VIEW to the U: An eye on UTM academic community

Carla DeMarco

We are based at the University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM) campus. Telling one UTM story at a time. Interviews are conducted, hosted, edited, and produced by Carla DeMarco. Original music by Tim Lane. I wish to acknowledge this land on which the University of Toronto Mississauga operates. For thousands of years it has been the traditional land of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca, and the Mississaugas of the Credit. Today, this meeting place is still the home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island and along with being lucky enough to encounter the amazing researchers that I do, I am truly grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land. Carla DeMarco Communications Manager car.demarco@utoronto.ca

  1. Scott Jess and Lindsay Schoenbohm

    01/29/2024

    Scott Jess and Lindsay Schoenbohm

    Creating more equitable environments in academia On this episode of VIEW to the U, guests are Profs Scott Jess and Lindsay Schoenbohm – Lindsay is a faculty member in UTM's Department of Chemical and Physical Sciences, where she has served as its Chair since 2019, and Scott, a former postdoc in Lindsay’s lab, is currently a faculty member in the School of the Environment at Washington State University. Over the course of this interview, Scott and Lindsay talk a bit about their field – geosciences and how they got into this particular area of research – but also their motivations for partnering up for a very profound collaboration that they undertook: “A Demographic Survey of Canadian Academic Geosciences.” Their “Demographic Trends in Canadian Academic Geoscience” report was published in 2023. The findings in this report are stark, and, as will be discussed, focus primarily in relation to the state of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion – or what’s commonly referred to as “EDI” or DEI – in geosciences, however, the statistics, which are not widely available in Canada – one of the reasons Scott spearheaded this research with Lindsay and Emily Heer from the University of Calgary in the first place. Resources - A full transcript of this interview is available at https://www.utm.utoronto.ca/dean/view-u-transcribed-scott-jess-washington-state-university-and-lindsay-schoenbohm-chemical-physical - Scott, Lindsay, and Emily's report is at Report https://www.geodemographicscananda.com/ - U.S. National Science Foundation report https://ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsf23315/report/introduction#overview - Lindsay Schoenbohm’s website https://www.lindsay-schoenbohm.com/ - Scott Jess’s website https://www.scott-jess.com/ - Dancy and Hodari article “How well-intentioned white male physicists maintain ignorance of inequity and justify inaction” https://stemeducationjournal.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40594-023-00433-8 - Lindsay was also on a previous episode of VIEW to the U in 2018 https://soundcloud.com/user-642323930/lindsay-schoenbohm-earthy-pursuits

    46 min
  2. Tina Malti

    11/29/2023

    Tina Malti

    Kids, kindness, and community On this episode of VIEW to the U, Tina Malti, a faculty member in the Department of Psychology, and the Director of the Centre for Child Development, Mental Health, and Policy – or CCDMP for short - talks about her work at CCDMP, which was established in 2019, and for which she is the Founding Director. But Tina is a world-renowned expert, whose contributions to child mental health and development extends over the past two decades. Prior to the birth of CCDMP, in 2010 she established the Laboratory for Social-Emotional Development and Intervention (SEDI), which seeks to explore the roots and ramifications of kindness and aggression in children. She discusses some of her findings related to children’s mental health and also offers a few suggestions for fostering more empathy in people. And, in conjunction with our theme for this season of the podcast, Tina also talks about the benefits of community-engaged scholarship and how it differs from traditional scientific research. She also shares some of the unexpected but extremely valuable outcomes that she’s seen in her research over time in working with various communities, as well as what she sees on the horizon for her field. Resources - A full transcript of the interview is available at https://uoft.me/9YH. - Read accompanying profile "Kids, kindness, and collaboration" at https://www.utm.utoronto.ca/dean/news/kids-kindness-and-collaboration. - Find out more about Tina Malti's work on her website at https://www.tinamalti.com/. - Go to the CCDMP website for more information https://www.utm.utoronto.ca/ccdmp/.

    27 min
  3. Mary-Rebekah and Romario Reyes (Pt II - Spoiler Episode)

    10/30/2023

    Mary-Rebekah and Romario Reyes (Pt II - Spoiler Episode)

    This is, once again, a VIEW to the U first: it’s a Part II continuation of another episode with guests Mary-Rebekah Reyes and her brother Romario, just in time for Halloween to talk about their short horror film Short Drop. It is audio from the chat with them in September 2023, however it contains some spoilers on their film Short Drop. So, if you don’t want the plot of the film ruined for you, please stop listening and go and watch the film now: it is available through Liquid Matter Studios’ YouTube Channel; link below. We talk a bit more about Trinbagonian folkloric characters and they also divulge some technical and creative insights that make that final shot of the film so iconic. Resources - You can view the short (9-minute) horror film Short Drop through the Liquid Matter Studios' YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdW08LVSkHc. - Listen to both Mary-Rebekah and Romario Reyes on the recent episode of VIEW to the U: https://soundcloud.com/user-642323930/mary-rebekah-reyes-and-romario-reyes. - Also see the article "Family, filmmaking, and folklore" at https://www.utm.utoronto.ca/dean/news/family-filmmaking-and-folklore. - Also see the article "Short Drop screening leads to long-lasting contemplation and admiration" at https://www.utm.utoronto.ca/dean/news/short-drop-screening-leads-long-lasting-contemplation-and-admiration. - To get in touch with any members of the Short Drop team, their social media handles are the following: Romario Reyes is on Twitter https://twitter.com/Romariojreyes?t=NoI8NiTJma1VZbmOv2KmmA&s=08 and Instagram https://www.instagram.com/romariojosereyes/. Mary-Rebekah Reys is on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/merr.rebeks/ and LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/mary-rebekah-reyes-a54003292/. Liquid Matter Studios is on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/liquidmatterstudios/ and YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@LiquidMatterStudios.

    11 min
  4. Blockbusters, bombs, and Barbie™

    09/05/2023

    Blockbusters, bombs, and Barbie™

    On this episode of VIEW to the U, Professor Andreas Hilfinger talks a bit about his work in Chemical & Physical Sciences, but we also get to hear about the work of Professor Meghan Sutherland from Visual Studies. It's a bit of a film review with two brilliant UTM researchers, and we are talking about Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer and Greta Gerwig’s Barbie – both undoubtedly THE films of the summer that had so much buzz around them, with a return to theatres in a big event way, And I actually need to sometimes remind myself that I have access to the smartest people around to discuss these kinds of things – in this case pop culture. So, today, as a way to cap off summer and this season, we are going to the movies, and it’s a double feature! Resources - For a full transcript of the episode, go to https://uoft.me/9E1 - For more on Professor Hilfinger's work, go to his website at https://www.hilfinger.group/ - For more on Professor Sutherland's work, go to her website at https://www.utm.utoronto.ca/dvs/people/meghan-sutherland - Prof Hilfinger mentioned the Opinionated History of Mathematics podcast and it can be found at https://intellectualmathematics.com/opinionated-history-of-mathematics/ - Prof Sutherland mentioned Michel Serres the Variations of the Body, https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/variations-on-the-body#:~:text=World%2Drenowned%20philosopher%2C%20Michel%20Serres,clowns%2C%20artisans%2C%20and%20artists., Maggie Gyllenhaal's directorial debut of The Lost Daughter https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9100054/, and the Lying Life of Adults https://www.imdb.com/title/tt12708140/; both the Lost Daughter and Lying Life of Adults are Elena Ferrante adaptations.

    1h 4m
  5. Ai Taniguchi

    06/26/2023

    Ai Taniguchi

    In honour of Canadian Multiculturalism Day, which comes around each year on June 27, on VIEW to the U, we are talking about identity that directly correlates to the language that we use. On this episode, featured guest, Professor Ai Taniguchi talks about her work as a linguist in UTM’s Department of Language Studies, as well as her art, which animates and illustrates much of her scholarly pursuits. Ai specializes in semantics and pragmatics – for those of us who need a primer, or a refresher, as the case may be - she explains both over the course of this interview. But she also goes into detail about the graphics-based project she spearheaded: L’IMAGE, which stands for Language, Identity, Multiculturalism and Global Empowerment. L’IMAGE is a project that brings the lived experiences of multilingual UofT students, both domestic and international, to life in the form of comics. In our chat, she is also very candid speaking about her recent diagnosis of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder – ADHD for short. Ai feels that neurodiversity, which basically means a person’s brain works differently than someone with a brain and way of learning that is considered “neurotypical,” should be discussed more often and be less stigmatized. She says it is her own neurodiversity that has fed her creativity and fuelled her art and innovative pursuits, like the L’IMAGE project. Resources - A full transcript of this interview is available at https://uoft.me/9qg. - Visit Professor Ai Taniguchi's website at https://www.lingcomics.com/. - Her Twitter handle is https://twitter.com/LinguistAiT. - Her Instagram account is https://www.instagram.com/linguistait/. - For Pan Cooke, the illustrator CD mentioned (who does dating as well as social justice-related comics), go to his instagram page at https://www.instagram.com/thefakepan/?hl=en.

    36 min

About

We are based at the University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM) campus. Telling one UTM story at a time. Interviews are conducted, hosted, edited, and produced by Carla DeMarco. Original music by Tim Lane. I wish to acknowledge this land on which the University of Toronto Mississauga operates. For thousands of years it has been the traditional land of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca, and the Mississaugas of the Credit. Today, this meeting place is still the home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island and along with being lucky enough to encounter the amazing researchers that I do, I am truly grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land. Carla DeMarco Communications Manager car.demarco@utoronto.ca