Thursday, February 18, 2021


Rooted in History: A Celebration of Black History as Canadian History on February 26

A decoupage-style collage of human faces in profile made from different shades of paper.

The President's Anti-Racism Taskforce (PART) will be hosting a special event to mark Black History Month on Friday, February 26.

Rooted in History: A Celebration of Black History as Canadian History will include musical performances, a keynote address, and a panel of some of Waterloo's most formidable thinkers in celebration of Black History in Canada, and those trailblazers making history right here at Waterloo.

The event will highlight the achievements of Black Canadians and members of Waterloo's Black community while educating and mobilizing support around anti-Black racism.

Key participants at the event include:

  • Feridun Hamdullahpur, President and vice-chancellor, University of Waterloo;
  • Charmaine Dean, Vice-president, Research, University of Waterloo;
  • Laura Mae Lindo, Member of Provincial Parliament, Kitchener-Centre, delivering the keynote address;
  • Kathy Hogarth, Special Advisor, Anti-Racism and Inclusivity, VPRI and Associate Professor, School of Social Work, emcee;
  • Aaron Francis, Equity Advisor, Graduate Student Association, panelist;
  • Naila Keleta-Mae, Associate Professor, Department of Communication Arts, panelist;
  • Christopher Taylor, Lecturer, Department of History, panelist;
  • Vershawn Young, Professor, cross appointed English Language and Literature, and Communication Arts, panelist; and
  • Rufus John, Kitchener-Waterloo Canadian-Caribbean vocalist.

The event will run from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. virtually on Microsoft Teams. Registration is now open.

German Studies travel awards go virtual

Germany's famous Brandenburg Gate.

A message from the Waterloo Centre for German Studies.

The Waterloo Centre for German Studies is pleased to announce that our annual travel award applications are open. Though they're different this year because, you know, COVID-19.

At the moment, the WCGS is unable to make any awards available that involve travel. But thanks to the generosity of its donors, the centre can make awards available for students participating in virtual study abroad programs. This means that if a student at a Canadian university is participating in a program that usually takes place in Germany, but due to the pandemic is being held virtually online, the WCGS will accept applications for support to help defray program fees.

Any student planning on participating in a recognized institutional Canadian-organized German language or cultural studies program abroad between May 2021 and April 2022 may apply for the Stork Awards in German Studies. These awards are for full-time graduate and undergraduate students who will be participating in a recognized institutional, Canadian-organized German language or cultural studies program that would normally take place abroad. The awards are available to students in all disciplines. Deadline for applications is March 1. Visit the WCGS webpage for more information.

For any questions about scholarships, please contact Lori Straus.

A search engine for better disease diagnosis and treatment

A medical atlas featuring biospy sample images.

By Brian Caldwell. This article was originally featured on Waterloo News.

Professor Hamid Tizhoosh.Hamid Tizhoosh was looking for a new idea, a fresh start, when he began talking to doctors about how they do their jobs and how they might do them better. 

Six months into his consultations, with his engineering lab at the University of Waterloo reduced to a one-man show by a failed artificial intelligence (AI) startup, he heard something that almost floored him. 

Pathologists in the 21st century still rely on atlases — books of images from biopsy samples — and flip through them for potential matches to help diagnose new cases.

Really? Books of old images? That was it, the spark that sent the systems design engineering professor roaring down a productive new research path. 

“They were using a very Stone Age type of search,” he recalls. “When I learned that, I said, ‘For heaven’s sake, we should do this automatically. It is image search. Computers can do it.’” 

Seven years later, Tizhoosh has turned that basic concept into new technology he hopes will revolutionize health care by giving doctors a simple, powerful tool to help diagnose, treat and research disease via search in large medical image archives. 

Partnering with industry to secure $3.14 million 

And working with him to realize that goal is a local company, Huron Digital Pathology of St. Jacobs, that he approached for backing when his early work started showing promise. 

Huron is the industrial partner in a consortium led by Tizhoosh and researchers in his Laboratory for Knowledge Inference in Medical Image Analysis (KIMIA Lab) which secured $3.14 million in funding through the Ontario Research Fund: Research Excellence program in 2018. 

The money is important, but both sides stress the relationship goes well beyond Huron providing $500,000 for research over five years in exchange for commercialization rights. 

In addition to being a shareholder and AI advisor to the company, Tizhoosh helped hire its engineers and rolled up his sleeves to work booths at conferences and trade shows. 

“We lift the KIMIA lab up, the KIMIA lab lifts us up and, of course, the University of Waterloo is a fantastic calling card,” says Patrick Myles (BA ’87), the CEO of Huron. “We open doors for each other. 

“And on a personal level, Hamid and I almost finish each other's sentences. We’re both out there telling the story of how this wonderful technology can make lives better and doctors more efficient.” 

Search engine combs archives for close matches 

The technology at the heart of the partnership is essentially a specialized search engine that allows doctors to comb archives of digital images of tissue samples for the closest matches to new cases. 

The original images contain massive amounts of digital data, so search is only possible because Tizhoosh came up with a way of using AI to identify key features and convert them into bunches of barcodes. 

That reduces the size of images to a tiny fraction of the originals and indexes them, enabling the search engine to find matches in archives of millions of images in a split second using ordinary computers. 

“We designed the search from the beginning to be super-efficient, to do this without heavy-duty computational power,” Tizhoosh says. 

By finding similar images, the search engine instantly connects doctors to a treasure trove of information on old cases — the diagnosis report, the treatment plan, the eventual outcome — that is now just sitting in archives. 

Myles compares it to turning a giant pile of random books into a library structured and organized using the old Dewey Decimal System. 

“Our search engine unlocks all of the data that already exists,” he says. “It’s really a knowledge-sharing tool.” 

A hint of its potential came last fall when the KIMIA Lab was selected by the World Health Organization to contribute to a global research project on cancer categorization using its image-retrieval technology. 

Waterloo tech will modernize world’s largest tissue archive 

Around the same time, the United States military signed on as Huron’s first paying customer to modernize the Joint Pathology Centre, home to the largest collection of preserved tissue samples in the world. 

That deal put the project two years ahead of schedule in terms of commercialization, but Tizhoosh is convinced they have still only scratched the surface. 

He looks forward to the day the system is used everywhere — including areas of the developing world where pathologists are especially scarce — to virtually eliminate diagnostic error, personalize treatment plans and fuel drug development. 

“I think we’re only at the very beginning, to be honest,” Tizhoosh says. “I believe this is disruptive technology that will eventually touch every area of the medical field. 

“Even we don’t know what the full impact of image search in medical archives will be. Every time we talk to doctors, they give us new ideas.” 

Fiscal year-end is coming up

A pen and calculator atop a financial document.

In a memo circulated on February 16, Finance reminded the University community that fiscal year-end is April 30, 2021. "The April 30, 2021 fiscal year-end is approaching, and it is important that all current year transactions are posted and reviewed in a timely manner," says the memo. "We ask for your assistance in meeting year end deadlines by communicating with your departments and ensuring that tasks in Unit4 are processed by end users as soon as possible after they are received." 

Follow these procedures and deadlines to help ensure the accuracy of the University's financial statements for year-end:

  • Throughout the year, all transactions should be sent to Finance for processing as soon as possible and no later than the month following the completion of the transaction. Cut-off dates for each month-end can be found on the Finance website.
  • Financial reports for your area of responsibility should be reviewed monthly throughout the year for accuracy and completeness.
  • There are a number of actions required and deadlines for April 2021 transactions. See the full memo for details.

Academic units should contact their Faculty Executive Officer or Faculty Financial Officer with any questions. Academic support departments should contact their Financial Officer (if applicable), or the Finance contacts at the bottom of the memo. Finance would like to thank everyone in advance for their support.

Thursday's notes

"The 22 February 2021 Senate meeting will be held via Microsoft Teams videoconference," says a note from the Secretariat. "Guests are welcome to join the open session of the meeting similar to a normal "in-person" Senate meeting. If you would like to attend the meeting as a guest observer, please contact Emily Schroeder to request to join the meeting. All requests must be received by Friday 19 February 2021. The agenda is posted on the Senate webpage."

The next IST IT Seminar, IST-ITMS’s 2020, the year of “living in interesting times”, will take place on Friday, February 19 from 9:00 a.m. to 9:45 a.m. 'Instructional Technologies and Media Services (ITMS) provides the central facilities used for teaching and learning, from the classrooms, to the many educational technologies, to video editing, and more," says the note from the seminar organizers. "With up to 39,000 students and well over 2000 instructors making use of various in-person and online services in the two big terms (Fall and Winter), life for the team tends to be very busy. Then it got very interesting starting in late February of 2020. This presentation updates you on what ITMS does, and how areas of the group transitioned during the move to “remote teaching”, as the new mode of operating became known."

Speaking will be Andrea Chappell, the Director of Instructional Technologies and Media Services. Join online.

Link of the day

25 years ago: Muppet Treasure Island

When and Where to get support

Students can visit the Student Success Office online for supports including academic development, international student resources, leadership development, exchange and study abroad, and opportunities to get involved.

Instructors can visit the Keep Learning website to get support on adapting their teaching and learning plans for an online environment.

Updated Course templates are now available within your course in LEARN to help you build and edit your content and assignment pages quickly. Support for Winter 2021 is available.

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

Independent Remote Course Design Essentials. Self-directed, continuous self-enrollment course in LEARN.

Learning from Our Remote Teaching Experiences (CTE7009), Tuesday, February 23, 1:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. 

Introduction to Assessments in PebblePad (ATLAS) (CTE7512), Monday, March 8, 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. 

Employees can access resources to help them work remotely, including managing University records and privacy of personal information. Here are some tips for staying healthy while working from home.

Stay informed about COVID cases on campus by consulting the COVID case tracker.

Whether you’re a student or faculty member, the Writing and Communication Centre has virtual services and programs to help you with all of your academic writing needs. This term we have added evening and weekend one-to-one appointments with our peer tutors, and our NEW one-to-one workshops, where you can learn the content directly from one of our writing advisors.

  • Undergraduates: Work with us to brainstorm, draft, revise, and polish your assignments in one-to-one appointments. Ask questions and learn writing tips at our Instagram Live Q&A sessions, and beat isolation while improving your writing skills at the weekly PJ-friendly writing groups.
  • Graduates: Meet with our advisors in one-to-one appointments. Join the online writing community at the Virtual Writing Cafés, learn how to present your work at Speak Like a Scholar, or get moving on your dissertation at Dissertation Boot Camp.
  • Faculty and Instructors: Request custom workshops for your courses, join the Waterloo writing community at the Virtual Writing Cafés, or make progress on your article, book, or chapter in one-to-one meetings with our faculty specialist.

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

The Centre for Career Action assists undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, staff, faculty, and alumni through navigating career services that are right for them. You can attend a one-on-one appointment or same day drop-in session at the CCA for assistance with cover letter writing, career planning and much more. You can also book an appointment online or visit our Live Chat to connect with our Client Support Team. The CCA is here to help you.

You may need to speak with someone for emotional support. Good2Talk is a post-secondary student helpline based in Ontario, Canada that is available to all students. If you feel overwhelmed or anxious and need to talk to somebody, please contact the University’s Campus Wellness services, either Health Services or  Counselling Services. You can also contact the University's Centre for Mental Health Research and Treatment.

The Library has published a resource guide on how to avoid information overload.

The Faculty Association of the University of Waterloo (FAUW) continues to advocate for its members. Check out the FAUW blog for more information.

The University of Waterloo Staff Association (UWSA) continues to advocate for its members. Check out the UWSA blog for more information.

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

The Waterloo 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 (Visit https://wusa.ca/peersupport to book an appointment):

  • MATES – Available Monday to Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (online only)
    • Support sessions available in the following languages: Cantonese, English, Hindi, Mandarin, Portuguese, Punjabi, Spanish, and Urdu.
  • Glow Centre – Available Monday to Friday,  4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. (online only)
  • RAISE – Available Monday to Friday – Varied hours (online only)
  • Women’s Centre – Available Monday to Friday, 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. (online only)

Bike Centre – Will be reopening soon. Check https://wusa.ca/bikecentre for current operating times.

Campus Response Team, ICSN, Off Campus Community and Co-op Connection all available online. Check https://wusa.ca for more details.

Food Support Service food hampers are currently available from the Turnkey Desk on weekdays from 7:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. in the Student Life Centre. If you have any questions please email us at foodsupport@wusa.ca.

Centre for Academic Policy Support - CAPS is here to assist Waterloo undergraduates throughout their experience in navigating academic policy in the instances of filing petitions, grievances and appeals. Please contact them at caps@wusa.ca. More information at https://wusa.ca/services/centre-academic-policy-support-caps.

WUSA Commissioners who can help in a variety of areas that students may be experiencing during this time:

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 call 1-833-202-4571

Empower Me is a confidential mental health and wellness service that connects students with qualified counsellors 24/7. They can be reached at 1-833-628-5589.

When and Where (but mostly when)

Healthy Warriors at Home. Free programming including Online Fitness, Health Webinars, Personalized Nutrition and more from Warriors Athletics and Rec. Open to students, staff, faculty and alumni. Register today.

Livestream Exercises for Waterloo staff: Join us for an energy boosting Bootcamp or a fast and effective Express Home Workout! Open to UW Staff and subsidized by the Staff Excellence Fund.

Renison English Language Institute continues to offer virtual events and workshops to help students practice their English language skills.

Warriors vs. Laurier Blood Donation Battle. Join your fellow Warriors, donate blood and help us win the Blood Battle against Laurier for a second year in a row. Set up a profile or add the PFL code: UNIV960995 to your account if you have a blood.ca account already. Questions? Contact WarriorsInfo@uwaterloo.ca.

Warrior Rec Free Programs for Students, January to February. Wide range of free opportunities available to keep students active and healthy including:Fitness Classes (On-Demand), Health and Mindfulness Webinars, Personalized Nutrition Guides, Personal Training Consultations, Small Group Training and Warrior Reset. Register today.

Drop-in to Warrior Virtual Study Halls on Wednesdays from 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Come together in this virtual space to set goals and work independently or in groups each week.

Warriors truLOCAL Kickback Program, January 20 to February 20. Support your Warriors  varsity teams by purchasing a pre-set truLOCAL box filled with the best quality locally sourced meat and fish. Find out more information and purchase a box today.

Reading Week, Saturday, February 13 to Sunday, February 21.

Grade 10 Family Night, Thursday, February 18, 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Microsoft Teams Live.

NEW - IT Seminar: IST-ITMS’s 2020, the year of “living in interesting times”, Friday February 19, 9:00 a.m. to 9:45 a.m. Join online.

Quest downtime, Saturday, February 20 to Monday, February 22, 8:30 a.m.

Senate meeting, Monday, February 22, 3:30 p.m.

WaterLeadership: Write it up: Practical tips for communicating your research, Tuesday, February 23, 12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m.

GEDIx: A 30-minute Exchange, Tuesday, February 23, 1:00 p.m.

Concept Working Session: Customer Discovery, Tuesday, February 23, 5:30 p.m., virtual event.

Noon Hour Concert: Schumann’s Symphonic Etudes Op. 13, Wednesday, February 24, 12:30 p.m.