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Call to Order was interspersed throughout the space of Institutions by Artists as house music and sound cues during the debates, and as a live performance on Sunday, October 14, 2012. The live performance occurred at 1 pm in the World Art Centre Studio at the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, Simon Fraser University and was performed by Peggy Lee (cello), Jon Bentley (alto and bass clarinets), and Chris Gestrin (piano)"
Author: Ritter, Kathleen, Author: Maxwell, James, Author: PARRC, Contributor: Peggy Lee (cello), Contributor: Jon Bentley (alto and bass clarinets), Contributor: Chris Gestrin (piano)
Date created: 2012
Call to Order was interspersed throughout the space of Institutions by Artists as house music and sound cues during the debates, and as a live performance on Sunday, October 14, 2012. The live performance occurred at 1 pm in the World Art Centre Studio at the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, Simon Fraser University and was performed by Peggy Lee (cello), Jon Bentley (alto and bass clarinets), and Chris Gestrin (piano)"
Author: Ritter, Kathleen, Author: Maxwell, James, Author: PARRC, Contributor: Peggy Lee (cello), Contributor: Jon Bentley (alto and bass clarinets), Contributor: Chris Gestrin (piano)
Date created: 2012
Call to Order was interspersed throughout the space of Institutions by Artists as house music and sound cues during the debates, and as a live performance on Sunday, October 14, 2012. The live performance occurred at 1 pm in the World Art Centre Studio at the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, Simon Fraser University and was performed by Peggy Lee (cello), Jon Bentley (alto and bass clarinets), and Chris Gestrin (piano)"
Author: Ritter, Kathleen, Author: Maxwell, James, Author: PARRC, Contributor: Peggy Lee (cello), Contributor: Jon Bentley (alto and bass clarinets), Contributor: Chris Gestrin (piano)
Date created: 2012
Below the Radar unpacks ethics in community-engaged research and experiential learning with Kari Grain, who has been working with host Am Johal at SFU’s Community-Engaged Research Initiative. Kari speaks to her dissertation on the impacts of international service learning on local community partners. Centering ethical relationships and the unlearning of harmful biases about expertise and knowledge, Kari talks about teaching courses at UBC on community-based participatory research. She and Am also discuss barriers to meaningful and ethical community-engaged research at the institutional level, and the importance of reciprocity and bringing community in through the doors of the university.
Author: Kari Grain, Author: Johal, Am, Author: Fiorella Pinillos, Author: Melissa Roach, Author: Paige Smith, Author: Kathy Feng, Author: Alex Abahmed
Date created: 2020-11-17