Archive for July, 2009

15
Jul
09

CASA at work for students

CASA elects Governance Officers for 2009-2010

Ottawa, ON – During its recent annual Policy and Strategy conference, held in Calgary, Alberta, the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations (CASA) elected its governance officers for 2009-2010.

 

Tina Robichaud was elected as Chairperson. Joining her is Justin Williams as Secretary and Allan Hall as Treasurer. Robichaud is president of the “Fédération des étudiantes et étudiants du centre universitaire de Moncton,” Williams is the VP Education of the Federation of Students at the University of Waterloo, and Hall is the VP Administration for the University of Lethbridge Students’ Union.

The governance officers act on behalf of the entire membership to ensure the accountability and effectiveness of the organization. As leaders among leaders, these three students will help realize the policy and advocacy priorities set out by the membership.

“We have a big year ahead of us, but also a driven membership and incredible potential to work with the government, civil servants and stakeholders to accomplish our objectives,” said Robichaud. “I have no doubt we can achieve both our short term and long term goals, and ensure a common future and a better Canada.”

juuuuust kidding.

juuuuust kidding.

“Robichaud has been a dedicated leader within CASA and student politics for a number of years now,” said Arati Sharma, National Director of the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations. “I am confident that the new executive team will strengthen CASA’s mandate for a more accessible, affordable, high quality post-secondary education system in Canada.”

CASA would also like to thank the former governance officers, Kyle Steele, Kim Hartlin and Alastair MacKinnon, for their dedication to the betterment of students’ lives and of the post-secondary education sector as a whole.

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The Canadian Alliance of Student Associations (CASA) is a non-partisan, not-for-profit national student organization composed of 24 student associations, representing over 300,000 students from coast to coast.

For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact:
Jillian Flake
Public Relations and Communications Officer
Canadian Alliance of Student Associations
Tel.:   613-236-3457   ext. 224 (c)   613-868-6605  ,
Email: casacomm@casa.ca

07
Jul
09

Harvesting that homegrown talent…

Anyone who attended the ULSU’s March 26th Last Lecture event knows that you don’t need to bring in a big name with a big book deal in order to get students excited for an on-campus lecture. I attended several talks last year by world-renowned authors at which I was able to count the number of undergraduates in the audience on my two hands. The audience for the Last Lecture, on the other hand, was well beyond capacity. On a campus known for student apathy and a general lack of interest in academic life, Students Union volunteers were turning people away at the door! The rows were packed, seating was exhausted, and the edges of the classroom were lined with eager listeners.

“Why so much hype?,” you might ask. Was it because the event promoted like mad? Did everyone happen to have the same night off work? Was there some sort of nefarious conspiracy by the speakers to blackmail those students who would otherwise be drinking their faces off at a neighbourhood pub?

While I have no definite answer, I suspect that no one of the suggestions above was a deciding factor in the overwhelming popularity of the event. I suspect, rather, that students were genuinely excited to hear from their very own U of L profs. The fact is, the success of the event is not particularly closely related to the prominence of the speaker. Of course, I will go nuts over a talk by Thomas Homer-Dixon, or Jeffrey Simpson, or whomever, as will a small group of my friends, but we are a small group indeed. There are few authors or academics whose names alone will draw a crowd. Those whose names will draw a crowd are those who are known to the students, and those who are most often known to the students are those brilliant men and women who make up our own faculty.

For many students, a good professor is one of the people they look up to most. Everyone at this school has a few favourite professors who they’d love to see at an evening lecture, unrestrained by the narrow confines of course material. I know I can think of a few. It’s evident that each of the three professors who spoke at the last lecture has such a following.

What I’d like from you, dear readers, is your own list of suggestions as to which on-campus stars the ULSU should approach as speakers (or alternately, performers) at student events. I’m not talking strictly about the Last Lecture. Ever since witnessing the outstanding success of the last lecture, I’ve been pondering the huge amount of potential that the ULSU has missed out on by failing to focus more strongly on faculty-centred events. Of course, these don’t have to be faculty, per se; if you know of any grad students or staff who would put on a brilliant student event, please include them in your suggestions.

Please send your suggestions to su.academic@uleth.ca. You can also visit me (SU 180) or phone me (329-2770) during business hours.