New fitness studios at the UPEI Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre!
UPEI’s Department of Athletics and Recreation invites you and your family to an open house to celebrate the grand opening of new fitness studios in the Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre! The open house runs 10:00 am to 1:00 pm, Saturday, April 1.
The new studios include a new, two-storey 2,400 square-foot activity training centre, which features a lower floor to accommodate general fitness classes and an upper-level training area equipped with stationary bicycles and interval training capabilities. The new studios are available for private fitness classes, such as spin and yoga.
“We are excited to showcase our newly renovated fitness studios in addition to welcoming the general public into our facilities,” said Chris Huggan, Director of Athletics and Recreation. “We want as many families and individuals to come see and experience what we have to offer in a quality venue and fitness centre and our programs and services including fitness classes, recreational programming, event hosting and our Panther Academy programs.”
Use of the fitness centre during the open house will be free. Join us for a tour of the facility at 10:30 am and noon, and take part in free fitness classes in the new studios. The gym will feature a Kids Zone with camp counsellors, face painting, and activities to entertain the kids while parents explore the facilities.
Information will be available about all of the programs and services at the UPEI Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre. Community memberships will be available!
The new fitness studios are made possible in part by generous support from the Government of Canada.
Find more information about the facility at gopanthersgo.ca!
The University of Prince Edward Island prides itself on people, excellence, and impact and is committed to assisting students reach their full potential in both the classroom and community. With roots stemming from two founding institutions—Prince of Wales College and Saint Dunstan’s University—UPEI has a reputation for academic excellence, research innovation, and creating positive impacts locally, nationally, and internationally. UPEI is the only degree granting institution in the province and is proud to be a key contributor to the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island.
UPEI students take second place at Alberta Not-For-Profit Association Case Competition
UPEI’s Faculty of Business sent two teams to the Alberta Not-For-Profit Association (ANPA) Case Competition, and one came home with second-place honours. The competition was the faculty’s fourth competition of the season.
Hosted by the University of Alberta School of Business in Edmonton, the ANPA competition is the only international, not-for-profit-focused case competition for undergraduate students in Canada. Similar to other case competitions, it encompasses elements of strategy, marketing, finance, accounting, etc., but it focuses on the unique challenges of the not-for-profit world. Students must consider and balance the social mission of the organization, as well as its financial goals. Competitors must find creative, resourceful, and practical solutions—and do it with the limited resources of a not-for-profit organization.
Team one from UPEI was made up of Alex Dunne, Andrew Chapman, Kate Kinsman, and Sydney Gallant. Team two included Carter MacDonald, Shanna Blacquiere, Krista Lee Oliver, and Brodie Watts.
“ANPA was a great opportunity to apply our knowledge to a real-life not for profit organization,” said Gallant. “Preparing for this competition challenged us to learn about the concepts we study in class apply to not-for-profit organizations.”
On the first day of the competition, students attended a panel presentation and learned about the not-for-profit sector in Alberta. They took part in a poverty simulation, which educated participants about the day-to-day realities of life with little money and an abundance of stress.
The ‘case partner’ for the competition was the YMCA of Northern Alberta (YNAB). Students toured the YMCA facilities in downtown Edmonton, where they were able to interact with employees and get acquainted with the organization before participating in a ‘live’ case competition, working on a real and current problem of the YNAB.
“Knowing that the organization was currently looking for our help made the experience that much more exciting and worthwhile,” said Oliver.
Students had 24 hours to analyze and prepare a solution to the case. During that period, they had access to the Internet and textbooks, but were allowed no communication outside of the members of their respective teams. Teams were given 15 minutes to present their solution, and an additional seven to answer judges’ questions and defend their recommendations.
UPEI’s team one successfully made it to the final round, where they gave their presentation again, this time with ten minutes for questions and defense. The team took a respectable second place, finishing behind a team from the University of Regina.
“The students understood that they needed to shift their mindset when working with a non-profit organization,” said Mary Whitrow, case competition program coordinator and coach. “They were able to create insightful and practical solutions for the YNAB that also achieved an excellent result for UPEI.
“We can all be proud of our case teams and the results they were able to achieve at the ANPA Case Competition,” said Dr. Juergen Krause, dean of the Faculty of Business. “Congratulations to the team for representing UPEI so well.”
As part of the prizes for the ANPA Case Competition, teams who finish first, second, or third are given the opportunity to donate $5,000, $3,000, or $1,000 respectively to the charity of their choice. The unrestricted grant is provided by the event’s title sponsor, the Muttart Foundation.
UPEI’s team chose to direct its donation to Parkinson Canada, because a member of Kate Kinsman’s lives with Parkinson’s disease. Her teammates chose to donate to this charity in advance of the competition, but didn’t tell her until after their win.
“I want to thank all the ANPA organizers and the Muttart Foundation for the opportunity to give this generous donation to Parkinson Canada,” said Kinsman.
The University of Prince Edward Island prides itself on people, excellence, and impact and is committed to assisting students reach their full potential in both the classroom and community. With roots stemming from two founding institutions—Prince of Wales College and Saint Dunstan’s University—UPEI has a reputation for academic excellence, research innovation, and creating positive impacts locally, nationally, and internationally. UPEI is the only degree granting institution in the province and is proud to be a key contributor to the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island.
The UPEI Wind Symphony at Park Royal United Church
The UPEI Wind Symphony presents its final performance of the 2016-2017 academic year featuring a diverse set of pieces designed to showcase the colour of the modern wind band. The performance will be held Friday, March 31 at 7:30 pm at Park Royal United Church in Charlottetown. Following the success of last semester’s recital at Park Royal, the Wind Symphony returns for its acoustic beauty and to ensure that all of its supporters can be accommodated.
The program will open with a fanfare, Through the Looking Glass, by the American composer Jess Turner. Another feature, Summer Dances by Englishman Adam Gorb, is a joyful work in three short movements celebrating his favourite season. Phillip Sparke’s Sunrise at Angel's Gate is a programmatic work which attempts to describe the sounds at dawn at the Grand Canyon.
The centrepiece of the program will be an electro-acoustic piece by American Eli Fieldsteel titled Singularity. This piece is inspired by the idea of technological singularity as explored by Ray Kurzweil, Isaac Asimov, and other scientific writers. The piece outlines a narrative of interaction between organic life, as represented by the acoustic instruments, and non-organic life, represented by the electronic sound. The recital will conclude with Australian Percy Grainger’s Handel in the Strand, a multi-layered work based on folk songs.
This year’s Wind Symphony is in fine form having recently presented this program to a capacity audience at the Halifax Central Library’s Paul O'Regan Hall. Two graduating seniors, Aidan Tremblett (trumpet) and Daniel MacDonald (trombone), have had distinguished tenures with the Wind Symphony, for which this will be their final UPEI recital.
Tickets at $15 Adults/Seniors and $10 Students may be acquired at the music department, at the admissions desk prior to the performance, or online at upeiconcert14.bpt.me.
The University of Prince Edward Island prides itself on people, excellence, and impact and is committed to assisting students reach their full potential in both the classroom and community. With roots stemming from two founding institutions—Prince of Wales College and Saint Dunstan’s University—UPEI has a reputation for academic excellence, research innovation, and creating positive impacts locally, nationally, and internationally. UPEI is the only degree granting institution in the province and is proud to be a key contributor to the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island.
UPEI Business student wins NBIF’s Breakthru competition
Newpy, a social networking app created by fourth-year UPEI Business student Erin O’Halloran and her sister Alana, won the top national prize at the New Brunswick Innovation Foundation (NBIF) Breakthru competition. Breakthru is a biennial start-up competition where more than 60 teams compete for the chance to win $300,000 in business funding.
Newpy is a social network app for posting photos of products that are hidden inside digital packaging. The digital packaging designs grab attention and spark curiosity as to what is inside. Newpy offers two types of digital packaging—variety, which are ever-changing, unique designs to reflect the user’s interests, and custom, which are specifically tailored to reflect a company’s brand. Custom digital packaging showcases the company’s name or logo directly on the packaging. Companies will now have a choice: they can choose to hope that good photos of their products are taken, or they can guarantee with Newpy that every photo posted will grow their brand.
“This is an amazing win and the culmination of an innovative entrepreneurial project,” said Dr. Juergen Krause, dean of UPEI’s Faculty of Business. “We are very proud and wish the O’Halloran sisters great success with their start-up Newpy.”
The O’Hallorans were awarded first place last evening at a gala dinner in Fredericton, New Brunswick.
Congratulations, Erin!
The University of Prince Edward Island prides itself on people, excellence, and impact and is committed to assisting students reach their full potential in both the classroom and community. With roots stemming from two founding institutions—Prince of Wales College and Saint Dunstan’s University—UPEI has a reputation for academic excellence, research innovation, and creating positive impacts locally, nationally, and internationally. UPEI is the only degree granting institution in the province and is proud to be a key contributor to the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island.
UPEI’s School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences celebrates Pi Day
The School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences (SMCS) at UPEI recently held its fourth annual Pi Day event. Originally planned for Pi Day (March 14, or 3.14—which is almost Pi), the event was held a day late due to weather. The event included an integration tournament, a trivia challenge, and (of course) pie.
Sixteen of UPEI’s top SMCS students competed in the integration tournament. Students went head-to-head to see who could solve integrals fastest. Spectators cheered on students as they raced against each other and against the clock to solve integrals such as:
First-year student Taruna Boodhun won the integration tournament and was bestowed the title of Magnifluent (Isaac Newton, one of the inventors of Calculus, referred to what we now call integrals as fluents, so the winner of the integration tournament earns the title of Magnifluent in his honour). Will Taylor-Melanson was the other finalist, while Justin White and Jad Naaman were the other semifinalists. Sponsored by AARMS (Atlantic Association for Research in the Mathematical Sciences), the top finishers in the integration tournament were awarded $400 in prizes (and cool SMCS T-shirts). Congratulations to Taruna, Will, Justin, and Jad.
“While it is mainly a fun event, it allows students to demonstrate their skills, and the skill level at this year’s integration tournament was exceptional,” said Dr. Gordon MacDonald, associate dean of the SMCS. “There is very high demand for graduates from SMCS programs in mathematical and computational sciences, and this year’s integration tournament provides evidence that our students are top-notch.”
In between rounds of the integration tournament, attendees participated in the SMCS trivia challenge. The trivia featured questions about mathematical and computational sciences in popular in the past year. Congratulations to Team Angele, who came out on top. Team Angele won SMCS T-shirts and a monetary prize.
The event was organized by SMCS faculty member Dr. Shafiqul Islam and was emceed by Dr. MacDonald. Other SMCS faculty members volunteered as judges, technical support, and pie wranglers. The winner of the UPEI’s first integration tournament, Morgan Erskine, returned as a celebrity judge.
The University of Prince Edward Island prides itself on people, excellence, and impact and is committed to assisting students reach their full potential in both the classroom and community. With roots stemming from two founding institutions—Prince of Wales College and Saint Dunstan’s University—UPEI has a reputation for academic excellence, research innovation, and creating positive impacts locally, nationally, and internationally. UPEI is the only degree granting institution in the province and is proud to be a key contributor to the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island.
Mission to China fosters new partnerships
Dr. Alaa Abd-El-Aziz, President and Vice-Chancellor of UPEI, joined Premier H. Wade MacLauchlan's mission to China. Dr. Abd-El-Aziz met the president of Hainan University to discuss a new partnership agreement to facilitate faculty and student exchange opportunities. Hainan University is interested in new programs that have been recently established at UPEI, including the School of Sustainable Design Engineering, the Applied Communications, Leadership, and Culture program, the School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences, and the Climate Research Lab. There is also a growing interest in UPEI’s School of Nursing, and Faculties of Business, Arts, and Education.
In Shanghai, the president spoke with the administrative staff of a new PEI K-12 school based on the PEI curriculum. This school will provide great opportunities to attract international students who want to study at UPEI. He also connected with UPEI partners at CanAchieve China.
In Beijing, Dr. Abd-El-Aziz and Premier MacLauchlan met with Canada’s Ambassador to China, John MacCallum. The group discussed strengthening Canada’s relationship with China through education, industry, and tourism.
The University of Prince Edward Island prides itself on people, excellence, and impact and is committed to assisting students reach their full potential in both the classroom and community. With roots stemming from two founding institutions—Prince of Wales College and Saint Dunstan’s University—UPEI has a reputation for academic excellence, research innovation, and creating positive impacts locally, nationally, and internationally. UPEI is the only degree granting institution in the province and is proud to be a key contributor to the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island.
AVC faculty contribute to new edition of important pathology textbook
Dr. Alfonso López, professor emeritus, and Dr. Shannon Martinson, assistant professor, AVC’s Department of Pathology and Microbiology, are authors of a chapter in the recently published sixth edition of Pathologic Basis of Veterinary Disease.
Published by Elsevier, Pathologic Basis of Veterinary Disease is the preferred pathology textbook for DVM students in Canada, the United States, and many other countries. With over 2,100 full-color figures and illustrations, the book covers both general and systemic pathology, stressing diseases of domestic animal species and covering the mechanisms of disease development and the resulting functional and structural changes in the host.
Drs. López and Martinson wrote the chapter about the pathology of the respiratory tract, which illustrates many gross and microscopic pictures taken from routine post-mortem cases done at AVC’s Diagnostic Services. Congratulations, Drs. López and Martinson!
2017 Kenyan smallholder dairy health management project a success
By: Dr. John VanLeeuwen, Atlantic Veterinary College, UPEI
The 2017 Farmers Helping Farmers-AVC three-week senior veterinary student course in Kenya was a resounding success. Over 500 smallholder dairy farmers received education and services in cattle health management; over 650 animals were given individual treatments or health management interventions; and another 130 animals were treated for identified health concerns.
“The work done by veterinarians and veterinary students during this course enhanced the health of the animals and improved sustainable livelihoods of the rural Kenyan people, who demonstrated their appreciation time and again with gifts of mangoes, bananas, eggs, and even a couple 40 kg bags of potatoes,” says Dr. John VanLeeuwen, course coordinator and professor of ruminant health management at AVC. “They have so little, but they always want to say thank you somehow—which really makes you appreciate what you have in Canada.”
Seven veterinary students (Christine Makena, Sophie Masika, Francis Njoroge, and Edward Musemi, of Kenya, and Natalie Dow, Terra Macdonald, and Matt MacFarlane, of AVC) and many animal health personnel received clinical training in the treatment and health management of dairy cattle on smallholder farms.
The major health problems observed included infectious diseases (over 20 cases of East Coast fever and 13 coughing cattle), parasite infestations, udder infections, and insufficient nutrition, leading to low milk production, poor reproduction, and inadequate growth. We also saw numerous down cows and off-feed cow problems, many reproductive checks, and miscellaneous conditions.
The Canadian and Kenyan veterinary students exchanged information about their respective countries and the great challenges of international development work, self-sustainability, veterinary medicine, and producing and marketing milk in poor, remote areas of Kenya, as well as new techniques and theories of dairy cattle health management.
“This year was a notable year in that we broke some records. We had the largest single seminar attendance of 158 people,” says Dr. VanLeeuwen. “We also had the largest single day deworming session at our walk-in clinic, where despite modest handling facilities, we managed to deworm 590 cattle. In fact, we ran out of some types of dewormer but fortunately had other multi-purpose types that would still do the trick.”
During the last week, the team was joined by veterinarians, Drs. Jessica Gonzalez, Laura Kutryk, and Klaas and Karen Leppelman, supported by Vets without Borders-Canada (VWB). The VWB vets, working with a different Kenyan dairy group, had just arrived in Kenya, and so VanLeeuwen helped to orient them to the Kenyan dairy industry and provided additional training on how to handle veterinary problems from a Canadian perspective but in a Kenyan context.
Various veterinary pharmaceutical companies, including Bimeda, Boehringer, Merck, and Vetoquinol, provided products for the project, which enabled the veterinary team to provide suitable treatments for the animals that they encountered. The team appreciated the financial support from Merck Canada Inc. and members of the Atlantic cattle and veterinary community, including veterinary clinics in Antigonish, Cornwall, and Montague; Berwick Animal Hospital; Downsview Vet Hospital; Fundy Vets; Ross Vet Services; and Drs. Laura Field, Mike Walker, Andrea Dube, Marc Verschoor, Martha Sweeting, John Drake, Sandra MacConkey, and Genevieve Luca.
Thank you again to all our supporters for your assistance in making this possible.
Atlantic Green Expo at UPEI welcomes Peter Childs
Dr. Peter Childs will be the first of two keynote speakers at Atlantic Green Expo, presented by E365, held at the UPEI School of Sustainable Design Engineering on April 21 to 23. Dr. Childs is the head of Dyson School of Design Engineering at Imperial College London, UK. His general interests include robotics, creativity tools and innovation, design process and design rationale, fluid flow and heat transfer—particularly rotating flow, and sustainable energy component, concept, and system design. He has co-authored books on rural-urban migration, inclusive sports, and sports technology. Peter Childs will give his keynote address to the public at Atlantic Green Expo on Friday, April 21 at 5:30 pm.
“An important element of Atlantic Green Expo will be the UPEI SSDE Student Design Expo on Friday afternoon, which will coincide with the industry portion of the show,” says Allan Dale, director of Industry Partnerships at UPEI School of Sustainable Design Engineering. “What better way to connect the academic component with the applied business side of sustainable design than to have a leader in both realms share his ideas? Peter Childs is the person to do that. His background speaks for itself.”
Atlantic Green Expo starts on Friday, April 21 at 1:00 pm with the Student Design Expo beginning at 2:00 pm. All events are open to the public and admission is free. Atlantic Green Expo gives the public a chance to learn more about sustainable products and services available in the Atlantic region, with exhibitors displaying clean tech options, eco-friendly products, and environmental practices.
Find more information at atlanticgreenexpo.com.
Atlantic Green Expo is an initiative of PEI-based company E365, in partnership with Transform Events & Consulting, UPEI’s Climate Research Lab, the UPEI School of Sustainable Design Engineering, and Sierra Club Canada, PEI Chapter.
The University of Prince Edward Island prides itself on people, excellence, and impact and is committed to assisting students reach their full potential in both the classroom and community. With roots stemming from two founding institutions—Prince of Wales College and Saint Dunstan’s University—UPEI has a reputation for academic excellence, research innovation, and creating positive impacts locally, nationally, and internationally. UPEI is the only degree granting institution in the province and is proud to be a key contributor to the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island.
AVC cardiologist co-edits “gold standard” veterinary textbook
Three years ago, Dr. Etienne Côté, professor of cardiology at AVC, was asked to co-edit the eighth edition of the Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine, widely recognized as the most authoritative textbook for small animal internal medicine.
Created in 1975 by Dr. Stephen Ettinger, considered the trailblazer of veterinary specialty medicine, the Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine is the internationally acclaimed “gold standard” textbook in small animal medicine, with its unparalleled coverage of the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of diseases affecting dogs and cats. For the first three editions, Dr. Ettinger was the sole editor, and for the next four, Dr. Edward Feldman was co-editor with Dr. Ettinger.
“To be asked by Drs. Ettinger and Feldman to co-edit the latest edition of this essential textbook is a career-defining highlight for me,” says Dr. Côté, who has contributed to the book as an author since the fifth edition. He estimates that he spent about 3,500 hours working on the book over the past three years.
Published by Elsevier, this two-volume edition includes the latest information on topical issues such as clinical genomics, coexisting cardiac and renal diseases, minimally invasive interventional procedures, distinguishing behavioral disorders from neurologic disease, feeding tube placement, evidence-based medicine, and differentiating intoxications from nontoxicological illness, to name a few.
The book includes contributions by 310 authors from 21 countries around the world. Distinguishing features include a library of 517 original videos of characteristic symptoms, clinical procedures, and imaging loops; references accessible online instantly via a QR code at the end of each chapter; and two new sections: minimally invasive interventions and management of pairs of diseases that have opposite treatments (divergent comorbidities).