
Development Officer, School of Kinesiology
Scarfe 2601B
Tel 604 822 0134
Email deannal.mcintyre@ubc.ca
By avril hwang
Scarfe 2601B
Tel 604 822 0134
Email deannal.mcintyre@ubc.ca
By avril hwang
Scarfe 2601
Tel 604 822 9397
Email wendy.ma@ubc.ca
By avril hwang
January 6, 2025
Dear Colleagues,
Welcome back. I hope your holiday break was restful and rejuvenating, filled with moments of joy among family, friends, community and land. As we step into 2025, I am excited to re-engage with the dynamic spirit of our Faculty of Education and look forward to the opportunities ahead.
The Faculty is advancing a strategic planning process guided by UBC’s vision, emphasizing extensive community consultation and a decolonial approach. Led by Drs. Margaret Early and Lynne Tomlinson, and supported by Dr. Surita Jhangiani and Paula Sabti, we are seeking members for an Internal Community Consultative Team. Interested faculty, staff, and students are encouraged to apply by Wednesday, January 15, 2025, to help shape our inclusive and strategic direction.
Join us on Tuesday, January 28, 2025, for our inaugural Research Showcase and Celebration. This event will feature research posters from across our Faculty, showcasing groundbreaking research and innovative projects that are shaping the future of education. We will also honour distinguished awardees from the past year, celebrating their contributions to the field of education and our community. This gathering presents a valuable opportunity to connect with colleagues, exchange ideas, explore potential collaborations, and immerse in the latest educational advancements.
I am delighted to share that Dr. Julia Sinclair-Palm has assumed the debut role of Director for the forthcoming Robert Quartermain Centre for SOGI-Inclusive Excellence in Education (RQCSIEE). Dr. Sinclair-Palm brings deep expertise and fresh perspectives to this pivotal role, and her leadership will be instrumental in advancing the Centre’s mission to promote equity in education.
I am also pleased to present the second annual Global Speaker Series on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI) Inclusion, featuring Dr. Dennis Francis, a distinguished scholar from the University of Glasgow and a renowned advocate for equity and inclusion. Join us on Thursday, February 13, 2025, as we explore the power of global storytelling to challenge stereotypes, foster meaningful dialogue, and strengthen community understanding.
Our School of Kinesiology has been appointed to the Global Sport University Network (GSUN) Leadership Council, an international consortium tackling complex global challenges through sport-related research and innovation. This recognition places our school at the forefront of global collaboration, where it will contribute to groundbreaking research and influence the future of sport worldwide.
This year marks the half-century anniversary of NITEP and the graduation of its 500th student. In commemoration, NITEP will host a special celebratory event in March, as well as a visioning and strategic planning Think-In session, where NITEP students will play a central role in shaping the program’s future while honouring its impactful legacy and commitment to Indigenous education.
Preparations are underway for the Friday, January 24, 2025, TEO Education Career Fair, British Columbia’s premier teacher recruitment event. This dynamic gathering connects our talented teacher candidates with over 40 school districts, offering a unique chance to network with potential employers, explore emerging hiring trends, and take meaningful steps toward their professional futures.
These events and initiatives highlight just some of the exceptional talent, dedication, and innovation within our Faculty. I encourage you to seize the opportunities presented, join in the celebrations, and contribute to our shared goals as we strive for an exceptional year in advancing education together.
Miigwech – Thank you.
Jan
July 5, 2023
Dr. Jeff Reading, CM, Affiliate Professor at UBC School of Kinesiology, Faculty of Education, was appointed as a Member of the Order of Canada for his groundbreaking contributions to Indigenous health research and for his leadership in bringing Indigenous perspectives to scientific and health institutions.
Dr. Reading is the inaugural First Nations Health Authority Chair in Heart Health and Wellness at St. Paul’s Hospital, a leading international expert in Indigenous health, and a Mohawk from the Tyendinaga First Nation in Ontario. As Chair, he is leading research to develop health promotion strategies that incorporate First Nations history, culture, and spirit and producing health knowledge for policies and programs.
Indigenous people in Canada are up to two times more likely to develop heart disease than the general population. Although 80 percent of premature heart disease and stroke is preventable, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit people face many barriers to the elements of prevention, such as access to healthy food.
Dr. Reading is working to narrow the gap in heart and brain health for Indigenous peoples by working to create conditions where the future generations of First Nations peoples will have equal opportunities as do other Canadians, to experience optimal physical, emotional and spiritual health.
By jmills9
Open date: December 13, 2024
Deadline to apply: While the search remains open until the position is filled, interested applicants are asked to submit their complete application package by February 14, 2025.
Situated on the unceded, ancestral, and traditional territories of the xwmə0kwəy’əm (Musqueam) people in Vancouver, Canada, the Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS) in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia (UBC) invites applications for a tenure-track position at the rank of Assistant Professor of Teaching in Indigenous Teacher Education in Human Development, Learning, and Culture (HDLC). This appointment is expected to begin on July, 1, 2025, or as mutually agreed upon by the University and the successful candidate. In accordance with UBC’s equity plan, and pursuant to Section 42 of the BC Human Rights Code, preference will be given to applicants who identify as Indigenous. Indigenous applicants are requested to self-identify in their application.
Promoting Indigenous knowledges and Indigenous engagement are signature strengths of the UBC Faculty of Education and critical components of our strategic plan. Indigenous teacher education is advanced through NITEP – the Faculty of Education’s Indigenous Teacher Education Program – which is a five-year concurrent Bachelor of Education, as well as a 11-month Teacher Education Program. We recognize that educational leadership, knowledge creativity and mobilization, and mentoring capacity in Indigenous education extends beyond schools to consider both (1) Indigeneity at the intersections of social, ecological, cultural/linguistic, and political justice at local, national, and international levels, and (2) reimagining and rebuilding teaching practices through decolonization at each of these levels.
The successful candidate for this position must hold a PhD or EdD in Developmental, Educational, or Cultural Psychology, or the Learning Sciences, with demonstrated experience weaving Indigenous and decolonizing knowledges, histories, and pedagogies into teaching and learning in teacher education. The successful applicant must contribute to on-going commitments to and relationships with Indigenous communities and school districts, along with liaising with Indigenous organizations, particularly as they concern teacher education delivery in rural, urban, and First Nations communities. Teaching and knowledge in human development and learning, especially social and emotional learning and/or mental health, is a requirement. Experience in K-12 school systems is a significant asset, as well as advancing Indigenous education community-based aspirations through lived experience with Indigenous communities, cultures, and traditions.
The successful candidate will be expected to: (1) teach in Indigenous community-based settings drawing on Indigenous knowledges, perspectives, and pedagogies and approaches to decolonization; (2) utilize innovative, inclusive, and accessible teaching methods for community-based and on-campus delivery of teacher education; (3) engage in educational leadership that advances Indigenous teacher education and community-based priorities within NITEP and the Faculty’s Teacher Education Program; (4) attend to educational policies and practices of decolonization, reconciliation, and the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in programmatic and curricular design; (5) support academic, cultural, linguistic, and leadership needs of Indigenous students, educators, and communities; and (6) have knowledge of the BC and Canadian Indigenous education landscape. Culturally-grounded educators with a promising or an established record of educational leadership accomplishments in Indigenous teacher education with a focus on community-based and/or innovative approaches to Indigenous teacher education and decolonization are encouraged to apply.
The annual teaching load for this position is 18 credits (equivalent to six courses), which may include teaching at the undergraduate, masters, and/or doctoral levels, and significant educational leadership responsibilities as assigned by the Head, such as curriculum development, evaluation, innovation, course/program coordination, and other leadership roles.
This is a tenure-track position in the Educational Leadership Stream. The successful candidate will be reviewed for reappointment, promotion, and tenure in subsequent years in accordance with the Collective Agreement. For information on the review process and criteria for promotion in this stream, please visit this link. This position is subject to final budgetary approval. The expected pay range for this position is $140,000 – $160,000 per annum. Starting salary is determined both by the candidate’s qualifications and experience and by their placement on the career progress scale within the Faculty of Education.
ECPS, the Faculty of Education and UBC are dedicated to the goal of building a diverse and inclusive academic community. Preference will be given to applicants who demonstrate a commitment to and expertise in decolonizing, reconciliation, anti-racist, and social justice approaches to educational leadership, teaching, and service, and have a strong commitment to fostering inclusivity and teaching effectively in a welcoming environment. For more information about the Faculty of Education’s commitments and work related to equity, diversity, inclusion, and decolonization, please visit this link.
UBC is a global centre for research and teaching, consistently ranked among the top 20 public universities in the world. The UBC Faculty of Education is one of the leading Faculties of its kind in the world, tied first in Canadian rankings and ranked 10th globally. Our work advances educational research and understanding of teaching and learning in a way that affirms diversity, equity, and innovation, and takes part in international collaboration in an interdependent globe. We provide a comprehensive set of programmatic offerings at the baccalaureate, magisterial, and doctoral levels. As a global leader in Indigenous Education, we offer graduate Indigenous specializations, an Indigenous Teacher Education Program, and has new graduate programs and concentrations in Indigenous Education. We have two Canada Research Chairs whose research focuses in Indigeneity and thirteen Indigenous tenure stream faculty. For more information on the Faculty of Education, please visit this website.
Interested candidates are invited to submit an application package that includes:
Complete applications must be provided in the format of one bookmarked PDF file addressed to Dr. Jennifer Shapka, Department Head and Professor, ECPS, and sent electronically to Kay Mun (Assistant to the Head) at kay.mun@ubc.ca. Following the submission of the application, the applicant will receive an Equity Survey link via email. Completion of the Equity Survey is required as part of the application process. Accommodations are available on request for all applicants with disabilities at all stages of the search process. To confidentially request accommodations, please contact educ.hr@ubc.ca.
While the search remains open until the position is filled, interested applicants are encouraged to submit their complete application package by February 14, 2025. Questions regarding the position and the application deadline should be directed to Dr. Jennifer Shapka, Department Head, at jennifer.shapka@ubc.ca.
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Equity and diversity are essential to academic excellence. An open and diverse community fosters the inclusion of voices that have been underrepresented or discouraged. We encourage applications from members of groups that have been marginalized on any grounds enumerated under the B.C. Human Rights Code, including sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, racialization, disability, political belief, religion, marital or family status, age, and/or status as a First Nation, Metis, Inuit, or Indigenous person. All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however, Canadians and permanent residents will be given priority.
By avril hwang
This institute is designed to support BC educators with the Indigenous-focused graduation requirement course introduced in the 2023-2024 academic year and with decolonizing and Indigenizing their teaching practices.
There is cause for optimism and excitement based on the new graduate requirement. Robust support is essential for teachers leading these courses to ensure confidence in content and pedagogy. While there are a diversity of courses being offered, there are common threads and concepts that are imperative to lead Indigenous education in secondary education. The aim of the spring institute is to support teachers in building on their learning to gain expertise in these areas.
The in-person institute will emphasize a growth of knowledge of Indigenous histories, decolonization, Indigenous Knowledges, and anti-oppression. Led by renowned Indigenous scholar and educator, Dr. Dustin Louie, participants will be supported in positioning themselves in relation to the work, while expanding and shifting their thinking on what is possible for an Indigenous graduate requirement course.
We view all teachers as having a place in leading these courses, but the imperative first step is recognizing our positionality and how it directs us in our teaching. There will be a focus on how to regionalize your curriculum to represent your community’s Indigenous Knowledges and cultures, while also considering localized experiences of colonization to ensure the design is responsive and avoids pan-Indigenous approaches.
By jmills9
Open date: December 10, 2024
Deadline to apply: While the search remains open until the position is filled, interested applicants are asked to submit their complete application package by January 31, 2025.
Situated on the unceded, ancestral, and traditional territories of the xwmə0kwəy’əm (Musqueam) people in Vancouver, Canada, the Department of Educational & Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS) in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia invites applications for a full-time Assistant Professor of Teaching (tenure-track) position in the Special Education (SPED). We seek someone with expertise in Autism/Developmental Disabilities (Autism/DD) and/or Behaviour Disorders (BD). This appointment is expected to begin on July 1, 2025, or as mutually agreed upon by the University and the successful candidate.
The successful candidate must hold a PhD in Special Education or related field. The successful candidate must also hold a Board-Certified Behaviour Analyst certification (BCBA/BCBA-D) relevant to special educators and behaviour analysts who are focused on a career in practice and/or research with Autistic children and youth, children and youth with other developmental disabilities, and/or children and youth at risk for or with a behaviour disorder (e.g., conduct disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, anxiety disorder). The successful applicant will be expected to support the Board-Certified Behaviour Analyst (BCBA) Verified Course Sequence (VCS) program in SPED, which has been approved by the Association for Behavior Analysis International (ABAI).
The SPED program area in ECPS offers MEd (no thesis), MA (thesis), and PhD degrees. The annual teaching load 1 for this position is 18 credits (equivalent to six courses), which may include teaching at the undergraduate, masters, and/or doctoral levels, and significant educational leadership responsibilities as assigned by the Head, such as curriculum development, evaluation, innovation, course/program coordination, graduate teaching assistant supervision, and other leadership roles. Candidates shall demonstrate a promising record of university-level teaching, both in-person and online, and educational leadership activities that advance innovation in teaching and learning with an impact beyond their own classrooms. In addition, experience in K-12 school systems is a significant asset, especially working with Autistic students, and/or students with developmental disabilities, and/or students at risk for or with a behaviour disorder.
This is a tenure-track position in the Educational Leadership stream. The successful candidate will be reviewed for reappointment, promotion, and tenure in subsequent years in accordance with the Collective Agreement. For more information on the review process and criteria for promotion in this stream, please visit this link. This position is subject to final budgetary approval. The expected pay range for this position is $140,000 – $160,000 per annum. Starting salary is determined both by the candidate’s qualifications and experience and by their placement on the career progress scale within the Faculty of Education.
ECPS, the Faculty of Education, and UBC are dedicated to the goal of building a diverse and inclusive academic community. Preference will be given to applicants who demonstrate a commitment to and expertise in decolonizing, reconciliation, anti-racist, and social justice approaches to educational leadership, teaching, and service, and have a strong commitment to fostering inclusivity and teaching effectively in a welcoming environment. For more information about Faculty of Education’s commitments and initiatives related to equity, diversity, inclusion, and decolonization, please visit this link. Furthermore, the mission of the SPED program area is to collaboratively engage a range of diversity, expertise, and research endeavours to promote or enhance the learning and well-being of individuals with exceptionalities in home, school, and community settings.
UBC is a global centre for research and teaching, consistently ranked among the top 20 public universities in the world. The UBC Faculty of Education is one of the leading Faculties of its kind in the world, tied first in Canadian rankings and ranked 10th globally. Our work advances educational research and understanding of teaching and learning in a way that affirms diversity, equity, and innovation, and takes part in international collaboration in an interdependent globe. We provide a comprehensive set of programmatic offerings at the baccalaureate, magisterial, and doctoral levels. For more information on the Faculty of Education, please visit this website.
The Department of ECPS is the largest of the six academic units in the UBC Faculty of Education and has 40+ tenure stream faculty members across five program areas, including Counselling Psychology; Human Development, Learning, and Culture; School and Applied Child Psychology; Special Education; and Measurement, Evaluation and Research Methodology. Over 400 graduate students, including 140 PhD students, are currently enrolled in the Department. The Department has strong ties to schools, community, governmental agencies, and the Faculty of Education’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Research and Collaboration in Autism.
Interested candidates are invited to submit an application package that includes:
Complete applications must be provided in the format of one bookmarked PDF file addressed to Dr. Jennifer Shapka, Department Head, and sent electronically to Ms. Kay Mun (Assistant to the Head) at kay.mun@ubc.ca. Following the submission of the application, the applicant will receive an Equity Survey link via email. Completion of the Equity Survey is required as part of the application process. Accommodations are available on request for all applicants with disabilities at all stages of the search process. To confidentially request accommodations, please contact educ.hr@ubc.ca.
While the search remains open until the position is filled, interested applicants are asked to submit their complete applications by January 31, 2025. Questions regarding the position and the application deadline should be directed to Dr. Jennifer Shapka, Department Head, at jennifer.shapka@ubc.ca.
1 The annual workload for Educational Leadership faculty in the Faculty of Education is currently under review and may change following the Faculty’s Workload Policy.
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Equity and diversity are essential to academic excellence. An open and diverse community fosters the inclusion of voices that have been underrepresented or discouraged. We encourage applications from members of groups that have been marginalized on any grounds enumerated under the B.C. Human Rights Code, including sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, racialization, disability, political belief, religion, marital or family status, age, and/or status as a First Nation, Metis, Inuit, or Indigenous person. All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however, Canadians and permanent residents will be given priority.
By jmills9
Open date: December 9, 2024
Deadline to apply: While the search remains open until the position is filled, interested applicants are asked to submit their complete application package by January 10, 2025.
Situated on the unceded, ancestral, and traditional territories of the xwmə0kwəy’əm (Musqueam) people in Vancouver, Canada, the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia invites nominations (including self-nominations) for an academic administrative leadership position as Head of the Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS). Reporting to the Dean, the Department Head is a member of the senior leadership team in the Faculty of Education and provides administrative, intellectual, social, and academic leadership for ECPS. The appointment is expected to begin on July 1, 2025, for a three- or five-year term, or as mutually agreed upon between the Dean and the successful candidate.
The role of the Department Head requires that we restrict eligibility to tenured Professors, Professors of Teaching, Associate Professors, or Associate Professors of Teaching with an active appointment in ECPS.
The successful candidate is expected to demonstrate:
In the role of Department Head, the successful candidate will be expected to:
The Faculty of Education and UBC are dedicated to the goal of building a diverse and inclusive academic community. Preference will be given to applicants who demonstrate a commitment to and expertise in decolonizing, reconciliation, anti-racist, and social justice approaches to research or educational leadership, teaching, and service, and have a strong commitment to fostering inclusivity and teaching effectively in a welcoming environment. For more information about the Faculty of Education’s commitments and work related to equity, diversity, inclusion, and decolonization, please visit this link.
Interested candidates are invited to submit a nomination (including self-nomination) package that includes:
Complete nominations must be provided in the format of one bookmarked PDF file addressed to Dr. Jan Hare, Dean, Faculty of Education, and sent via email to Michael Wilkinson, Manager, HR & Administration, Faculty of Education, at michael.wilkinson@ubc.ca by Friday, January 10, 2025. Questions regarding this search and the application deadline should be directed to Michael Wilkinson, Manager, HR & Administration, Faculty of Education, at michael.wilkinson@ubc.ca.
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