All posts by Emily Rugel (TA)

Week Fourteen

As the final week of class comes to a close, we wanted to pass along a few end-of-term reminders.

On Thursday, we’ll wrap up the term with presentations from the following groups:
Northeast False Creek A, Northeast False Creek B, and Arbutus A.

Peer review will be provided by members of UBC Hospital C, Arbutus B, and Arbutus C; any students who have not yet had a chance to serve as a peer reviewer should join one of these panels to ensure they receive credit for this component of the course.

On a related note, please ensure that you have posted at least one question and one comment to this site by Wednesday, April 12 at 4 p.m. to meet the requirements for blog participation.

Finally, if you’d prefer to hand in a hard copy of Assignment 3, you can do so during the final class session. Please make sure that it is a single package that includes print-outs of your two group and two individual slides along with the brief narrative (one to two pages) in support of your individual component. If possible, please also include a short statement about your role in the group and your assessment of your fellow project members.

Alternately, a single PDF package containing all of these items can be submitted via e-mail to Sara Fryer Barron by 4 p.m. on Wednesday, April 12.

Looking forward to our last time together in class!

Group Presentations Off to a Great Start!

Today’s presentations certainly set a standard of excellence for the remaining groups, and we hope you were duly proud of your efforts! We have no doubt that the final week will be equally successful, and we’re already looking forward to hearing about your plans for the sites you’ve been engaging with throughout the term.

Next week, we’ll hear from the groups listed below, with both the peer evaluation and instructor feedback continuing along with input from some special guests.
Tuesday, April 4: Pacific Spirit Park, UBC Hospital A, UBC Hospital B
Thursday, April 6: Northeast False Creek A, Northeast False Creek B, Arbutus A

As a reminder, please ensure that you arrive on time and enter and exit the room as quietly as possible if you need to do so while the presentations are in progress.

Feedback on Interactive Video Content in Forestry Courses

Per the brief announcement at the beginning of Tuesday’s class, you are invited to participate in a survey designed to support the integration of interactive video content into undergraduate forestry courses. All of the details needed to complete the survey are below; please address any questions you may have to matthew.gordon.shields@gmail.com.
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We are trying to improve the delivery of forestry concepts in your undergraduate program! Supported by the Teaching and Learning Enhancement Fund (TLEF), we’re looking at introducing interactive video to your courses. We’ve produced a test video that demonstrates some of the features of interactive video, and would like you to explore it and give us some feedback. You can access the test video and the feedback survey at this link.

The first five people from each course we’ve targeted to complete our survey will receive a $10 gift card to Starbucks!

Week Ten

In addition to going over the grading rubric for the midterm and answering any related questions, lecture provided a brief introduction to the evidence regarding the role of the immune system in connecting urban forests to health.

Because the groups for the final project were newly formed last week, we’ve decided to postpone the design charrette until next Thursday, March 14. We’re hoping this will give you time to visit your site as a group first so you’ll have a solid foundation for the hands-on work that will take place in the charrette.

To support this team work, this week’s seminar offered hands-on instruction in how to represent trees as part of landscape designs, with a particular focus on doing so in the fast-paced environment of a charrette.

Week Nine

Part of this week’s seminar will consist of a group reading exercise, based on the article “Uncommon ground – our new urban oases”, which appeared in The New York Times Sunday magazine last year. You’ll have time to read the piece together, but feel free to take a look in advance as well.

Returning from reading week, lecture focused on methods of understanding and measuring access to urban forests to advance public health. Such interdisciplinary conversations and collaboration are critical to maximizing the potential health benefits of urban forestry. In seminar, there was a guest lecture from Lorien Nesbitt on her research into equity issues in urban greenspace.

One way to advance intersectoral collaborations is by identifying the potential monetary benefits of greenspace interventions, and the article examining the impact of parks and trees in Toronto by Kardan and colleagues achieves just that. The methodology is fairly complex, so you may want to focus on the introduction and discussion sections. If you’re interested in how these findings were translated for a broader audience, take a look at the Washington Post’s summary of the piece.

Offering additional insights into how evidence is put into practice, the BC Provincial Health Services Authority’s Healthy Built Environment Linkages toolkit is directed toward public health professionals, urban planners, and resource managers and explicitly links research to best practices for creating a healthy built environment.

Unpacking research articles can certainly be challenging, but it’s also a critical skill you need to develop both as a student and practitioner. This step-by-step guide to reading a scientific article is an excellent foundation for honing this skill.

Finally, we’re hoping students have found time to review Assignment Two – which is due by 4 p.m. next Thursday, March 9 – so feel free to post any questions about the assignment either here or on the Assessment page. And, as always, your comments on what we’re reading and learning are always appreciated!

Week Eight

Happy Reading Week!

We have postponed the due date for Assignment Two until Thursday, March 9 so you can focus on reading and relaxing this week. As part of this, please be sure to read 14 Patterns of Biophilic Design by the next time we meet.

In addition, with the midterm behind you, this is an excellent time to post any questions you may have about the first half of the term’s lectures or readings here, either below or on the relevant week.

Week Seven

This week’s guest lecture by Dr. Michael Jerrett of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) described his research into the role parks and other forms of urban greenspace can play in increasing rates of physical activity, reducing levels of overweight and obesity, and preventing the adverse health outcomes associated with both of these risk factors.

In lieu of seminar, Thursday will be spent completing an in-class midterm, worth 15% of the total course grade. The midterm will cover all content presented through Week Six, with a focus on lecture and seminar presentations. Students will have the entire class to write the exam, which will consist primarily of short-answer questions along with one page-length essay question.

As always, we encourage you to continue posting comments on any of the course presentations, as well as questions related to the required and optional readings. If there are specific topics that you would like clarified in advance of the midterm, feel free to post them below or on the relevant weekly post.

Week Six

This week’s guest lecture by Cecil Konijnendijk delved into the importance of social connections for our health, and the roles that urban forests can play in strengthening these connections.

In seminar, we built upon this discussion by talking about how to design spaces to promote social interaction, and thereby improve health. Students broke into small groups to redesign one of UBC’s public open spaces, resulting in a range of proposed improvements.

As a guide to understanding the many forms of scientific literature presented throughout the course, this was accompanied by a brief introduction to evidence development and appraisal.

Although we were only able to watch a small portion of the William Whyte’s Social Life of Small Urban Spaces video during seminar, you can view the entire piece on Vimeo. The work done by Frances Kuo in inner-city Chicago is described in greater detail in her article “The role of arboriculture in a healthy social ecology”, which is an optional reading for this week.

Week Five

Please note that Assignment One may be submitted either as a hard copy at the start of seminar or via e-mail to any of the instructors by 4 p.m. on Thursday, February 2. If you choose the latter option, please combine the main report, the mind map (only if you didn’t complete it during seminar), and the POST worksheet into a single document before attaching it to your e-mail.

This week, lecture focused on the potential role of stress reduction along the pathway linking urban forests to health improvements. This discussion was expanded upon during seminar, which also introduced the concept of “shinrin-yoku” (or forest-bathing) through a presentation and a walk in the woods.

Because we want to make sure you have enough time to devote to Assignment One, all of this week’s readings are optional: a brief section from primatologist Robert Sapolsky’s groundbreaking book on the impacts of stress on health, “Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers”; a research article comparing the stress-reduction effects of gardening to those of reading in a garden environment; and a novel approach to testing the role of natural sounds on stress that took advantage of an immersive virtual reality environment.

Please continue to post your comments on lectures and seminars along with any questions that may be inspired by the readings, required and otherwise!

Week Four

For Week 4, there are two required readings: a brief report on the health and financial benefits of access to nature in urban environments across the lifecourse and
a discussion of the role nature can play in encouraging the types of pro-environmental beliefs and behaviours that are critically important in responding to the threat of climate change. Expanding on this second reading, this week’s lecture will explore the impact of nature on individual beliefs and behaviours related to environmental sustainability and climate change mitigation.

Both of these readings will be included as part of this Thursday’s reading quiz. Based on the input you have provided through the blog and during seminar, here is a list of potential questions that may appear on the quiz. Seminar will also include a guest presentation and a brief overview of academic writing.

Now that the quiz is over, if you’d like to learn more about the fishing game used to test an individual’s level of cooperation, take a look at “Cooperation is in our nature”; to explore the concepts described in the lecture by Paul Piff in greater detail, consult “An occasion for unselfing”.