Engineering dean to discuss vision for Centre for Engineering Innovation

In just a few short weeks, the Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation will open its doors to a new crop of first-year students. When they graduate four years from nowif Mehrdad Saif has his waythey’ll be as well-versed in sculpture, classical music and business acumen as they are in designing bridges, automobiles and electronic devices.

“My hope is for a well-rounded graduate with leadership and entrepreneurial abilities, with an appreciation for the arts and the kind of critical thinking skills they’ll need to be successful,” says Dr. Saif, dean of the Faculty of Engineering.

The new CEI, a $112 million 300,000 square-foot facility, is nearing completion; large parts of it will be handed over to the University for occupancy by September 17. Saif believes the building was designed in such a way that it will facilitate the fulfilment of his vision for a new kind of graduate. A critical component of that vision depends on encouraging increased collaboration on research and design projects among students and faculty from various departments, who until now, have been somewhat compartmentalized, he says.

“Our current space (in Essex Hall) does nothing to prevent the silos that have been created,” says Saif. “The whole point was to remove barriers and have people from different disciplines interacting with one another.”

The faculty is currently home to four separate engineering departmentsCivil and Environmental; Industrial; Electrical and Computer; Mechanical, Automotive and Materialsand while they will remain the same, Saif will encourage increased partnerships among them. However, with wide open spaces that offer more opportunities for social interaction among students, more graduate student meeting spaces, and glass-walled learning labs, the new CEI will naturally encourage those interactions, Saif says.

“We’re following model of successful businesses like Facebook, Microsoft or Google,” he says. “The spaces designed for comfort, but also to stimulate creative thinking and collaboration. The space itself plays a major role.”

Saif’s vision also depends on increased collaboration with researchers across campus.

“I don’t want it to be just an engineering building,” he says. “I want to see people in there from business and the arts, examining issues regarding technology, the environment, and sustainability. We should incorporate liberal arts curriculum, and offer technology courses to students in business, and in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. We have to offer innovative programs that meet the needs of both the students and the businesses that will potentially hire them some day. We can’t just offer vanilla flavoured programs. If we really want to attract new students we need to offer unique new programs. We need to carve our niche.”

Saif will appear today on Research Matters, a weekly talk show that focuses on the work of University of Windsor researchers and airs every Thursday at 4:30 p.m. on CJAM 99.1 FM.

 

Campus Transformation Plan to provide framework for next 50 years

The creation of a safe pedestrian esplanade on Sunset Avenue between Fanchette and Wyandotte streets is among the highlights of a Campus Transformation Plan to be discussed at a public open house event on Wednesday, September 19, from 4 to 7 p.m. in the CAW Centre’s Ambassador Auditorium.

The plan involves improvements already underway and proposed projects through 2015.

It includes the proposed closure to vehicular traffic of Sunset Avenue from Fanchette to Wyandotte streets in 2013, and the development of an attractive walkway to support a pedestrian-friendly environment. Additional safety measures will include the installation of a crosswalk traffic light at the corner of Sunset and Wyandotte and a four-way traffic light to be added to the intersection of California and Wyandotte.

University of Windsor president Alan Wildeman will be joined by City of Windsor representatives at the September 19 event. He will introduce campus neighbours and other interested members of the community to the University’s long-term plans to modernize the campus and prepare it to meet the needs of students for the next 50 years. Members of the media, students, faculty and staff are welcome to attend.

“An important factor in accomplishing the University’s strategic goals is the availability of modern and inspiring infrastructure,” says Dr. Wildeman. “We must continue to upgrade the campus to support the kind of experience we want our students to have and to help our faculty and staff to be their most productive and efficient. These improvements will enhance the competitive position of UWindsor within the post secondary system, and strengthen our engagement with the community. The campus experience should be one that people enjoy, and the spaces we are creating will help that happen.”

Phase I campus improvements currently in the works through 2015 include:

  • Completion of the Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation—Fall 2012
  • Completion of space renovation to house the International Student Centre—Spring 2012
  • Completion of the third floor space in the Medical Education Building—Summer 2012
  • Completed demolition of the former Cody Hall residence and former drama building—Summer 2012
  • Creation of the Student Centre Courtyard outside Dillon and Memorial halls—Fall 2012
  • Streetscaping along Wyandotte from Sunset to Campbell, featuring new walkways, planters holding low perennials and shade trees, benches, bicycle racks and trash receptacles—Fall 2012
  • Demolition of four former residential buildings located along the Fanchette to Wyandotte pedestrian esplanade—Spring 2013
  • Renovations to the Odette School of Business—Fall 2013
  • Construction of an Innovation Centre and parking facility. This parking structure will offer visitor parking, allowing the current surface lot located at the corner of Wyandotte and Sunset to be developed into green space—Fall 2013
  • Developing plans to determine the future of the parking lots situated parallel to California between Fanchette and Wyandotte—ongoing
  • Construction of a Welcome Centre—Fall 2013
  • The transformation of downtown Windsor’s Armouries building, the former Windsor Star building, and the former Greyhound bus depot into classroom and office space for the University’s music, visual arts and film production programs; the School of Social Work; and the Centre for Executive Education—Fall 2014

Moose-dodging law student studies Aboriginal water rights in Alaska

When Lija Pukitis graduates from law school and begins practicing, there may be some rare occasions when she’ll be late for work. Among the explanations she’ll offer then, certainly none will compare to the unavoidable reasons that made her a tad tardy several times while cycling to her office in Alaska this summer.

“I was late for work a couple of times because I’d be biking along the trail and there would be a moose in the middle of it,” said Pukitis, a law student who spent her summer in Anchorage. “They aren’t dangerous or anything, but I would just turn around a find a different way to work.”

Pukitis, a native of Port Perry, Ontario and second-year UWindsor law student, was awarded an internship through a program called Canadian Lawyers Abroad. During her three-month internship, she worked with an organization called the Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council. An indigenous non-profit organization, it serves 70 tribes and First Nations in Alaska and the Yukon Territory.

The aim of her work there was to research the legalities of establishing a structure that would allow for Aboriginal governance over the Yukon River watershed. The council was established in 1997 by Aboriginal groups concerned about increasing cancer rates and other health problems in people and wildlife within the watershed. It was created to restore the river and to protect it from further contamination.

“Their goal was to be able to drink the water directly from the Yukon River,” she said of the waterway, a 3,190-kilometre stretch that runs from northern British Columbia through the Yukon and southern Alaska into the Bering Strait. “A lot of them do drink the water already, but it depends on where you are along the watershed. They want to make sure they’ll be able to continue drinking the water.”

She spent most of her time working in Anchorage, but did get to do some travelling, mostly on weekends. At one point, her boyfriend came from Torontoto visit for a week and they went to the Kenai Fjords National Park near Seward, where they went on a boat tour and saw orcas, sea otters and other wildlife.

“Anchorage is a really fun city and the people there are really friendly,” she said. “It’s remote, but it’s roughly the same size as Windsor and it still feels like a city. But an hour out of that and you’re really in Alaska.”

Pukitis said she learned a great deal about legal research while she was in Alaska, but more importantly, saw a much larger picture of how law affects real people by working with members of the tribal council there.

“You see how it impacts real people in real communities,” she said.

When her work there was finished, her team had wrapped up recommendations that mapped out a method for handing over governance to the tribes. Those recommendations have been given to the council, which is working with communities to get input and move the project forward. Their goal is to have a watershed management plan to present by next summer when the council holds its biennial summit in Mayo, Yukon.

“It is possible but’s it’s just going to be a massive project,” she said of the likelihood of the tribes taking control, adding that she plans to stay in touch with the new friends she made in Alaska in the hopes of learning that the plan she contributed to has come to fruition.

Campus services gear up for students’ return

Some campus services will offer extended hours during the start of the semester, while others resume normal operations.

The University Bookstore will meet the demand for textbooks and school supplies by operating weekends and evenings from September 1 to 16. During this period, the Bookstore will close for Labour Day and otherwise will operate:

  • 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., Mondays to Thursdays
  • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays
  • Noon to 5 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays

It will also staff a table in the corridor of the lower level of Vanier Hall, selling computer supplies from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. for residence move-in day, Sunday, September 2.

The Bookstore will return to normal hours of operation September 17. For details, consult the calendar on the Bookstore Web site.

The UwinCARD office will open a satellite operation to serve residence students on Sunday, September 2, producing and distributing the identification cards from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Crocodile Grill. The office o the lower level of the CAW Student Centre will open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on September 3 and 7, extending hours to 7 p.m. September 4, 5 and 6. It will resume regular operation on Monday, September 10. Read more on the UwinCARD Web site.

The Information Technology Services HelpDesk will extend its hours during the first week of classes, September 6 to 13, opening 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays. Find the regular hours of the HelpDesk and the University Computer Centre’s service counter on the IT Services Web site.

Food Services outlets across campus will begin their return to operation this weekend, as the Marketplace food court in the CAW Student Centre opens for lunch Sunday, September 2, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. It will close for the Labour Day holiday and re-open Tuesday, September 4, with a truncated schedule of 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. through Thursday before moving to its regular semester schedule.

The Crocodile Grill on the ground floor of Vanier Hall will serve dinner from 7 to 11 p.m. starting Monday, September 3—earlier on Fridays—and will begin breakfast service from 7:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. weekdays starting Tuesday, September 4.

The Bru in Alumni Hall will begin its regular hours on Monday, September 3, opening 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. weekdays, and noon to 8 p.m. weekends.

The Tim Hortons kiosk in the CAW Student Centre will open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, September 4 and 5, before commencing its regular hours of operation on Thursday.

The Williams Café in the Leddy Library will open 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday, September 6 and 7, and will begin regular operations on Monday, September 10.

Dividends in the Odette Building will open 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. September 4, 5, and 7, and 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Thursday, September 6. It will begin its regular semester schedule on Monday, September 10.

The University Club, the law school’s Gavel and the Bru in the Toldo Health Education Centre will open Monday, September 10.

Find a full list of campus outlets and their hours of operation on the Food Services Web site.

Leddy Library announces hours for fall semester

The Leddy Library will commence the following hours of operation on Tuesday, September 4.

  • Monday to Thursday — 8 a.m. to 2 a.m.
  • Friday — 8 a.m. to midnight
  • Saturday — 10 a.m. to midnight
  • Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 a.m

The library will close Monday, October 8, for the Thanksgiving holiday.

The library will extend hours for exam studying December 1 to 17, opening around the clock for five days a week starting at 10 a.m. Sunday through Friday until 2 a.m. Saturday, and re-opening Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 a.m.

Ready for the scrimmage line: Lancer football to kick off 2012 campaign

Venkata Chiluvuri will be perched in prime seats for Monday’s kick-off to football season. The graduate student of electrical and computer engineering won the DailyNews quiz and four gold-seat tickets to the Labour Day Classic, September 3 against the Ottawa Gee Gees at south campus stadium.

Chiluvuri’s name was drawn from all those respondents who correctly identified 50-33 as the score of Windsor’s quarterfinal win over Ottawa in the 2011 playoffs; 5-3 as the Lancers’ 2011 regular season record; and coach of the year, six OUA all-stars and three all-Canadians as among the honours team members won last year.

Monday’s game gets underway at 1 p.m. It will be televised live on TVCogeco, cable channel 11.

Lancer football opens season in national top 10

A panel drawn from the Football Reporters of Canada has ranked Windsor no. 10 in Canadian Interuniversity Sport to start the 2012 season.

For the first time, the McMaster Marauders open the season atop the national ranking. Other Ontario teams on the list include no. 5 Western and no. 6 Queen’s.

Read the full story, “Lancer Football ranked #10 in CIS pre-season rankings,” at goLancers.ca.

Sessions to help grad students improve their teaching skills, September 5

A program organized by the Centre for Teaching and Learning and GA/TA Network will help UWindsor graduate students improve their teaching skills, whether to benefit their current students or to prepare for careers in which they'll need to discuss, present, and provide feedback to others.

GATAcademy 2012—sponsored by the faculties of arts and social sciences, business, science and engineering, in cooperation with graduate studies—offers a mix of workshops created especially for new graduate and teaching assistants, but of practical use to GAs and TAs at every level of experience.

This year's sessions will be led by experienced GAs, TAs, and instructors from many disciplines, as well as staff from Leddy Library, the Centre for Teaching and Learning and the Educational Development Centre.

Topics include:

  • Conducting Effective Labs and Tutorials
  • Dynamic Discussions
  • Effective Explanations
  • The First Day
  • Giving Meaningful Feedback
  • Mark My Words: A Guide to Marking Written Assignments
  • Catch Me If You Can: Identifying Plagiarism in Students' Papers and Assignments
  • Classroom Technologies: From Consoles to Google Apps
  • Cyber-communication: Dos and Don'ts
  • To Instruct and Delight: Storytelling for Higher Education
  • Zotero: Your Research, A Click Away!
  • Preparing for Life After Grad School

The program runs Wednesday, September 5.  Space is limited, so organizers encourage faculty to inform their GAs and TAs that they will need to register quickly. More information and online registration are available at: https://ctl2.uwindsor.ca/workshops/ctl/64/.

Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario application against UWindsor withdrawn

Allegations of discrimination against the University of Windsor and professor Richard Moon made by Emily Carasco in an application to the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario have been withdrawn by Dr. Carasco. She had alleged race and gender discrimination following her unsuccessful candidacy during the University's 2010 search for a dean for the Faculty of Law. The application to the HRTO is being dismissed and the hearing is terminated.

Holly Ward, spokesperson for the University of Windsor said, “The University has and will continue to strive for the highest standards of human rights and equity. With respect to the specific application that was before HRTO, we will be making no further statements.”

Ceremony to commemorate hiring of Windsor’s first black police officer

Alton C. Parker was a pioneer. Appointed Windsor’s first black police constable in 1942, promoted in 1951 as Canada’s first black police detective, he hosted hundreds of local children and families for the annual Uncle Al’s Kids’ Party before his death in 1989.

Among the accolades he earned was an honorary doctorate from the University of Windsor in 1987 and the renaming in his honour of the park where he held his summer parties. Alton C. Parker Park in the 400 block of Brodhead Street is the site of a celebration to mark the 70th anniversary of his hiring, Friday, August 31, from 11 a.m. to noon. The public is invited.

Constable Mike Akpata of the Windsor Police Service, a UWindsor grad himself (BA 1989), says the event will commemorate an historic milestone.

“Attitudes towards blacks were different in 1942,” he says. “Blacks in positions of authority were rare.”

Parker originally met some resistance, but made the most of the opportunity to prove himself, Akpata says: “Constable Parker was dedicated to his duty and his community, and eventually he was accepted by members of the service.”

Brodhead Street runs between Mercer Street and Howard Avenue just north of Erie Street.

Watch a documentary on Parker by Brian Cowan of the Centre for Teaching and Learning: