The Daily Bulletin is published by Internal and Leadership Communications, part of University Communications
Contact us at bulletin@uwaterloo.ca
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Editor:
Brandon Sweet
University Communications
bulletin@uwaterloo.ca
By Jenna Braun. This is an excerpt of an article originally published on Waterloo News.
It takes all kinds of helping hands to make the Olympic Games run smoothly, including alumni from the University of Waterloo. According to Statista, the Paris 2024 Olympics have created approximately 150,000 jobs across the globe.
Recreation and Leisure Studies alum Tanya Casole-Gouveia (BA ’09), a digital producer at CBC Sports, is currently producing a daily show on CBC Gem for this summer’s Games.
In 2004—the same year that Facebook launched—Casole-Gouveia took on a social media role through a co-op placement with BlackBerry. After graduating from Waterloo, she became a social media pioneer at CBC, starting her career at a time before it was something that could be studied at school.
With this being her sixth Olympics, and having covered many storylines throughout the years, Casole-Gouveia shares that it’s not just the sport aspect she enjoys about her career, but the culture around the Games.
“I find sport is this microcosm of society, and that everything that’s happening in the world is happening in sports too, like equity issues, economics, the pandemic, the Black Lives Matter protests moving to the court,” she says. “Sport is a unifier; it brings people together.”
Touching on the matter of gender equality in sports, one of the goals of the International Olympic Committee, Casole-Gouveia shares that even though women are excelling and breaking Olympic records in swimming, soccer and many more, there’s still a long way to go in terms of covering their stories.
“There are women's stories in the big four games — soccer, hockey, football and basketball — you just have to look a little deeper to find them,” she says. “Every athlete has a story with challenges and barriers, and just being able to tell those stories, shining a light on their failures and successes, is rewarding.”
Read the full story on Waterloo News
Over the next four weeks the Copyright Advisory Committee has prepared a series of reminders on keeping copyright in mind as you use materials when delivering your courses – everything from slides to course readings to audiovisual material.
You’ve got a bunch of great visuals that will help your students understand the concepts in your course. How can you make sure you can use them, while respecting copyright?
It depends on the source of the image. We’ll cover one of the most common topics we receive questions about: reusing images found online. For example, if you wanted to use the Plains Zebra infographic available on the PBS Nature site, Infographic: All About the Plains Zebra in a slide deck in Zoology 100, and upload a copy of it to the LEARN space for the course. One way you could use this image would be under the Work available through the Internet exception in Copyright Act – this exception allows you to copy an entire work as long as you meet a set of five requirements:
This is just one example, and we know there are lots of ways you find material for your course. You can use the Copyright Decision Tool to help you figure out what applies to your situation or read through the Guide for slides (and other lecture material) for more information on how copyright comes into play with the visual material in your classroom. If you need help, reach out to copyright@uwaterloo.ca.
A message from the Office of the Associate Academic Vice President and Teaching Innovation Incubator.
As announced on May 3, the University obtained a one-year centrally funded site licence to pilot the polling tool Vevox, for both academic and non-academic purposes. iClicker is still currently supported since no single polling tool previously met all the requirements of our community of users. Both tools have recently added new features that need to be evaluated before assessing the results of the Vevox pilot.
The University has recently been provided with a short-term opportunity to thoroughly pilot iClicker and its new features, free of charge. Before this, iClicker has been available to Waterloo students via a paid subscription.
Instructional Technologies & Media Services (ITMS) is partnering with the Teaching Innovation Incubator (TII) to lead a pilot comparing these two polling tools to determine whether one of these tools would meet the needs of our users, or whether both will continue to be required for specific situations.
ITMS and the TII are looking for instructors, students, and staff with experience, or who are willing to use polling tools Vevox and/or iClicker to participate in a pilot during the Fall 2024 and/or Winter 2025 terms. Note: interested students can apply to join the pilot so long as they have experience using either polling tool; there is no requisite that students must join the pilot with their instructor.
During this pilot:
While all University of Waterloo students, faculty and staff can use either polling tool during this period, as participants in the pilot, your feedback will inform the decision on how the University will move forward. Any future direction is dependent on budget approvals and must align with Policy 17: Quotations and Tenders which may result in a Request for Proposal to ensure a transparent competitive bidding process.
Interested participants should complete the expression of interest form by Monday, August 19 at 1:00 p.m. to register for this pilot.
Additional information on accessing the free option for iClicker, as well as the impact for students who have already purchased an iClicker subscription for the Fall term, will be shared soon. Support information for both iClicker and Vevox can be found on the EdTech hub under Centrally Supported Tools.
Questions about this pilot can be directed to Kyle Scholz.
The latest module in the Public Safety Canada Safeguarding Science series takes place today. Safeguarding Science: Raising awareness of security risks and mitigation tools in the research ecosystem is a 90-minute online that runs from 1:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. The primary objective of this workshop is to explain the potential for misuse of dual-use research, technology and materials, along with possible risk indicators and mitigation tools to protect Canadian research assets.
The next Safeguarding Science workshop, open to faculty, staff (Research staff, Safety Office staff, Research Ethics staff, and Information Systems & Technology staff involved in research using biological, chemical, radiological, or nuclear materials or technology), and students is set for Tuesday, September 17.
Here are next week's electrical shutdowns as part of the ongoing Primary North Electrical Distribution Replacement project:
The Office of Indigenous Relations (OIR) office will be closed on Tuesday, August 6 and Wednesday, August 7. Staff will be working remotely and available by email.
"I see dead people" - The Sixth Sense at 25
The Student Health Pharmacy (located in the lower level of the Student Life Centre) is offering flu shots with no appointments needed daily from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Call 519-746-4500 or extension 33784 for more info. COVID shots will be available on appointment basis only. You can register online at studenthealthpharmacy.ca.
Warriors Youth Summer Camps. Basketball, Baseball, Football, Hockey, Multi-Sport and Volleyball. Register today!
WatITis 2024 call for proposals, Saturday, June 15 to Friday, August 23.
Final examination period, Friday, August 2 to Friday, August 16.
Knowledge Gathering and Sharing Consultation Sessions: 2STNBGNC+ allies who are employees (staff and faculty), Wednesday, August 7, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., in person. Register.
Safeguarding Science: Raising awareness of security risks and mitigation tools in the research ecosystem, Wednesday, August 7, 1:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Deadline to submit a proposal to the Fall P3 Showcase, Friday, August 9.
Ontario Mennonite Music Camp, Sunday, August 11 to Friday, August 23.
Perseids Sky-watching Party and Lecture: 30,000 Years of Looking Up! with Dr. Liza Sazonova of the Waterloo Centre for Astrophysics, Monday, August 12, 7:30 p.m., lecture in OPT 347 and meteor-watching on Columbia Lake fields from sunset. Registration requested.
Postdoctoral affairs update: Information session for staff and faculty, Tuesday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. to 12 noon, MS Teams.
Invasive Species Pull, Wednesday, August 14, 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., DWE parking lot. Register today.
Retirement celebration for Sue Koebel, Wednesday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., University Club. RSVP.
New Faculty Teaching Days Spring 2024, Monday, August 19 to Friday, August 23, MC 2036.
WICI Speaker Series: Embracing Complexity in Sustainability Transitions with Dr. Enayat Moallemi, Monday, August 19, 10:00. a.m. to 11:30 a.m., DC 1302.
Deadline to get "Fees Arranged,"Tuesday, August 20.
Knowledge Gathering and Sharing Consultation Sessions: an open session for employees who wish to remain anonymous or protect their identities (e.g., cameras off; pseudonyms used), Wednesday August 21, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., virtual, Register .
New Writing and Communication Support Services for Grad Students: Focus Groups, Wednesday, August 21, 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., online.
Co-operative work term ends, Friday, August 23.
On this week's list from the human resources department, viewable on the UWaterloo Talent Acquisition System (iCIMS):
Secondments/Internal temporary opportunities
Affiliated and Federated Institutions of Waterloo opportunities
https://uwaterloo.ca/careers/current-opportunities/affiliated-and-federated-institutions
Stay up to date on service interruptions, campus construction, and other operational changes on the Plant Operations website. Upcoming service interruptions include:
ESC building electrical shutdown, August 24, 6:00 a.m. for 14 hours, building will be closed, all power to ESC will be shut down, elevators will not be functional.
The Daily Bulletin is published by Internal and Leadership Communications, part of University Communications
Contact us at bulletin@uwaterloo.ca
Submission guidelines
The University of Waterloo acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.