroad, and opportunities to get involved.

Instructorscan visit theto get support on adapting their teaching and learning plans for an online environment.

are available within your course in LEARN to help you build and edit your content and assignment pages quickly.

The following workshops, webinars, and events are offered by the KL team (CTE, CEL, ITMS, LIB):

Employeescanto help them work remotely, includingmanaging University records and privacy of personal information.Here are sometips for staying healthywhile working from home.

Stay informedabout COVID cases on campus byconsulting the COVID case tracker.

Thehas virtual services and programs to helpundergrads,grad students, postdocsandfaculty memberswith academic writing.

Co-op studentscanget help finding a joband find supports to successfully work remotely, develop new skills, access wellness and career information, and contact a co-op or career advisor.

TheCentre for Career Action (CCA)will be expanding somein-person services for fall 2021. The Tatham Centre will be open with front-desk support beginning September 7, with limited in-person appointments and co-op consults beginning September 20. All services will continue to be offered virtually this term. Book an appointmentor visit ourto connect with our Client Support Team. The CCA is here to help.

If you feel overwhelmed or anxious and need to talk to somebody, please contact theUniversity’s Campus Wellness services, eitherHealth Servicesor Counselling Services. You can also contact the University'sCentre for Mental Health Research and Treatment.Good2Talkis a post-secondary student helplineavailable to all students.

Whilethe Librarycontinues to focus on digital resources andconsultations, our spaces are open for the fall term. Dana Porter Library is open Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Davis Centre Library is open Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.for drop-in individual study space,bookableindividual study rooms,drop-in access to computers and printers, book pick-up servicesand IST Help Desk support.Special Collections & Archivesand theGeospatial Centrewill be accessibleby appointment.Library staff are available for questions viaAsk us.Full detailsoncurrent services and hours are available ontheLibrary’sCOVID-19 Update webpage.

TheFaculty Association of the University of ݮƵ (FAUW)continues to advocate for its members.for more information.

TheUniversity of ݮƵ Staff Association (UWSA)continues to advocate for its members.Check out the UWSA blogfor more information.

The Sexual Violence Prevention and Response Office (SVPRO)supports all members ofthe University of ݮƵcampuscommunitywho have experienced, or been impacted, by sexual violence.This includes all students, staff,facultyand visitorsonthemain campus, the satellite campuses, and at the affiliated and federated ݮƵ Institutes and Colleges.For support, email:svpro@uwaterloo.caor visit theSVPRO website.

TheIndigenous Initiatives Officeis a central hub that provides guidance, support, and resources to all Indigenous and non-Indigenous campus community members and oversees the university Indigenization strategy.

TheݮƵ Indigenous Student Centre, based at St. Paul’s University College,provides support and resources for Indigenous students, and educational outreach programs for the broader community, including lectures, and events.

WUSA supports for students:

Peer support - MATES, Glow Centre, RAISE, Women’s Centre -Visitto book an appointment either in person or online for the Fall term!

Food Support Servicefood hampersare currently available from the Turnkey Desk 24/7 in the ݮƵ Centre. Drop off locations are also open again in SLC, DC, DP, SCH and all residences.

Co-op Connectionall available online. Checkfor more details.

Centre for Academic Policy Support-CAPS is here to assistݮƵ undergraduates throughout their experience in navigating academic policy in the instances of filing petitions, grievances and appeals. Please contact them atcaps@wusa.ca..

WUSA Student Legal Protection Program-Seeking legal counsel can be intimidating, especially if it’s your first time facing a legal issue.The legal assistance helpline provides quick access to legal advice in any area of law, including criminal. Just call1-833-202-4571.

is a confidential mental health and wellness service that connects students with qualified counsellors 24/7. They can be reached at1-833-628-5589.

When and Where (but mostly when)

(Online Fitness)

.Starts September 7. A wide range of programs are being offered this term. Intramural deadline: September 13, 11:00 a.m. Instructional deadline: September 19, 11:59 p.m..

Warriors vs. LaurierBloodDonation Battle. Join your fellow Warriors, donatebloodand help us win theBloodBattle against Laurier for a second year in a row.or add the PFL code: UNIV960995 to your account if you have ablood.ca account already. Questions? ContactWarriorsInfo@uwaterloo.ca.

Drop-in toWarrior Virtual Study Hallson Wednesdays from5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Come together in this virtual space to set goals and work independently or in groups each week.

continues to offervirtual events and workshopsto help students practice their English language skills.

NEW -ݮƵ Innovation Summit, Tuesday, September 28.

Information session for ݮƵ faculty and staff:NSERC Alliance and Ontario Centre of Innovation (OCI) Voucher for Innovation and Productivity (VIP) Joint Program, Tuesday, September 28, 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Please register.

Noon Hour Concert: Fire and Rain, Wednesday, September 29 at 12:30 p.m.online.

ݮƵ Womxn + Nonbinary Wednesdays (W3+) presents Invisible Stories, Sound(Mapping) Inequality, and Responsible Representationwith panelists Lai-Tze Fan, Jessica Thompson, and Jin Sol Kim, Wednesday, September 29, 12 noon to 1:00 p.m..

Truth & Reconciliation, and Indian Residential Schools: Keynote for the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation with Dr. Kathy Absolon,Wednesday, September 29, 1:00 p.m. to2:30 p.m.

NEW -Fusion Conference 2021: Advances and Emerging Opportunities in Financial Technologyregistration deadline, Thursday, September 30.

Continuous Improvement and Change Management Community of Practice (CI&CM CoP) meeting, Thursday, September 30, 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.Register for this event.

NEW -“Remember Me, Remember Us” Community Walk hosted by Healing of the Seven Generations, Thursday, September 30, 10:00 a.m. Walk begins at300 Frederick St. in Kitchener.

NEW -School of Planning - Virtual Induction Ceremony, Thursday, Septmeber 30, 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. via WebEx.

NEW -“A brief history of colonialism, intergenerational trauma, and genocide of Indigenous Peoples in Canada” with Dr. Michael Dan, Thursday, September 30, 7:00 p.m.