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34 results
University of Regina

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.

Financial Empowerment (2nd Edition)

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)  1 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): Bettina Schneider

Editor(s): Bettina Schneider

Subject(s): Personal finance, Budgeting and financial management, Personal tax, Retirement

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

Publisher: University of Regina

Last updated: 07/05/2025

Financial Empowerment is an adaptation of the openly licensed textbook Personal Finance, v. 1.0 which was adapted by Saylor Academy (2012) under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License without attribution as requested by the work’s original creator or licensee and is available here: http://www.saylor.org/site/textbooks/.

The purpose of the Financial Empowerment adaptation is to take an accessible, student-focused, personal finance textbook from the United States and make it affordable and relevant for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Canada. While many mainstream Canadian personal finance texts provide excellent content in terms of the mechanics of personal finance, they are expensive and not always relevant to the values and experiences of students in the classroom. Many mainstream personal finance texts fall short for Indigenous Canadians and non-Indigenous Canadians alike because they do not speak to the varied backgrounds, knowledge systems, and experiences of their readers. This textbook was adapted in order to motivate a broad range of students to learn about personal finance.

The specific goals of this textbook are:

  1. to help students build a solid understanding of personal finance in order to achieve financial literacy and financial success by providing them with the skills and knowledge necessary to navigate short and long-term financial change;
  2. to tailor the content for a Canadian audience by providing Indigenous and non-Indigenous perspectives on personal finance and financial planning using examples and information from the Canadian financial system and economy;
  3. to increase accessibility to financial education resources for students and general public alike regardless of where they live or study;
  4. to customize the content for Indigenous students in Canada and address student needs for practical and theoretical knowledge on financial decision-making and financial risk assessment; and
  5. to connect financial literacy with Indigenous Knowledge and history by threading Indigenous perspectives and interviews with Elders and other community leaders throughout the textbook.

Supplementary resources for this text include:

  1. PowerPoint slides
  2. Video Introduction

SaskOER Network Pressbooks Authoring Guide

CC BY (Attribution)  1 H5P Activities    English (Canada)

Author(s): SaskOER Network

Editor(s): Corinne Litchfield

Subject(s): Language: reference and general

Institution(s): Saskatchewan Polytechnic, University of Regina, University of Saskatchewan

Publisher: Saskatchewan Polytechnic / BCcampus

Last updated: 02/05/2025

This Pressbooks Guide builds on information provided in the Pressbooks User Guide published by Pressbooks.com. It follows the steps an author might take to create or modify an open educational resource (OER) in Pressbooks. Each chapter points readers to the pertinent chapters in the Pressbooks User Guide, provides any additional information, and includes instructions specific to post-secondary faculty and staff working at an institution within the SaskOER Network.

Beyond the Exam

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)  2 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): A Collaboration between McMaster University, College Boréal and Brock University

Subject(s): Education: examinations and assessment, Higher education, tertiary education, Open learning, distance education

Institution(s): University of Regina

Last updated: 01/05/2025

This resource was created to help reduce barriers educators experience in creating and adopting alternative assessment strategies. The toolkit contains a bank of exemplars, resources and instructions as well as a space for users to share back adapted or newly-designed assessment approaches that have proven successful for their learners and context.

Thriving Online: A Guide for Busy Educators

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

Author(s): Robin H. Kay, William J. Hunter, Sharon Lauricella, Chris D Craig, Alison Mann, Tricia Dwyer-Kuntz, Janette Hughes, Diana Petrarca, Rob Power, Timothy Bahula, Laura Banks, Wendy S. Barber, Joshua DiPasquale, Allyson Eamer, T. Keith Edmunds, Terri Jackson, Jia Li, Bill Muirhead, Mike Prasad, Mortilaine Riley, Lorayne Roberston, Robyn Ruttenberg-Rozen, Joseph M. Stokes, Sarah Ann Stokes, Diane Tepylo, Stephanie Thompson

Editor(s): Robin H. Kay, William J. Hunter

Subject(s): Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy, History of education, Educational psychology, Educational systems and structures, Education: examinations and assessment, Educational strategies and policy: inclusion, Secondary schools, Higher education, tertiary education, Lesson plans, Educational material, Educational: Humanities and social sciences, general, Educational: Technology, Educational: Design and technology, Educational: General knowledge, For secondary education, For vocational / professional education / training, For higher / tertiary / university education, For adult education, For educational curricula of Canada

Institution(s): University of Regina

Publisher: Ontario Tech University

Last updated: 01/05/2025

This book focuses on helping educators (secondary school and higher education level) succeed and thrive in blended and online learning settings. Grounded in evidence-based practices and principles, we share diverse and extensive insights on starting out, differentiated learning, learning activities, feedback and assessment, and useful tools. Each chapter includes a subject overview, guidelines, activities or tools, and general resources.

Enhancing Inclusion, Diversity, Equity and Accessibility (IDEA) in Open Educational Resources (OER)

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)  4 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): Nikki Andersen

Editor(s): Nikki Andersen

Subject(s): Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy, Diversity, equality, equity and inclusion in the workplace

Institution(s): University of Regina

Publisher: University of Southern Queensland

Last updated: 01/05/2025

This practical guide provides a framework and tips to enhance inclusion, diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility in Open Educational Resources.

Open Source for Digital Communication & Learning Objects

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

Author(s): David Kwasny, Matthew Humphries

Subject(s): Digital, video and new media arts, Intermediate technology, Open source and other operating systems

Institution(s): University of Regina

Last updated: 01/05/2025

This project is made possible with funding by the Government of Ontario and through eCampusOntario’s support of the Virtual Learning Strategy. To learn more about the Virtual Learning Strategy visit: https://vls.ecampusontario.ca.