Showing 1000 results

Archival description
Simon Fraser University Archives and Records Management Department Series
Print preview View:

To this cedar fountain

Series includes records related to writing and publishing To this Cedar Fountain, Braid's book of poetry written in response to Emily Carr's paintings, which was nominated for the Dorothy Livesay (BC) Poetry Prize. Records include corresondence from readers, publisher, book reviews, interviews with Braid, and rough drafts.

Three Universities Capital Fund

Series consists of records arising from the administration of the Three Universities Capital Fund campaign. Series includes correspondence, address lists, lists of donations and refusals, promotional material, and other items.

Thesis and university work

Series consists of records relating to Evans' completion of his Master of Arts degree in the Department of History at the University of Victoria. Evans entered the program in 1985 and completed his thesis, The Vancouver Island Brewing Industry: 1858-1971, in 1991.

The series includes a paper and digitized copy of the thesis (files 18-20 and 21 respectively); two course papers that set out the program of study (files 2-3); chapter drafts and notes, including materials for a chapter on labour ("The Workplace") that was omitted in the final thesis (file 10); and administrative records relating to Evans' enrolment in the Master's program (file 1).

Records include notes and working papers, essays, draft chapters, and thesis; correspondence, transcripts, and letters of recommendation.

Files are arranged chronologically.

The Northern Stores project

Series consists of records relating to Lloyd's proposed Northern Stores project, for which he never received funding. The project is described in the Saturday Night article available in the hard copy finding aid. Includes correspondence, grant applications, questionnaires and other documents.

The Neo-pagans: Rupert Brooke and the ordeal of youth

Series consists of records relating to the publication of Delany's book on Rupert Brooke.

Series contains research, drafts, permissions, and correspondence, and documents relating to preparing a SSHRC application for research on Brooke.

TeleLearning Conference records

This series consists of records relating to TeleLearning conferences. Activities documented include conference planning and organization, media relations, delivery of conference sessions, and post-conference evaluations.

Records include conference material (programs, abtracts, and audio recordings of sessions); publicity material (brochures, posters, graphics and promotional artifacts); administrative records (correspondence, work plans, contracts and agreements, release forms, budgets, speakers and registration lists, media releases); and post-conference reports (debriefings, wrap-up reports, conference statistics).

Teaching records and lectures

Series consists of records documenting Fellman's teaching activities. It includes course and lecture materials for SFU courses, as well as workshops, seminars, and public lectures delivered at SFU and abroad.

Teaching records

Series consists of records documenting courses proposed, developed, or taught by Bill Richards over his career. It also includes recordings of guest lectures from his classes, and two dissertations by non-SFU PhD students that Richards mentored in social network analysis and his software program FATCAT. Records include correspondence, departmental memoranda, course syllabi and outlines, exams, assignments, evaluations, lecture notes, background literature, audio cassettes, and two dissertations.

Teaching records

Series consists of records documenting courses and workshops taught by Iris Garland primarily at SFU. It also includes substantial material relating to “Dancing in Cyberspace: Creating with the Virtual Body,” a telelearning course she co-developed at SFU. For types of records, see sub-series descriptions.

Series is arranged into 2 sub-series:

  1. Course materials
  2. Dancing in Cyberspace records

Teaching records

Series consists of records relating to Mark Winston's position as a professor of Biological Sciences at Simon Fraser University, as a professor and Fellow in SFU's Undergraduate Semester in Dialogue program and Centre for Dialogue, and as an instructor in related dialogue, facilitation, and leadership courses and programs. Of particular note are the Knowledge Network "Bees and Beekeeping" televised course written and delivered by Winston; the Bee Masters course offered to the public; graduate student supervision and research records; and two SFU Apiculture "Heavenly Honey" t-shirts. Also included are lecture notes for one pre-SFU course taught by Winston.

Records include correspondence, lecture notes, handouts, assignments, exams, working papers, reports, certificates, photographs, slides, and audio-visual materials.

Series is arranged into 6 sub-series:

  1. Pre-SFU courses
  2. SFU courses
  3. Bee Masters course
  4. SFU graduate student files
  5. Audio-visual and photographic materials
  6. Undergraduate Semester in Dialogue and related courses

Teaching records

Series consists of records made and/or received by Peter Buitenhuis in the course of his teaching career. Topics and activities covered include course instruction and planning, program development, and Buitenhuis’s teaching positions and sabbaticals. The records reflect Buitenhuis's work at such institutions as University of California Berkeley, Yale University, McGill University, and Simon Fraser University's Department of English.

Records include exams; course readings, notes, outlines, and class materials; student assignments; a thesis; program proposals; Master of Publishing Steering Committee minutes; and correspondence.

Teaching materials

Series consists of teaching materials used by Messenger at Bucknell University, the University of California, San Francisco State University, the University of British Columbia, and Simon Fraser University. Includes course outlines, lesson plans, lecture and tutorial notes, assignments, examinations, and readings.

Teaching and research files

Series consists of files relating to Lloyd's teaching and research activities. Includes published and unpublished papers, notes, correspondence, and course-related material such class outlines and exams.

Teaching and instructional staff matters - correspondence

Series consists of records relating to matters affecting teaching and faculty staff, including librarians and lab instructors. Activities and topics documented include development of the university's academic policies and procedures; faculty appointments, salaries and economic benefits; renewal, tenure and promotion; leave, retirement and immigration; and negotiations and consultations with the Simon Fraser University Faculty Association (SFUFA) and the Teaching Support Staff Union (TSSU). For a description of record types, see individual sub-series descriptions.

Teaching

Dallas Smythe served as a professor and/or guest lecturer at several universities from 1948 to 1988, including the University of Illinois; the University of Saskatchewan at Regina; the University of California, San Diego; Simon Fraser University; Temple University; Ohio State University; and the University of Hawaii. Smythe also participated in teach-ins on the topics of the Vietnam War, Reaganomics, and other subjects. He was also involved in research and lecturing at the Centre for International Research on Communications and Information Technology (CIRCIT) in Sydney, Australia.

Series consists of records arising from Smythe's teaching activities at various locations. Series includes course outlines, lecture notes, reference material, class readings, and other materials. The majority of the records in this series relate to courses on the political economy of communications, and other topics in the field of communications.

Teaching

Series consists of records related to instruction in the Department. It includes correspondence, course evaluations, transcripts, and examination papers.

Teaching

Series consists of records relating to policy on faculty workloads, appointments and evaluation. It includes memoranda, discussion papers, course proposals and records relating to liaison activities.

Talks and speeches

Series consists of talks and speeches given by Mitch Taylor to various organizations relating to establishing, growing and operating Granville Island Brewing (GIB); the brewing business; the GIB brewing process; and Taylor’s experiences as an entrepreneur.

Talks

The series consists of paper and born-digital records arising from Kalle Lasn's participation in various conferences and public forums. Notable conferences documented are:

• Canadian Association for Media Education - Annual General Meeting, Vancouver, April 29, 1996
• The American Institute of Graphic Arts Conference, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, October 17, 2002
• TYPO Berlin, May 2006

Paper records include talking notes, event flyers, correspondence, and planning materials. Born-digital records include a powerpoint presentation (in .PDF format).

Subject Files

Series consists of records relating to the Vice-President's liaison with various departments and projects on campus. For a list of the departments, see Access Points below. Records also consist of adjudication of student bursaries and fees; programming for the "SFU Today" television show; community liaison activities; surveys on non-registering students and student attrition; the student garden plot project; orientation planning; renovation proposals for the rotunda; and a proposed campus poison control centre. Records include correspondence and working papers, financial statements, reports, surveys and publications.

Subject files

Series consists of Press Gang Publishers' general subject files, reflecting their political and professional interests and their links with other organizations in feminist networks and in the publishing industry. Topics and activities documented include censorship, racism, feminist, lesbian and gay issues; liaison with other feminist organizations; ISBN and cataloguing information; and membership in publishers' associations and professional advocacy.

Records include correspondence, reports and briefs, photographs, Canadian Cataloguing in Publication (CIP) Data Forms, questionnaires, directory listings forms, project proposals, notes and working papers, newsletters, catalogues, articles and other printed reference material.

Subject files

Series comprises records created or collected by various individuals involved in the BC beekeeping field on a variety of apiculture-related topics and activities. Records consist of correspondence, newspaper clippings, publications, catalogues, a bound volume of clippings, and an original manuscript that includes photographs.

Subject files

Series consists of files relating to a number of issues, activities, and areas of interest to the women's movement in North America. Files contain material on such diverse topics as birth control, socialism, pornography, rape and beauty pageants. Also includes files on organizations, groups, and movements in the fight for women's rights, such as the Younger Lesbian Association, Women Against the Budget, Vancouver Rape Relief, Concerned Citizens for Choice on Abortion, the Childcare Occupation Forces, and others. Includes articles, clippings, newsletters, academic papers, reports, posters, calendars, and ephemera.

Subject files

Series consists of records relating to various subjects, including the B.C. Police College, distance education, the Isaac Ray Memorial Lectures, and Law Foundation grants. It includes correspondence, memoranda, reports and statistics. Names that appears in file titles as correspondents or subjects are listed below under Access Points.

Subject files

Series consists of records relating to topics of interest to the Centre for Canadian Studies. Records include correspondence, reports, and other documents.

Subject files

Series consists of records relating to a number of issues, activities and areas of interest relating to Gordon M. Shrum's involvement with Simon Fraser University. Records reflect information on the architectural competition to design SFU, convocation, staff, scholarships, and other like topics. Includes correspondence, reports, briefs, memoranda, architectural drawings, and publications.

Subject files

Series consists of records relating to significant events in SFU's history as well as general biographical information on Dennis Roberts, his correspondence, and a selection of his writing including a lengthy history of the Alumni Association. Examples of significant events documented include the Admissions Protest in 1968 and the AUCE strike in 1979. Series contains correspondence, press releases, flyers, clippings, newsletters, publications, notes, transcripts of speeches, cartoons and other artwork. A file of ephemera contains humorous, unusual, or controversial publications and correspondence collected by Roberts during his years at SFU as well as a collection of SFU political and commemorative buttons.

Subject files

Series consists of subject files relating to Lester's involvement in the architecture and construction of the campus, censure from CAUT, reorganization, resolutions, and a recollection of his time at SFU.

Subject files

Series consists of Parker's subject and research files; includes a copy of her paper co-authored with Sibylle Klein, "Developing An Ideology: the Feminist Movement in North America." Record types include notes and drafts, news clippings, reprints, broadsheets, position papers, briefs, and newsletters.

Results 61 to 90 of 1000