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184 results

Canada and Speeches from the Throne

CC BY (Attribution)   English

Author(s): Alexander Washkowsky, Braden Sapara, Brady Dean, Sarah Hoag, Rebecca Morris-Hurl, Dayle Steffen, Joshua Switzer, Deklen Wolbaum

Editor(s): Raymond B. Blake

Subject(s): Biography: historical, political and military, Politics and government

Institution(s): University of Regina

Publisher: University of Regina

Last updated: 07/05/2025

The Speech from the Throne is one of the most important moments in the Canadian Parliamentary calendar. It signals the beginning of a new Parliament, and it lays out the government’s agenda for the upcoming session as well as the Prime Minister’s vision for the country.  In this book, senior undergraduate students and graduate student enrolled in their History course on Canadian Political History at the University of Regina in the fall of 2020 researched how Prime Ministers have articulated a national identity through their speeches marking the opening of Parliament. It offers their perspectives on the engaging question of Canadian identity.

Cree: Language of the Plains / nēhiyawēwin: paskwāwi-pīkiskwēwin

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English

Author(s): Jean L. Okimasis

Subject(s): Language learning: specific skills, Language teaching and learning, Language teaching and learning: first or native languages, Language learning: grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation, Language self-study, Language learning: specific skills, Language learning: speaking skills, Language learning: listening skills, Cultural and media studies, Cultural studies, Cultural studies: customs and traditions, Social and cultural anthropology

Institution(s): University of Regina

Publisher: University of Regina

Last updated: 07/05/2025

Cree: Language of the Plains is a comprehensive educational resource, offering a broad range of learning materials that is easily accessible to Cree language learners. This collection includes an updated and redesigned Cree language textbook, Cree language audio labs, and a Cree language workbook. Access the book from the link Cree: Language of the Plains. Other resources available are:

  1.  Workbook
  2. Audio Lab Sessions
  3. Cree Audio Sessions User Guide

Listening as a Shared and Social Practice

CC BY-SA (Attribution ShareAlike)  12 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): Lindsey French, Kate Joranson

Editor(s): Kate Joranson, Lindsey French

Subject(s): The Arts, The arts: general topics, Paintings and painting in ink, Drawing and drawings, Drawing and drawings in pencil, charcoal, crayon or pastel, Performance art, Digital, video and new media arts, The visual, decorative or fine arts: treatments and subjects, Nature in the arts, Landscapes / seascapes in the arts, Comic book and cartoon artwork, Music recording and reproduction, Poetry / poems by individual poets, Social pedagogy, Botany and plant sciences, Sounds of the natural world

Institution(s): University of Regina

Publisher: University of Regina

Last updated: 07/05/2025

The materials gathered here grew out of a Great Lakes Association for Sound Studies (GLASS) conference in 2022, on the theme of “Listening as a Shared and Social Practice.” Responding to a turn in sound studies that considers the role of listening, the conference call invited presentations, workshops, and performances that considered the co-constitutive nature of listening. This volume contains activities and essays that create starting points for listening and noticing more deeply, through different frameworks and lenses. Several themes run throughout the collection: collective study of/though listening; embodied listening; imagination and place; resonance and response.

The Diaries and Selected Letters of Jeanne Demessieux

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): Lynn Cavanagh

Subject(s): Published diaries, letters and journals, History of music

Institution(s): University of Regina

Publisher: Lynn Cavanagh

Last updated: 07/05/2025

This publication presents the diaries and selected letters of French organist-composer Jeanne Demessieux (1921-1968) in English translation. These fall into three sections. The earliest letters and diary, spanning 1932 to 1940, were written by the teenage Demessieux during her first eight years of study in Paris, mainly at the Paris Conservatory. They concern her tribulations and successes as a student of piano, composition, and organ. The second diary, with related letters, spans 1940 to 1946. The opening of the diary concerns Demessieux’s last semester of study at the Paris Conservatory; the bulk of the diary describes Demessieux’s collaboration, as organist and composer, with Marcel Dupré, and quotes from lengthy conversations she had with him. The third section consists of letters and travel diaries from Demessieux’s 1950s North American recital tours, and is a revealing glimpse of the trials of being a touring organist in a country very different from the European countries in which she ordinarily toured.

Interspersed with the translations are chapters of introduction and commentary. The chapters introducing each translation describe the biographical, historical, and musical contexts of its content. The chapter following each translation comments on the subject matter, reading between the lines to demonstrate how the written words provide clues to more than first meets the eye.

The translations are annotated with notes. These explain obscure or incomplete references, provide background information, and mention when statements made can either be confirmed by other sources, or appear to be in error. In the translations spanning 1932 to 1940 and 1940 to 1946, names of historical figures mentioned are linked to short biographical notes.

Public Policy Case Studies

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy

Subject(s): Public administration / Public policy

Institution(s): University of Regina

Publisher: University of Regina

Last updated: 07/05/2025

Welcome to this online book of case studies on Canadian public policy and administration, created as part of the MPA program at the Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy. This resource includes videos and written content exploring four Canadian public policy and administration case studies: The Opioid Epidemic, The Phoenix Pay System, Canada’s Affordable Housing Crisis, and the Transmountain Pipeline Expansion. Students in the MPA program can expect to learn more about these cases throughout their program

Cree Dictionary of Mathematical Terms with Visual Examples and Sound

CC BY (Attribution)  239 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): Arzu Sardarli, Ida Swan

Editor(s): Ting Zhou

Subject(s): Mathematics, Other graphic or visual art forms, Language teaching and learning, Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy

Institution(s): First Nations University of Canada, University of Regina

Publisher: University of Regina

Last updated: 07/05/2025

The Cree Dictionary of Mathematical Terms with Visual Examples and Sound is the continuation of our work on composing Cree equivalents of mathematics terms. The glossary of mathematics terms was developed considering the topics of school curriculums of Canadian provinces. The Dictionary provides Cree equivalents of 176 mathematics terms and their definitions in English. Audio pronunciations of the Cree terms are provided. The visual examples mainly contain Indigenous elements. The Dictionary was reviewed by Elders, Indigenous Knowledge Keepers, and Cree-speaking educators. Elders found it acceptable to use visual examples with Indigenous elements for educational purposes.

The RCM 401 Speakers’ Handbook

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English (Canada)

Author(s): Rebekah Bennetch (Instructor)

Subject(s): The Arts

Institution(s): University of Saskatchewan

Last updated: 02/05/2025

A collection of work submitted by undergraduate students enrolled in the University of Saskatchewan's Certificate of Professional Communication course RCM 401: Oral Rhetoric.

University Success (2nd Edition)

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): N. Mahoney, B. Klassen, M. D'Eon, & L. Marken, Mahoney, N., Klassen, B., D'Eon, M., Marken, L.

Subject(s): The Arts

Institution(s): University of Saskatchewan

Publisher: University of Saskatchewan, 2017.

Last updated: 02/05/2025

Our primary goal in adapting University Success from the US-based, University of Minnesota Libraries Publication, College Success textbook is to help you succeed in university.

University Success has a student-friendly format arranged to help you develop the essential skills and provide the information you need to succeed in university. This is not a textbook full of theory and extensive detail that merely discusses student success; rather, this is a how-to manual for your first year of study. The book provides realistic, practical guidance ranging from study skills to personal health, from test taking to managing time and money. Furthermore, University Success is accessible—information is presented concisely and as simply as possible.

University Success has the following features to help you achieve your goals: Each chapter asks you to evaluate yourself because success starts with recognizing your strengths and weaknesses, your hopes and desires, and your own personal, individual realities. You’ll develop your own goals based on these self-assessments, determining what success in college really means for you as an individual. Throughout the book, you will find numerous interactive activities created to help you improve your skills. To assist you with this, the material is presented in easily digestible “chunks” of information so you can begin applying it immediately in your own life—and get the most out of your university education.

 

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1: You and Your University Experience
  • Chapter 2: Staying Motivated, Organized, and On Track
  • Chapter 3: Thinking about Thought
  • Chapter 4: Listening, Taking Notes, and Remembering
  • Chapter 5: Reading to Learn
  • Chapter 6: Preparing for and Taking Tests
  • Chapter 7: Interacting with Instructors and Classes
  • Chapter 8: Writing in University: It’s All About the Process!
  • Chapter 9: The Social World of University
  • Chapter 10: Taking Control of Your Health
  • Chapter 11: Taking Control of Your Finances
  • Chapter 12: Taking Control of Your Future

 

Introduction to Geomatics

CC BY-SA (Attribution ShareAlike)  22 H5P Activities    English (Canada)

Author(s): Scott Bell

Subject(s): Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning, Engineering graphics and draughting / technical drawing

Institution(s): University of Saskatchewan

Last updated: 02/05/2025

This OPEN textbook was developed as a supplement to Geography 222.3 (GEOG 222), Introduction to Geomatics at the University of Saskatchewan. GEOG 222 is a required course for all Geography majors (B.A., B.Sc., B.A.Sc., and Planning), as well as the gateway geomatics course for a Specialization and Certificate in Geomatics. The content of this reader is a mix of original content (95% to 100% of the text and most of the images) created by Professor Scott Bell while other material comes from attributed sources (attribution is included at the beginning of a chapter or section, or for the note taking guide, on each slide or at the culmination of a series of slides).

Strategies for Academic Success

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): Liv Marken

Subject(s): The Arts

Institution(s): University of Saskatchewan

Publisher: University of Saskatchewan, 2017.

Last updated: 02/05/2025

Strategies for Academic Success accompanies the online first-year University of Saskatchewan Arts and Science course by the same name.  The textbook has a reader-friendly format arranged to help you develop the essential skills and provide the information you need to succeed in university. Strategies for Academic Success is meant to be accessible—information is presented as concisely and as simply as possible.