Tag Archives: Education

Questioning-Martin-EME2141

Questioning the Classroom
Perspectives on Canadian Education

(Oxford University Press, 2015)
EME 2141

Questioning the Classroom is organized around key philosophical questions that engage students with major debates in Canadian education and highlight the practical implications for future educators. This thought-provoking introduction encourages students to develop a personally meaningful philosophy of education that they can take with them into classroom practice.

(Description Source: Oxford University Press)


Author

Christopher Martin is an associate professor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia (Okanagan). His research focuses on the philosophy of education. His specific areas of interest include educational ethics, the aims of higher education, and education for democracy. His work has been funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Spencer Foundation, and the Centre for Ethics and Education (Wisconsin).


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/y3n6coem


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Oxford University Press
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Paper ISBN: 9780199010035


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

Understanding-Bosetti-EME2181

Understanding School Choice in Canada

(University of Toronto Press, 2016)
EME 2181

Understanding School Choice in Canada provides a nuanced and theoretical overview of the formation and rise of school choice policies in Canada. Drawing on twenty years of work, Lynn Bosetti and Dianne Gereluk analyze the philosophical, historical, political, and social principles that underpin the formation and implementation of school choice policies in the provinces and territories.

Bosetti and Gereluk offer theoretical frameworks for considering the parameters of school choice policies that are aligned and attentive to Canadian educational contexts. This robust overview successfully shifts the debate away from ideology in order to facilitate an understanding that the spectrum of school choice policy in Canada is a response to the varying political challenges in society at large. This book is essential reading for those who desire a deeper understanding of school choice policies in Canada.

(Description Source: University of Toronto Press)


Author

Lynn Bosetti joined the University of British Columbia in September 2010 as Dean of Faculty of Education. Prior to her position she was tenured faculty at the University of Calgary in Educational Policy and Leadership Studies. Bosetti is responsible for the $1.2 million donor gift of intellectual property of SMART to the Faculty of Education.

She was a Visiting Scholar at University of Melbourne, University of Glasgow, Visiting Lecturer at University of Saskatchewan, and Visiting Fellow at St. Edmund’s College, University of Cambridge. Most recently Lynn was a professor and Dean of the School of Education in La Trobe University, Melbourne Australia.

Her research and teaching has focused on faith, identity and the common school, planning alternative futures for education, issues related to school choice, charter schools and more recently, university leadership in the new economy.

Dianne Gereluk is the associate Dean of Undergraduate Programs in Education, and an associate professor in leadership, policy, and governance at the Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary.


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/y4j32nyk


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – University of Toronto Press
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Cloth ISBN: 9781442643086
eBook ISBN: 9781442695412
PDF ISBN: 9781442695405


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

Education-Martin-EME2141

Education in a Post-Metaphysical World
Rethinking Educational Policy and Practice Through Jürgen Habermas’ Discourse Morality

(Bloomsbury, 2012)
EME 2141

What does it mean to say that a person has been educated? This question forms the basis of global education policy debates; from the way governments establish funding for national school systems, to the way children are treated in the classroom. Should there be a common ethical core to such policies? What kind of educational process should aboriginal groups in Labrador, Canada, have a moral right to, and should this process be different from what children in New York’s boroughs have a claim to? Should a school-based curriculum, such as the UK’s National Curriculum, make well-being a central concern or are there other ethical dimensions to be addressed? Christopher Martin explores these questions and argues that the best way to consider them is to view education as a matter of public moral understanding. He brings together traditions of thought central to philosophy of education, such as R.S. Peters, and connects this tradition to the moral philosophy and critical theory of Jurgen Habermas, whose theory of Discourse Morality has previously been given little attention in education circles.

(Description Source: Bloomsbury)


Author

Christopher Martin is an associate professor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia (Okanagan). His research focuses on the philosophy of education. His specific areas of interest include educational ethics, the aims of higher education, and education for democracy. His work has been funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Spencer Foundation, and the Centre for Ethics and Education (Wisconsin).


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/y3ydwfmz


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Bloomsbury
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Paperback ISBN – 9781472569127
Hardcover ISBN – 9780826433602
ePub ISBN – 9781441111081
PDF ISBN – 9781441122902


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

Placing-Latta-EME2141

Placing Practitioner Knowledge at the Center of Teacher Education
Rethinking the Policies and Practices of the Education Doctorate

(Information Age Publishing, 2012)
EME 2141

Rethinking the Education Doctorate so that practitioner knowledge is at the center of programmatic concern in teacher education raises provocative education policy/practice considerations. Participants in the national Carnegie Project on the Education Doctorate (CPED) are doing just this. Their accounts of rethinking what counts as educational knowledge and their reconsideration of the roles of teacher educators, scholar-practitioners, students, policymakers, and others are illuminated in this book. Asserting the primacy of practitioner knowledge, the book generates a rich and complex terrain of issues and considerations that participating CPED institutions navigate as multiple technical, normative, and political questions at the crux of educator preparation, professional growth, and control of their field. And, it is this terrain that calls attention to the nature of practitioner knowledge and its inherent potential for redirecting, mediating, and generating education policy. Conversations within and across national and local levels orient away from technical means-ends “what works” questions alone, and open into normative and political questions about educational value and professional action.

In documenting the largest, most coordinated effort to rethink the educational doctorate in a century of such efforts, this book will interest teacher educators and programs engaged in pre-service and graduate-level teacher education, practicing K-16 teachers, and education policy/practice interest groups and individuals. Illustrating a policy development method that is neither top-down nor necessarily ‘grass roots’, it also invites the interest of other educational sectors. Additionally, as CPED implementation contexts value interdisciplinarity, multiple methodological perspectives, and interactions and deliberations across interests, the lived consequences and significances of doing so are mapped out and, as such, hold much potential for policy/practice intersections within manifold education settings, and beyond, to settings of all kinds invested in the primacy of practitioner knowledge. Thus, a core goal of this volume is to broach these considerations with a broad readership.

(Description Source: Information Age Publishing)


Author

Margaret Macintyre Latta is the director of Education and a professor at The University of British Columbia (Okanagan). She’s a former classroom teacher at the elementary, junior high, and high school levels who returned to graduate studies compelled by John Dewey’s (1938) assertion that within aesthetic experience is a learning approach and direction. The aesthetic is understood as attention to the creating process, primary to the arts, permeating all learning—thus adapting, changing, building, and making meaning. Her scholarship addresses the integral role of aesthetic considerations such as attentiveness to participatory thinking, emotional commitment, felt freedom, dialogue and interaction, and speculation within the acts of teaching and learning. She terms these neglected epistemological assumptions, elemental to learners and learning. She believes the aesthetic merits serious consideration as a pragmatic and philosophical necessity missing in much schooling. Aesthetic teaching/learning contexts call for rethinking and revaluing what is educationally important. She is committed to the primacy of teachers in the lives of their students and the long-term impact on the future, contributing to the scholarship regarding school curriculum, teacher education, and professional development reform initiatives.


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/y5xelmuc


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Information Age Publishing
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Hardcover ISBN: 9781617357381
eBook ISBN: 9781617357398


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

Q-Douglas-EME2141

Q: Skills for Success
Reading and Writing 5

(Oxford University Press, 2011)
EME 2141

Q Skills for Success Reading and Writing 5 was co-authored by Nigel Caplan and Scott Douglas.  This book supports English language learners as they develop their general academic English and critical thinking skills.  Each unit in the book focuses on a core academic discipline, using a language through content-based approach in which learners explore an essential question related to that discipline.  Thus, content becomes a vehicle for language learning, with the language skills covered in each unit (such as vocabulary, grammar, reading, writing, and critical thinking skills) supporting students are they put together their answers to the unit’s essential question.

(Description Source: Oxford University Press)


Author

Scott Roy Douglas is an associate professor and director of English as an additional language program at the University of British Columbia’s Okanagan School of Education. He is also the editor of the BC TEAL Journal. His focus is on English as an additional language teaching and learning, with a particular interest in English for academic purposes, materials writing, curriculum development, and short-term study abroad.


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/yxdyyyf9


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Oxford University Press
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Paper ISBN: 9780194903967


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

Academic-Douglas-EME2141

Academic Inquiry 4
Essays and Research (2nd edn)

(Oxford University Press 2018)
EME 2141

The fourth book in the Academic Inquiry series, this book supports English language learners who are just about to enter full-time academic studies at a post-secondary institution in English to develop their academic writing skills. Using an inquiry-based approach, this writing textbook guides students as they explore their own questions related to key college and university subject areas. Thus, the students’ own questions drive their learning as they cover a wide range of disciplines such as applied linguistics, ecology, health sciences, engineering, geography, and business. While finding the answers to their own questions, students are supported with key vocabulary, reading, critical thinking, research, writing, and grammar skills.

(Description Source: Oxford University Press)


Author

Scott Roy Douglas is an associate professor and director of English as an additional language program at the University of British Columbia’s Okanagan School of Education.  He is also the editor of the BC TEAL Journal.  His focus is on English as an additional language teaching and learning, with a particular interest in English for academic purposes, materials writing, curriculum development, and short-term study abroad.


UBC Library Holdings

First Edition: http://tinyurl.com/y424ryjf


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Oxford University Press
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Paper ISBN: 9780199028269


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

 

Teacher – Cherkowski – EME1153

Teacher Wellbeing
Flourishing in Schools by Noticing, Nurturing, and Sustaining

(Word & Deed Publishing, 2018)
EME 1153

Grounded in research that explores flourishing schools and positive educational leadership, this book advocates for much more attention on teacher wellbeing. Offering a blend of theory and practice, this book is written to engage teachers, groups of teachers, and school leaders in conversations that help make sense of the often overwhelming demands inherent in teaching, the accompanying challenges of these realities, and their impacts on teachers’ wellbeing. The authors argue that as teachers foster the wellbeing of their students, they must ensure that their own self-care is a professional priority.

(Description Source: Word and Deed Publishing)


Author

Sabre Cherkowski is a professor of Education and the Director of Graduate Programs at UBC Okanagan. She has been researching what it means for educators to grow their professional and personal potential toward flourishing at work. She has examined how teacher wellbeing contributes to building positive school experiences and the role of leadership in cultivating positive workspaces. In recognition of her innovative research, Cherkowski received UBC Okanagan’s 2020 Researcher of the Year award for Social Sciences and Humanities in 2020.

Keith Walker is a professor in the Department of Educational Administration at the University of Saskatchewan.


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/y28hbjon


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Word and Deed Publishing
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

ISBN: 9780995978225


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

Mindful – Cherkowski – EME1153

Mindful Alignment
Foundations of Educator Flourishing

(Lexington Books, 2018)
EME 1153

Mindful Alignment: Foundations of Educator Flourishing develops a foundation for educators to flourish by promoting self-awareness as a mindful approach to ongoing professional inquiry. It presents three mindful arts—the art of well-being; the art of positive relationships; and the art of living from strengths, passions, and purposes—detailing several practices that, when executed over time, can provide a focus for developing mindful alignment. The authors present an approach to personal, professional learning that encourages educators to slow down, create space to notice, and then nurture their intentions and actions toward fulfilling their purposes and passions, in order to grow a sense of flourishing at work and overcome the challenges presented by teaching in ever increasingly fast-paced, rapidly-changing, accountability-driven professional environments.

(Description Source: Rowman & Littlefield)


Author

Sabre Cherkowski is a professor of Education and the Director of Graduate Programs at UBC Okanagan. She has been researching what it means for educators to grow their professional and personal potential toward flourishing at work. She has examined how teacher wellbeing contributes to building positive school experiences and the role of leadership in cultivating positive workspaces. In recognition of her innovative research, Cherkowski received UBC Okanagan’s 2020 Researcher of the Year award for Social Sciences and Humanities in 2020.

Kelly Hanson is a PhD student and Faculty Advisor (2017-2019) in the Okanagan School of Education at the University of British Columbia. Her research explores innovative ways that educators can support each other to develop their teaching practices. As part of her research into teaching and mindfulness, Hanson co-initiated a professional teachers’ group two years ago with colleagues at Rutland Middle School. They have since expanded to include educators across School District 23.

Keith Walker is a professor of educational leadership in the Department of Educational Administration at the University of Saskatchewan.


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/yxmzznz5


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Lexington Books
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Hardback ISBN: 9781498570787
Paper ISBN: 9781498570800

eBook ISBN: 9781498570794


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

Curricular-Latta-EME1121

Curricular Conversations
Play is the (Missing) Thing

(Routledge, 2012)
EME 1121

The central theme of Curricular Conversations is this: Play is the thing that brings aesthetic curricular complications near educators and their students, making the lived consequences very vivid, tangible, and possible. Viewing curriculum as genuine inquiry into what is worth knowing, rather than simply a curricular document, this book explores the significances instilled and nurtured through aesthetic play. Each chapter delves into the space a given artwork reveals. The artworks act as points of departure and/or generative vehicles, foregrounding the roles and possibilities of play within curricular conversations. Looking at relevant educational issues, traditions, and theorists through an illuminating lens, this book speaks to curriculum theorists and arts educators everywhere.

(Description Source: Routledge)


Author

Margaret Macintyre Latta is the director of Education and a professor at The University of British Columbia (Okanagan). She’s a former classroom teacher at the elementary, junior high, and high school levels who returned to graduate studies compelled by John Dewey’s (1938) assertion that within aesthetic experience is a learning approach and direction. The aesthetic is understood as attention to the creating process, primary to the arts, permeating all learning—thus adapting, changing, building, and making meaning. Her scholarship addresses the integral role of aesthetic considerations such as attentiveness to participatory thinking, emotional commitment, felt freedom, dialogue and interaction, and speculation within the acts of teaching and learning. She terms these neglected epistemological assumptions, elemental to learners and learning. She believes the aesthetic merits serious consideration as a pragmatic and philosophical necessity missing in much schooling. Aesthetic teaching/learning contexts call for rethinking and revaluing what is educationally important. She is committed to the primacy of teachers in the lives of their students and the long-term impact on the future, contributing to the scholarship regarding school curriculum, teacher education, and professional development reform initiatives.


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/y6mh3e55


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – Routledge
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Paper ISBN: 9780415897532
eBook ISBN: 9780203804018
Hardback ISBN: 9780415897525


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.

African-Tettey-ART110

The African Diaspora in Canada
Negotiating Identity and Belonging

(University of Calgary Press, 2006)
ART 110

What does it mean to be African-Canadian?

The African Diaspora in Canada addresses the conceptual difficulties and political contestations surrounding the term “African-Canadian.” In the midst of this fraught terrain, it focuses on first-generation, black continental Africans who have immigrated in the past four decades. In highlighting their experiences, this book addresses the empirical, conceptual, and methodological gaps that homogenize all black people and their experiences.

Rooted in the specific experiences of continental Africans in Canada, this book examines the social constructions of African-Canadians, their experiences within the political and education systems, and with the labour market. It explores the forms of cooperation and tension that characterize African-Canadian communities, and how multiple transnational spaces are negotiated and occupied. The book also explores the circumstances of children, as they try to define their identities vis-à-vis their parents and the larger Canadian society.

(Description Source: University of Calgary Press)


Author

Wisdom Tettey served as Dean of the Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies and as Dean of the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences at UBC Okanagan before moving to the University of Toronto Scarborough. He is a leading researcher on African diaspora, politics and the media.


UBC Library Holdings

http://tinyurl.com/y4qqb4kd


How to Purchase this Book

From the Publisher – University of Calgary Press
From Used-book Sellers – ABE, Amazon, Antiqbook, Biblio, Vialibri

Paper ISBN: 9781552381755
PDF ISBN: 9781552382769


UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project

The University of British Columbia Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project aims to display academically inspiring artwork in classrooms and other teaching areas of the university.

Artwork displayed as part of this project – including the covers of books and journals containing work written or edited by UBCO scholars and researchers – is intended to help enliven university teaching spaces, educate classroom users about the connections between research and teaching, and introduce members of the broader public to some of the research and scholarship carried out at UBCO.


How to Submit Artwork

If you know of other book or journal covers, or other academically inspiring artwork that is connected to work carried out by UBCO artists, scholars or researchers and that is consistent with UBCO’s educational mission, please email your suggestions to classroom.artwork@ubc.ca.

The UBC Okanagan Classroom Artwork Project began in 2019 with support from the Irving K. Barber School of Arts and Sciences. It is now a joint project of UBCO’s Faculties and the Office of the Provost.

Artwork and other images that are a part of this project are displayed solely for educational purposes.