CGS-M: Approaching deadline and important reminders

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CGSM and Affiliated Fellowships – Important reminders

The deadline for students to submit their CGS-Master’s applications via the Research Portal is before 5 PM (PT) on Wednesday, 1 December 2021. This deadline is set nationally and is not flexible; UBC has no administrative authority/means to extend the deadline for applicants.

Unlike the Doctoral competition, CGS-M application materials cannot be revised after the deadline. Applicants are strongly encouraged to follow the application instructions and presentation standards when preparing their application.

Important reminders regarding transcripts:

  • The Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies does not provide transcripts for award/scholarship applications.
  • The Transcript Checklist – Master’s covers questions related to transcript requirements.  The checklist is posted here: https://www.grad.ubc.ca/awards/award-resources-programs/affiliated-fellowships-tri-agency-competitions.
  • It is the applicant’s responsibility to submit up-to-date official transcripts of all undergraduate and graduate studies via the Research Portal before the deadline. An application will be deemed ineligible if it does not include the up-to-date official transcripts required for determining grade point average (academic standing) in each of the last two completed years of study (full-time equivalent).
  • Transcripts cannot be updated or submitted separately after the deadline.

Important reminders regarding reference assessment forms:

  • Referees (faculty members) are strongly encouraged to complete their assessments and submit them via the Research Portal well in advance of the December 1 deadline (instructions).
  • Applicants cannot submit their CGSM application until the two reference assessment forms have been completed and submitted in the Research Portal. The deadline will not be extended for applicants who are unable to submit because of missing reference assessments.

 

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UBC Affiliated Fellowships-Master’s

The UBC Affiliated Fellowships Master’s competition runs in concert with the Canada Graduate Scholarships-Master’s (CGS-M; see below) competition. Approximately 50 fellowship with values ranging from $175 to $16,000 are offered through this competition. Current and prospective full-time UBC-Vancouver graduate students can apply regardless of citizenship or visa status. Students who are eligible for the CGS-M must submit a CGS-M application in order to additionally be considered for Affiliated funding.

Detailed Affiliated Fellowships-Master competition information with links to application and reference forms is available at:
https://www.grad.ubc.ca/awards/affiliated-fellowships-masters-program.


Tri-Agency Canada Graduate Scholarships-Master’s (CGS-M)

Applicants for Tri-Agency CGS-M competition must be domestic students (Canadian citizen or PR) who are applying for or enrolled in graduate studies anywhere in Canada. Each applicant can select up to 3 universities with the same application. To be considered for a CGS-M at UBC, they must select The University of British Columbia as one of the 3 available institutions.

Details about this award opportunity, including eligibility and evaluation criteria, are available at:
 http://www.nserc-crsng.gc.ca/Students-Etudiants/PG-CS/CGSM-BESCM_eng.asp and our site at https://www.grad.ubc.ca/awards/canada-graduate-scholarships-masters-cgs-m-program.

Students who apply for CGS-M awards will automatically be considered for open/un-restricted Affiliated Fellowships.
To be considered for criteria-based Affiliated Fellowships, students should fill out and submit to their graduate programs the checklist available at:  https://www.grad.ubc.ca/forms/list-criteria-based-affiliated-fellowships.

UBC Deadlines for the Tri-Agency CGS-M / Affiliated Fellowships Master’s Competitions

  • Applicant deadline:1 December 2021 before 5:00 pm PST
  • Graduate program nomination deadline:  Late January (nomination deadline will be indicated in December)

CGSM and Affiliated Fellowships-Master’s information session

  • Interested applicants are invited to attend the CGSM information session on Friday, October 22 from 10:30 to 12:00.  REGISTER HERE.

What you can do now:

  • Importance of the application deadline.  CGS-M applications cannot be submitted or edited after the application deadline.  Late applications will be ruled ineligible. The CGS-M application deadline is set nationally by the CGS-M funding agency and is not flexible.
  • Please ask for reference letters early and to send the instructions to your referees
    http://www.nserc-crsng.gc.ca/ResearchPortal-PortailDeRecherche/Instructions-Instructions/CGSM_REF-BESCM_REF_eng.asp.
  • Check early if you have all of your official transcripts for all previous studies (including transfer credits). Transcript guidance for applicants is outlined on our CGS-M webpage.
  • Note that although the SISC academic history document is accepted for UBC CGS-M applications, it may not be accepted by other universities in Canada, so students applying elsewhere for the CGSM in addition to UBC should order official UBC transcripts.
  • It would help us greatly if you are using the same email in your CGS-M Research Portal login as in eVision or SIS. This is absolutely not a requirement, but it helps route the applications to correct programs quicker after the application deadline.

 

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Doctoral Deadline reminder – Spring 2022 Graduation

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The deadline for submission of Nominations for External Examiner for PhD candidates wanting to complete on the timeline for Spring 2022 Graduation is this week, Friday, November 26.
This is a flexible deadline, and there is still time for students to submit those forms. They should come in by the end of next week to reduce the likelihood of a delay in the invitation process.

As a reminder, the other dates candidates need to meet are as follows:

  • FRIDAY, 28 JANUARY 2022 – Doctoral dissertation (and supporting documentation) submitted to Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies for external examination
  • FRIDAY 25 MARCH – Last Day for Final Doctoral Oral Examination
  • FRIDAY, 22 APRIL – Acceptance of final, approved doctoral dissertation by Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies

The deadlines for April 30, 2022 Program end date are quite similar to these dates; it is important for students who want to participate in the Spring Graduation Ceremony to meet the timeline.

Students will be able to choose to defend either in person or on Zoom. We will work with students to select the most appropriate mode for their defense.

Please distribute this email to any faculty or students you think may be interested.

Best,

Robyn

Robyn Starkey (Prounouns: No Preference)
Doctoral Exams Coordinator
Office of the Dean | Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies
The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory
The University of British Columbia 170 – 6371 Crescent Road | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z2 Canada
Phone 604 822 3989
robyn.starkey@ubc.ca
http://www.grad.ubc.ca

RES 500C: Advanced Topics in Conservation Biology

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*** Course Announcement- Term 2 – 2022***

We are very pleased to announce that RES 500C is open to graduate students in all departments, please feel free to sign up if you are interested:

RES 500C:  Advanced Topics in Conservation Biology

Mondays, 1 – 4 PM; AERL Rm 107

http://ires.ubc.ca/courses/course-information/

Course Description

This course is a graduate level seminar with lecture and discussion covering advanced topics in conservation of biological diversity.   We will read a mixture of foundational as well as recent papers covering a range of current topics within Conservation Science.  One of the most exciting aspects of the course is that students will have the opportunity to work in interdisciplinary teams on an active conservation project, commissioned by international and local NGOs.   Students will prepare deliverables that will help these organizations in their current on-the-ground work, under the guidance of the instructor and the project lead(s) from respective NGOs.    A list of this year’s projects is noted below.  Group projects represent an exciting and unique opportunity to learn while contributing to conservation, and can lead to future projects or co-authored publications, resumé-building and networking.  Students will also gain experience leading discussions and developing interactive class exercises.

All graduate students with some background in ecology and a strong interest in conservation are welcome.  4th year undergraduates may request enrollment with consent of instructor. Students with any prior experience in GIS, remote-sensing, OR other quantitative modeling skills, OR social sciences/qualitative coding, OR indigenous knowledge systems,  project management, conservation finance, wildlife or plant ecology, science communications, or literature review are particularly encouraged to enroll.  All departments welcome also.

2022 projects (partial list):

 Nature Conservancy Canada

  1. An analysis of two-eyed seeing approaches to conservation prioritization frameworks to help inform conservation planning work at the Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC)
  2. Exploring the intersection of conservation financing and Indigenous conservation at the Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC)

Canadian Wildlife Federation

  1. Assessing the availability of and temporal changes to Monarch butterfly nectaring habitat in south-eastern Ontario

UBC Botanical Garden/CGIAR/USDA

  1. Berries of the Pacific Northwest: Conservation in a Changing Climate

The Nature Conservancy (US)/UBC Interdisciplinary Biodiversity Solutions (IBioS) program

  1. Using connectivity to prioritize area-based conservation for community conservancies in Kenya

Canadian Parks Collective for Innovation and Leadership (CPCIL)

TBD

GradUpdate – How to Get Hired_The Job Search and Application, Overcoming by Understanding Academic Writer’s Block, Teaching Professionalism, Careers in the Green Economy, Online Graduate Student Teaching Practicum, SciComm workshops, and more.

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GradUpdate

In this issue, How to Get Hired_The Job Search and Application, Overcoming by Understanding Academic Writer’s Block, Teaching Professionalism, Careers in the Green Economy, Online Graduate Student Teaching Practicum, SciComm workshops, and more.

Registration now open

 

How to Get Hired: The Job Search and Application
Alumni panel | Thursday, Dec 2 | 4:00 – 5:00 PM

Register

Seats still available

 

Assertiveness: Speaking Up for Yourself in Difficult Conversation
In person | Wednesday, Nov 24 | 2:00 – 5:00 PM Register

Introduction to Statistical Concepts III: Two group comparison and ANOVA
Online | Thursday, Nov 25 | 1:00 – 3:00 PM Register

Events and Opportunities

 

The following highlights some upcoming events. Please find more on community.grad.ubc.ca and grad.ubc.ca/current-students/professional-development
ACADEMIC SUPPORT AND SUCCESS

 

Free Data Anaylsis Through Stat 450
Submit one-page project description now (deadline Jan 14) Learn more

Using RefWorks for Citation Management
Monday, Nov 29 | 4:00 – 5:30 PM Register

CAREER EXPLORATION

 

Industry Nights – Building a Sustainable World: Careers in the Green Economy
Tuesday, Nov 30 | 3:00 – 5:00 PM Register

Transdisciplinary Climate Action Co-Design Research Assistant
Part-time | Jan to Jun 2022 | Apply now Learn more

PROFESSIONAL EFFECTIVENESS

 

Refined Project Communication Plan (Mitacs Training)
Asynchronous course requirements must be completed prior to synchronous session.
Wednesday, Dec 1 | 1:00 – 3:00 PM Learn more
For additional Mitacs Training courses specific to UBC, including project and time management, check out the list under the events tab here.
RESEARCH SKILLS

 

Powerful searching with Regular Expressions
Tuesday, Nov 30 | 2:00 – 4:00 PM Register

NVivo part 2: classification and datasets
Wednesday, Dec 1 | 4:00 – 6:00 PM Register

TEACHING DEVELOPMENT

 

Qualtrics Studio
Monday, Nov 29 | 3:00 – 4:30 PM Register

Exploring Complex Classroom Dynamics Using Case-Studies
Wednesday, Dec 1 | 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Register

Teaching Professionalism: Nailing Jell-O to the Wall?
Monday, Dec 6 | 9:00 – 10:30 AM Register
This is the first of many workshops on the CTLT Winter Institute Schedule. This year’s Institute’s theme is Sustainable, Inclusive and Thriving Communities.

Online Graduate Student Teaching Practicum
Jan 12 – Apr 12 | To register, you need to be a Graduate Student and have completed a Graduate ISW, the CIRTL Summer Teaching Institute, or Foundations of Pedagogy.
Registration is now open and closes Jan 11th.

WRITING AND COMMUNICATION

 

Overcoming by Understanding Academic Writer’s Block
Tuesday, Nov 30 | 11:00 AM – 12:30 PM Register

Science Communication Workshops
Hosted by (un)scientific method
Part 1: SciComm101 – Telling your science as a story | Dec 6 & 12 | 12:00 – 12:45 PM
Part 2: Communicating your science through podcasting interviews | Jan 17 & 24 | 9:00 – 10:00 AM Learn more

Thesis Defense -Food Science – MSc – Xanyar Mohammadi

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UBC – Faculty of Land and Food Systems Announces

The Oral Examination for the Degree of Master of Science
(Food Science)

Xanyar Mohammadi

Pulsed light technology: a new alternative to reduce the use of SO2 in red wine

Monday, December 6th, 2021 – 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM

Virtually

https://ubc.zoom.us/j/63340773720?pwd=MHRTUGx1TXVDK05jRldhMkIwNUVhUT09

EXAMINING COMMITTEE

Chair: Dr. S. Wang

Supervisory Committee:
Dr. A. Pratap-Singh – Supervisor
Dr. D. Kitts – Committee member
Dr. S. Castellarin – Committee member

Defense Committee Composition
Dr. A. Pratap-Singh – Supervisor
Dr. S. Castellarin – Committee member
Dr. D. Dee – External