We acknowledge that the land on which we gather in Treaty Six Territory is the traditional gathering place for many Indigenous people. We honour and respect the history, languages, ceremonies and culture of the First Nations, Métis and Inuit who call this territory home.
The First People’s connection to the land teaches us about our inherent responsibility to protect and respect Mother Earth. With this acknowledgement, we honour the ancestors and children who have been buried here, missing and murdered Indigenous women and men, and the process of ongoing collective healing for all human beings. We are reminded that we are all treaty people and of the responsibility we have to one another.
The mêskanâs project team is now preparing for the second round of the faculty course conversion process. What does the second round of faculty course conversion mean? What…
There are two means of creating visual cues to show relationships between items within a mêskanâs course section. Labels allow you to insert an extra line of text…
In addition to our workshops and resources, the Centre for Teaching and Learning is offering drop-in sessions in Lab 6-283 on Monday mornings from 9 a.m. to 12…
The Facilitator Development Workshop (FDW) is a week-long workshop that prepares participants to facilitate the Instructional Skills Workshop (ISW) for others. Join Dave Kato and Chris Hancock to further develop your…
Did you know some Blackboard courses has over 10 Gb of content stored? Typically, a course with this much content indicates video files have been uploaded into the…
People working in SharePoint often say that they prefer to work in the desktop app instead of the browser app. Users can right-click on a SharePoint file and…