2012 Alumni Recognition Awards

The recipients of the 2012 Alumni Recognition Awards are some of the most successful individuals in their fields.

By Rick Pilger

July 30, 2012 • 21 minute read

An innovator in international aid. A medical pioneer. An industry-changing inventor. The recipients of the 2012 Alumni Recognition Awards are some of the most successful individuals in their fields, earning them our respect and the alumni association's highest awards.

Distinguished Alumni Award

The Alumni Association's most prestigious award recognizing a living graduate whose truly outstanding achievements have earned them national or international prominence

Scott Gilmore

Scott Gilmore, '95 BCom, was working with a UN peacekeeping mission to East Timor in 2001 when he realized the noises to which he awoke each morning weren't just annoying clatter-they were the sounds of positive economic change. Below his window, his Timorese landlord was using the money from Scott's rent to refurbish minibuses and to hire local boys to work as drivers and mechanics. "He was soon the largest employer in the neighbourhood and provided an island of stability and prosperity, all because of my rent cheque," says Scott. (Read more...)


Lubomyr Romankiw

Lubomyr T. Romankiw, '55 BSc(Eng), along with Steve Jobs, was among those inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Washington, D.C. Had the Apple co-founder been alive to participate, he could have been expected to shake Lubomyr's hand with extra warmth-for without the work of the U of A alumnus in making data storage compact and affordable, there may well have been no Apple computer, no iPod, no iPhone. (Read more...)


Theodore Aaron

Theodore (Teddy) Aaron, '39 BSc, '42 MD not only witnessed major changes in the discipline in his nearly seven decades of practising medicine, he was at the forefront of a number of them. He was the first person in Alberta to administer penicillin, and his research led to the use of antihistamines in cold medications. The breadth of Ted's contributions to health care in Alberta is recognized in professional circles in his being named one of Alberta's Physicians of the Century and receiving the Pharmacy Centennial Award of Distinction-the only person to make both lists. (Read more...)


Alumni Honour Award

Recognizing the significant contributions made over a number of years by University of Alberta alumni in their local communities and beyond

Sten Berg

Sten Berg, '54 BSc(Ag), has made significant contributions to agriculture in Canada and beyond. Sten was organizer of the Western Hog Grower's Association (WHGA) and was known for his innovative hog breeding and production management practices. In 1962, as chair of the WHGA market development committee, he pioneered outreach to the Japanese market. At its peak, 15 per cent of Alberta's hog production went to Japan. In 1974, Sten was appointed to the Alberta Export Agency. He later launched his own market consulting firm and served as chair of the Alberta Cattle Commission. He was involved in numerous projects in China, including an evaluation of human and natural resources of the Himalayan mountain territories. Sten also served as a Strathcona County elected councillor.


Andrew Dawrant, '93 BA, is widely considered the top Chinese-English language interpreter working in China today. Andrew is the only native English speaker accepted as a Chinese language interpreter at the United Nations. He has also served at other high-level meetings of the UN, G8/G20 and International Atomic Energy Agency. Andrew began his career as a Chinese language interpreter for the Government of Canada in 1996 after graduating from the U of A and completing conference interpreter training. He instructed in the simultaneous interpretation program at Beijing Foreign Studies University and, in 2002, simultaneously interpreted a speech by U.S. president George W. Bush broadcast to an audience of hundreds of millions across China. Currently, he works as managing director of Sinophone Interpretation, a firm based in Shanghai.


Merna Foster

Merna Forster, '76 BA, has made important contributions to bringing Canadian history alive. Merna has done this through innovative public awareness initiatives that promote a better understanding of the brilliance, ingenuity, energy and creative power of Canadian women. The recipient of many awards, she has worked on numerous public education programs and outreach activities in Canada's national parks and national historic sites. She is also well known for her public presentations, her writing and her media commentary. Her life work has culminated in a trio of invaluable resources: the heroines.ca website she created in 2004 and two best-selling books, 100 Canadian Heroines: Famous and Forgotten Faces and 100 More Canadian Heroines: Famous and Forgotten Faces. She is currently executive director of the Great Unsolved Mysteries in Canadian History Project at the University of Victoria.


Dianne Greenough

Dianne Greenough, '78 BEd, has taken the art and athletics of cheerleading to new heights. In 1995, she was invited to develop an acrobatics co-ed cheer team for the Edmonton Eskimos Football Club, which was soon regarded as North America's best. Her Victoria School of the Arts cheer teams won 52 city and provincial titles and 200 championship trophies from competitions around the world.

She recently coached the gold medal-winning Team Canada in the ICU World Cheerleading Championships. She has choreographed numerous high-profile events, including the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics, the 2001 World Track and Field Championships and the 2005 World Masters Games. She is the creator of the Alberta Cheerleading Association and also founded Perfect Storm Athletics, which works with young people in fitness, leadership and success.


Megan Hodge

Megan M. Hodge, '73 BSc(Speech), has dedicated her career to advocating for children with severe speech sound disorders. A longtime faculty member in the U of A Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, she has been an innovative teacher, mentor and champion of clinically relevant research. In 2005, she received the Eve Kassirer Award from the Canadian Association of Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists for outstanding professional achievement. Megan's work has resulted in the development of a widely used tool for measuring children's speech intelligibility, as well as an effective intervention approach for children and their families. Known by the trademarked name Let's Start Talking, this innovative and creative program applies theoretical principles of neuroplasticity and speech learning to a structured curriculum.


W. Laird Hunter

W. Laird Hunter, '74 BA, '75 LLB, has devoted much of his career to helping advance the law and regulatory regime applicable to charities and non-profits in Canada. Appointed a Queen's Counsel in 2006, he brought together Canadian federal and provincial departments with voluntary-sector representatives to improve the regulatory environment in which non-profits operate. He has worked on provincial and federal legislative reviews of co-operatives in eight Canadian provinces and contributed to the advancement of First Nations communities. Laird was instrumental in shaping the First Nations Commercial and Industrial Development Act. In 2012, the Law Society of Alberta and the Canadian Bar Association honoured him with a 2012 Distinguished Service Award in recognition of his pro bono activities.


Yasmin Jivraj

Yasmin Jivraj, '80 BSc, is a seasoned business executive with more than 30 years of experience in the information technology (IT) sector. She is president and co-owner of Edmonton-based Acrodex, which has offices across Canada and a development centre in India. An active community leader, she has served on the boards of CBC/Radio-Canada and the Edmonton Economic Development Corporation. She is a supporter of, and has served on the board of, the Aga Khan Foundation Canada. For her contributions to the advancement of IT she was named a Fellow in 2005 by the Canadian Information Processing Society and, in 2011, NAIT awarded her an Honorary Bachelor of Technology in Technology Management.


Prem Kalia

Prem Kalia, '64 BEd, has lived a life of service through teaching and advocating for global peace, universal brotherhood and social justice. He has done this in the classroom, the United Nations Club, the Multicultural Council of the Alberta Teachers' Association and the Mother Teresa Habitat Institute. Through the Mahatma Gandhi Canadian Foundation for World Peace, he brought attention to many issues, raising awareness and supporting initiatives that share Gandhi's philosophy. As chair of the foundation for more than a decade, he was a recognizable leader who established the U of A's Gandhi Institute and local conferences at high schools. He was instrumental in establishing Gandhi Peace Weeks and the Mahatma Gandhi World Peace Graduate Scholarship at the U of A.


Krishan Joshee

Krishan Joshee, '68 BEd, is a highly respected community leader whose efforts have built bridges between cultures and communities for the purpose of serving society. A former science teacher, he is a model for engaged citizenship. He has been on the board of organizations as diverse as the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, the Edmonton Police Commission, the National Film Board and the Canadian Race Relations Foundation. He is a founder and former president of the Edmonton Heritage Festival, and former premier Ralph Klein declared him a lifetime chair of the Wild Rose Foundation. In the late 1980s, Krishan helped create the Mahatma Gandhi Canadian Foundation for World Peace. He has also received the Alberta Achievement Award for Service and the Order of Canada.


Patricia Lane

Patricia C. Lane, '79 BA, '82 LLB, has championed equality in the legal profession. Her work on employment benefits for same-sex couples and their ability to be married in Manitoba permanently changed that province's social landscape. She served on the Collaborative Practice Manitoba Association for many years. She also helped develop the Youth Helping Youth program and, in 2003, the youth involved won the inaugural Sybil Shack Human Rights Youth Award. Her honours include the 2010 Ally Award, presented by the Canadian Bar Association for work advancing equality of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered and two-spirited people. She is active in programming nationally and in the U.S. on effective conflict resolution communication and has board positions on the Women Lawyers Forum for both jurisdictions.


Jean McBean

Jean McBean, '68 BA, '72 LLB, won widespread respect within the legal profession and in the broader community for her passion for social justice, and for the thousands of volunteer hours she committed to serving those most vulnerable in society. For four decades, she was an active teacher in the areas of family law and matrimonial property law to members of the legal profession and members of the bench, as well as to the general public. In 2001, she left private practice to set up legal aid offices for family law in both Edmonton and Calgary. A former president of the Alberta New Democratic Party, she also served a term as a commissioner of the Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission. (Ms. McBean passed away in April 2012.)


Michael Mowat

Michael R. A. Mowat, '79 PhD, is a cancer researcher whose work focuses on tumour suppression genes. Over the last 30 years, Michael-a senior scientist and professor at the Manitoba Institute of Cell Biology-has published in many high-impact scientific journals, including his seminal paper in the journal Nature in 1985 that clarified the true role of the gene p53. He showed it to be a tumour suppressor, not a tumour-causing gene, and p53 is today the most studied gene in human disease. In 1992, the U.S. National Cancer Institute invited Michael to serve on its committee for research excellence in lung cancer. He is also recognized for his teaching, mentoring and relentless dedication to community service.


Donald Sinclair

Donald A. Sinclair, '73 MEd, is an outstanding leader in education whose work has benefitted many educational institutions in his native Australia. He has written award-winning textbooks and served as chief appointments officer for the Victorian Ministry of Education. Determined to improve the world around him, he volunteered to teach long-sentence prisoners to matriculation level at night. He has also been involved in Australia's Ryder-Cheshire Foundation almost since its inception 50 years ago and, as its national chairman, provided leadership to its efforts to ease the suffering of the disabled and destitute of impoverished areas. In 2009, in recognition of his leadership and his diverse contributions to the nation, he was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia.


Mogens Smed

Mogens Smed, '72 BA, is a creative business leader whose decisions are guided by a steadfast environmental consciousness. He founded Smed Manufacturing in the mid-1990s and focused on producing modular interiors for office space, reducing reliance on traditional building materials, which often end up in landfills. After building SMED International into a multimillion-dollar company, Mogens founded DIRTT (Doing It Right This Time), which has pushed the envelope of modular interiors by using and producing less waste, and adding more design and performance to its products. Interiors & Sources magazine named Mogens an Environmental Champion for his commitment to stopping the corporate cycle of procure, build and demolish. DIRTT has received numerous other awards recognizing the excellence of its products and its environmental commitment.


The Alumni Centenary Award for Voluntary Service

Recognizes alumni who have demonstrated commitment, dedication and service to the University of Alberta

Michael Bullock

Michael Bullock, '60 MD, has been a key supporter of U of A medical students since 1991, when he and his wife, based in California, established a bursary that provides financial support to two students for their entire medical training. Michael worked as a railroad brakeman and in logging camps to put himself through university and worked as a medical technologist before enrolling in medicine. During breaks from medical school, he worked, literally, night and day to finance his education. Michael wishes to reward students who are "self-reliant" and who have earned money to help pay for medical school. He believes that such students should find time to "smell the roses."


Wendy Jerome

Wendy C. Jerome, '58 BPE, is one of the University of Alberta's most willing volunteers. A reunion class organizer for the Office of Alumni Relations, she helps out with numerous alumni events and activities and is an active committee member for the Physical Education and Recreation Alumni Association. A former professor at Laurentian University and former national coach with the Canadian track and field team, Wendy is a pioneering Canadian sports psychologist. One of the first people in North America to earn a degree in sports psychology, she founded Canada's first undergraduate sports psychology program in 2001 at Laurentian. Wendy has worked with athletes from almost every sport and from five countries.


Alumni Award for Excellence

Celebrating recent, outstanding accomplishments of University of Alberta graduates

J. Waymatea Ellis

J. Waymatea Ellis, '97 BEd, is the lead singer, face and founder of Canada's top reggae band, Souljah Fyah. Honoured at the 2011 Western Canadian Music Awards for Urban Recording of the Year, Souljah Fyah has appeared at some of Canada's most prestigious music festivals and was nominated for a JUNO Award in 2009. As a social studies teacher, she tied music to country and culture, sharing the message that "uniqueness is not a weakness." She is currently studying to be a minister of prayer with the International Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers to enhance her work with children. She has also been recognized as one of Avenue magazine's Top 40 under 40 and with a Women of Vision award from Global TV Edmonton.


Benjamin Sparrow

Benjamin Sparrow, '99 BSc(Eng), is the CEO of Saltworks Technologies and lead inventor of its series of revolutionary desalination processes. Saltworks' patented processes produce freshwater and solid salt from a variety of water sources, including seawater, mine tailings and oil-and-gas-produced water. Its technologies are proving to be lower-cost than conventional methods and environmentally friendly, using renewable heat from the sun or waste heat from industrial processes. His company is working with Albertan oil majors and has delivered plants to the Canadian navy, NASA and a major Australian energy company. In 2012, he was recognized with Business in Vancouver's Top 40 Under 40 B.C. Award, based on his leadership, exemplary work ethic and groundbreaking accomplishments.


Jane Walter

Jane Walter, '93 BEd, founded organicKidz in 2008 to provide safe, toxin-free baby bottles as an alternative to plastic ones containing bisphenol A (BPA). Created from food-grade stainless steel, her baby bottles are now sold in 35 countries. They have been featured on the Today Show and in O, The Oprah Magazine and endorsed by celebrity parents as well as Disneyfamily.com and Healthy Child Healthy World, which named organicKidz its first Trusted Partner in Canada. The bottles were also selected as a winner of the 2009 JPMA (Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association) Innovation Awards. Dedicated to improving the quality of life for children, she is a founding member of the 10,000 Kids Project, created to help feed Calgary children to promote their success at school.


Alumni Horizon Award

Recognizing the outstanding achievements of University of Alberta alumni early in their careers

Graham Buksa

Graham Buksa, '04 BSc(Eng), has applied his inventiveness and drive to building longboards that have revolutionized the sport of longboarding. Graham built his first board while still a student. After graduation, he founded Rayne Longboards in North Vancouver and won the 2004 Small Business B.C. Plan competition. He has grown Rayne to a business of 30 employees, developed a line of 11 board designs and branched out into ancillary products. He has made Rayne a global brand and built a team of racers that includes world champion Kevin Reimer. Graham approaches his designs scientifically and builds the boards in his own high-efficiency factory with support from the National Research Council.


Punita Chohan

Punita Chohan, '08 Dip(Ed), has a gift for creativity and a talent for inspiring others. An award-winning artist, she is inspired by-and, in turn, inspires-women of many generations and backgrounds. As a cosmetology instructor at Edmonton's M.E. LaZerte High School, she teaches her students to see the internal beauty of each person. She works with community groups-from hospitals and senior associations to the Cerebral Palsy Association in Alberta and the Women's Emergency Accommodation Centre-as part of her lesson plans, providing students a greater appreciation for others. She has been recognized with the City of Edmonton Cultural Diversity in the Arts Award and was named a YWCA Woman of Distinction.


Abdullah Saleh

Abdullah Saleh, '10 MD, a general surgery resident, is the founder and executive director of ICChange, an Alberta-based organization that manages and supports international development projects. In 2006, while a medical student, he founded the Kenya Ceramic Project, providing ceramic water filters and high-efficiency stoves to rural Kenyans. In 2008, he founded a project to aid Burmese refugees and also spoke at a UN conference about his work to show how university students can lead development projects. The recipient of a Clinton Global Initiative University Commitment Award and Canadian Medical Association Resident Leader Award, he was also recently awarded the Grand Challenges Canada Rising Stars grant for the development of a medical records initiative for the slum of Kibera, Kenya.


Shannon Scott

Shannon D. Scott, '06 PhD, is one of few Canadian health-care researchers involved in the field of knowledge translation. An associate professor of nursing at the U of A, she has developed a program of research focused on understanding how research findings are transferred and used in child-health settings. She has published more than 60 papers in refereed journals and presented her work nationally and internationally. In 2011, she was given special recognition when she received the Monique Bégin Prize for Knowledge Translation from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research. She recently received funding as one of the co-directors of a National Centres of Excellence group entitled TREKK (Translating Emergency Knowledge for Kids).


Warren Serink

Warren Serink, '00 BA, is an award-winning producer who has reported on breaking news from around the world. After leaving the U of A, he earned a graduate diploma in journalism and began a career in digital media, starting with an internship at the CBC bureau in London, England. In 2007, Warren became a producer at CBS News in New York. His assignments have taken him to Haiti and Chile after the 2010 earthquakes, the U.S. Gulf Coast during the BP oil spill, and Joplin, Missouri, following the deadly tornado. He has also had a front-row seat at events such as U.S. President Barack Obama's inauguration, Michael Jackson's funeral and Prince Harry's royal tour of the Caribbean and Brazil.


Dorothy Thunder

Dorothy Thunder, '02 BA(Native Studies), is helping keep the Cree language alive through her dedication and hard work. Dorothy, who is currently pursuing a master's degree in linguistics with the goal of producing a corpus of the Cree language, is a highly regarded Cree language teacher who bridges the gap between academia and the community. Dorothy contributed to the team translating Father Émile Grouard's 1883 Cree prayer book into modern Cree and English. That work resulted in the publication The Beginning of Print Culture in Athabasca Country, which was recently named Alberta's scholarly book of the year. Having spent years creating a set of textbooks for Cree language classrooms, Dorothy is now developing an online version of her courses.


Sports Wall of Fame

Recognizing the contributions of alumni as athletes and builders of University sport

Blake Dermott

Blake Dermott, '84 BEd, is one of the most durable football players in Edmonton. As a Golden Bear, he started all 41 games during his career and was unanimously selected twice as a Canada West All-Star. As a student athlete, he won a gold medal at the 1982 CIS Wrestling Championships. In 1983, he began his 14-year career with the Edmonton Eskimos, starting in the second game and playing the next 187 in a row. Elected by fans to the Eskimos' All-Century team, Blake played in five Grey Cup Games and was twice named a CFL Western Division All-Star. Since retiring from the Eskimos, he consistently gives back to Edmonton's amateur football community as a coach and leader.


Keltie Duggan

Keltie Duggan, '94 BA, can look back on a distinguished career as a competitive swimmer. A member of Canada's national team from 1987 until 1993, she won gold medals at the 1987 Pan American Games, the 1989 Pan Pacific Championships, and the 1990 Commonwealth Games. She was also a member of the Canadian Olympic Swim team in 1988. In 1989-90, she was named Swimming Canada's athlete of the year. She was the U of A's female Athlete of the Year in 1989-90 and earned five consecutive Academic All-Canadian honours. In 1994, Keltie began volunteering at the Alberta Children's Hospital to further her goal of becoming a doctor. She graduated from the University of Calgary medical school in 2000.


Gerald Glassford

R. Gerald Glassford, '64 MA, has left an indelible mark on the evolution of the U of A Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation. Gerry came to the U of A in 1963 as a graduate student, having taught and coached at high schools in B.C. A year after he received his master's degree, he was appointed as a faculty member in physical education and began helping coach the Golden Bears basketball team. As chair of the Department of Physical Education and dean of the faculty from 1981 to 1990, he served as a mentor to countless students, academic colleagues, University athletes and coaches. Gerry served on 57 University, provincial, national and international committees and chaired the conferences associated with both Universiade 1983 and the 1978 Commonwealth Games.


Janine Helland

Janine Helland, '93 BPE, enjoyed a career as one of Canada's most outstanding soccer players. With the Pandas, she was a four-time All-Canadian, the championship MVP when her team won the 1989 national championship and was named the winner of the Bakewell Trophy in 1992 as the U of A's top female athlete. Beginning with the 1990-91 season, she played in 47 games over 10 seasons for the Canadian women's soccer team, serving as captain. As a coach, Janine helped lead the Grant MacEwan Griffins to the collegiate national championships in 1994, where they placed fourth. Currently co-ordinator of community programs for KidSport Edmonton, she has also contributed to sport through executive director roles with Judo Alberta and Ringette Alberta.


The Honourable Dr. Lois E. Hole Student Spirit Award

Celebrates student spirit and the many contributions students make to the betterment of the University community and beyond

Kristen Poon

Kirsten Poon, '12 BSc, plans to pursue a career in primary care medicine and to advocate for preventive health care and healthier communities. She already has an impressive record of community service, including serving as chair of the City of Edmonton Youth Council for 2010-11. Kirsten is also a founding member and board director of a startup non-profit organization, Literacy Without Borders, which aims to help communities establish sustainable literacy programs by recruiting post-secondary students to travel to developing countries and share literacy models. Additionally, Kirsten has been active on the executive of the Rotaract Club of Edmonton, which is associated with Rotary International and promotes service to the community.


Stephen Lee

Stephen Lee, a fourth-year medical student, has been very active in the community. In 2010-11, he helped lead the MD Ambassadors Committee, a group of students that represented the U of A medical school to high school and undergraduates. The goal was to connect with a greater diversity of prospective students. He also co-founded a program that brought medical students together with small groups of undergrads of diverse backgrounds. He founded and ran Students for Learning, a program that helped academically struggling elementary children in the community, pairing university mentors with individual children for an entire year. Stephen also served as webmaster for the Kenya Ceramic Project, which promotes the use of ceramic filters for access to healthy drinking water.


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false
Just For Fun
Why Mountains Matter
false
At Work
Always Choose Adventure
false
Environment
Aged Ice
News
Campus News
false
News
Campus News
false
Profile
Redefining Ability
Just For Fun
U of A Goes Hollywood
false
Health
Igniting the Body's Immune System Against Cancer
false
Society
A Voice for Young People
Did You Know
Uncovering Campus Treasures
Discovery
News Briefs
false
Discovery
Composing to the Sounds of Space
false
Discovery
Did Hawking say 'no black holes'? Well, not technically
false
Money
Crowdfunding Gives Student Projects a Head Start
false
Feature
Take your kids to a gallery
false
Profile
Where Arts Meets Anatomy
false
Did You Know
Growing Hope in India
false
Society
U of A Comes a Long Way to Show Its Pride
false
Living
Helping People Find Their Voice
false
Did You Know
PAW Project Begins
false
Environment
Cool Literature
false
Discovery
A Mass-ive Discovery
false
News
Sports Savvy
false
Just For Fun
Dodge Ball Redux
false
Just For Fun
Happy 60th Birthday Rutherford
false
Profile
Polar Attraction
false
Notes
Campus Connections
Notes
Press'd Sandwiches
Notes
An Alumni "Operation" in Ecuador
Notes
Top 40 Under 40
false
Tech
The Wayback Machine
false
Discovery
Mussel Man
false
Feature
Hall of Famers
false
Health
Magical Moments
false
Tech
Thinking Big
false
Tech
Sweet Tweet
Portrait photo of Cathy Allen on main campus
Profile
11 Questions With Your New Alumni Association President
Multi ethnic couple reading books at a sidewalk cafe
Alumni Recommend
Welcome to Your 2025 Summer Reading List
 photo of Taylor McPherson and Katie Mulkay
Living
It Really Was Amazing
 low-angle photo of a medical chart and blood vials
Health
Five Lessons From Startup Founders Trying to Fix Health Care’s Prevention Problem
colour photo of Linda Ogilvie, dark green background
2024 Distinguished Alumni Award
A Rising Tide Lifts All Nurses
Colourful portrait illustration of Abbas Mehdi
Profile
Mover, Shaker, Protein Maker
Illustration of two men playing golf, one is a large Falstaffian character, the other is wearing a cloak and hat, resembling Sherlock Holmes
Continuing Education
Book, Meet Cover
Illustration of a woman curled up dreaming
Thesis
The Brain’s Pain
Photo of a businesswoman standing at a flip chart leading a meeting
Alumni Impact 2024
Four Ways for Women — or Anyone — to Take the Lead
false
Trails
Why Don’t Sheep Shrink When They Get Wet?
false
Alumni Impact 2024
Helping Young People Find Their Voices
false
Living
How to Face Failure
 a man doing paperwork in front of his laptop
Did You Know
Five Tips to Prepare for the Inevitable
Colourful illustration of woman’s side profile with hair flowing behind her
Feature
The Power of AI Is In Our Hands. What Do We Need to Know?
false
Health
Hope in Motion
a photo of Bruce Ritchie
2023 Distinguished Alumni Award
A Champion for People With Rare Blood Disorders
.
Thesis
For Want of a Nail
Two female businesswomen working at a desk
At Work
Who Wants To Be an Entrepreneur?
Girl with her ear up to a large metal sculpture
Living
How to Appreciate Sculpture
John Acorn holding and inspecting a rock in a creek bed
Just for Fun
Take a Walk on the Wild Side
false
Did You Know
Six Facts About Pollinators You Won't Bee-lieve
false
Profile
Legendary Links
false
Did You Know
Five Tips for Learning and Teaching Mandarin
Illustration of farmland with crops, animals, and farmers.
Environment
Pesky Pests and Other Threats
false
Tiny
Little Wonders
false
Relationships
Four Tips to Nurture a Relationship
false
Tiny
Time Machines
false
Distinguished Alumni Award
This Man Makes Medical Treatment Better For Us All
Common Vampire Bat
Continuing Education
Bloodthirsty Behaviour
false
Feature
Rural Frontiers
false
Did You Know
City Dwellers
false
Thesis
Engineering Student Groups Make Their Own Chances
false
Tech
Five Things I've Learned About Using AI for Social Good
false
Feature
The Impossible Made Possible
false
At Work
Goodwill Abounds
false
Health
Health Gets More Precise
false
Continuing Education
Think Like a Designer
false
Thesis
Where I Stop and You Start
false
Continuing Education
In the Minds of Mavericks
false
At Work
Five Things I’ve Learned About Working in the Non-Profit Sector
false
Profile
Five Things I’ve Learned About Working Together
false
Just For Fun
The Buzz About Bugs
false
Society
How To Be a Better Treaty Person
false
Health
It’s Got to Be Fun
false
Thesis
When the Master Makes Mistakes
false
Society
The Future of Food Delivers
false
Did You Know
Geared Up for Green-and-Gold
false
DIY
How to Be Wikipedia Wise
false
Society
Leadership in Times of Change
false
Technology
Better With Blockchain
false
Health
Whose Health Is in Harm’s Way?
false
Society
A Reading List for Fresh Perspectives
false
Alumni Awards
Karen Barnes Bolstered Education In the North
false
Alumni Awards
Howard Leeson Played a Key Role in Crafting Our Constitution
false
News
Restructuring Will Make UAlberta More Nimble, Efficient, Says President
false
Just For Fun
Wind Down the Year With Beer
false
Society
Three Paths
false
New Trail Classic
Do Not Bend or Mutilate — This Is a Human Being
false
Walking Together
Let’s Walk the Talk to End Racism
false
Discovery
An Inside Look at COVID-19 Research
false
Feature
The Future of Pandemics is Proactive
false
Living
'With This Hope We Can Do Beautiful Things'
false
Feature
Hope is an Overused Word, But the Real Thing Can be Powerful
false
At Home
A Common Quest
false
Living
Lawyers Get Creative As People Update Wills
false
Health
How to Neutralize Negative COVID-19 Thoughts
false
Living
Tips for Welcoming Refugees to Canada
false
At Home
Quarantine Bookshelf
false
Living
Six Things I’ve Learned About Embracing Discomfort
false
Thesis
Atypical Learning and Remarkable Results
false
DIY
Tuck Shop Cinnamon Bun Recipe
false
At Home
5 Books to Inspire Kids and Their Parents
false
Feature
A Justice for All
false
Thesis
Duplicate Studies
false
Thesis
Fair Play
false
Health
How I Learned to Ask for Help
false
Thesis
The Space Overhead
false
Tech
Inner Space
false
Energy
Indigenous Workers Tell Their Stories
false
Energy
People-Friendly Energy Projects
false
Energy
Powered Up
false
Energy
New Ways to Generate and Store Power
false
Did You Know
Meet Your New Alumni President
false
DIY
Build Your Own Robot From Junk at Home
false
Just For Fun
A Taste of Nostalgia
false
Health
How to Clean Your (Truly Gross, Germy) Phone
false
Money
How to Be Creative and Make Money
false
DIY
How to Make Your Words Last
false
DIY
How to Draw a Barn (on Fire)
false
Did You Know
How to Speak in Public With Aplomb
false
Tech
How Dylan Brenneis Built a Robot From Junk at Home
false
Living
Choose and Care for Your Perfect Christmas Tree
false
Health
Smoking Pot Behind Lister Is Legal
false
Thesis
How Long Until We Eat the Zoo?
false
Thesis
Have Your Burger and Eat It, Too
false
Alumni Awards
‘I think back with horror’
false
Trails
Tilting
false
Feature
Dementia Sets Lives Adrift. Research Is Finding a Better Way Forward
false
Health
The Elusive Cure
false
Thesis
Why You Feel Like Your Friends Are Having More Fun on Social Media
false
Thesis
Where Does Consciousness Live?
false
Living
Tips on How to Stink Less
false
Continuing Education
Five Things I’ve Learned About Perseverance
false
Continuing Education
Grant Me the Serenity to Accept My Inner Volcano
false
Tech
These Are Not Your Average Rabbits
These are not your average rabbits
false
At Work
How to Launch a Career During COVID-19
false
Profile
7 Things You Should Know About Billy-Ray Belcourt
false
Did You Know
What Do You Do When There’s No Reliable Internet?
false
Continuing Education
Check Your Blind Spots
false
Tech
They Saw What on YouTube?
false
Just For Fun
Flashback
Just For Fun
Fashion Sense
false
Discovery
Five Objects That Changed Our Lives
Alumni Awards
For giving Canadians insight into urgent global stories
false
Profile
For Fighting for LGBTQ Rights
Alumni Awards
For Bringing News and Entertainment to Canadian TV viewers
false
Feature
A Call to Bear Witness
false
Feature
Indigenous on Campus
false
Feature
Behind the Bodice
false
Feature
Reading Toward Reconciliation and More
News
Campus News
false
Did You Know
The Gateway's New Identity
false
Living
Put on Your Cape and Pants; It's Time to Go Out
false
Discovery
Research in the News
false
Continuing Education
Findings in the Field
false
Did You Know
Dark Cosmic Mysteries Illuminated
false
Environment
Alumni Among Wildfire Heroes
false
News
Research in the News
false
Discovery
'Welding' Neurons Opens Door to Repairing Nerves
false
Discovery
Paleontologists Discover Complete Baby Dino Skeleton
false
News
Alumni in the News
Did You Know
New Student Residence and Indigenous Gathering Place Coming to North Campus
false
Did You Know
Lecture Hall to Legislature
false
Health
When Food is Your Enemy
Discovery
Research Briefs
false
Environment
Our Man on Mars
false
Discovery
Who's the Boss of Evolution?
false
News
Kim Campbell Heads New College
Did You Know
From the Collections
false
Profile
Learning to Lead
false
Environment
Five Questions About Frankenstorms
false
Discovery
Blue Sky Green Moss
false
Profile
The Road to a Rhodes
News
Campus News
false
Health
A Mighty Heart
false
Did You Know
Medal of Freedom
false
Sweating the Small Stuff
false
Environment
Taking The Initiative
false
Discovery
Cell Mates
false
Did You Know
It Is Brain Surgery
false
In Memoriam
Remembering Robert Kroetch
Notes
Powerful Women
Notes
Royal Society of Canada Honours
Notes
Meet Your Reunion Organizer
false
Health
Treating the King Georges of Edmonton... and Calgary
false
Discovery
Weird Science
false
Feature
Whatsoever Things Are True
false
Feature
U of A's Newest Building
false
Continuing Education
Rhodes Worthy
false
Did You Know
Uphill Racer
false
Profile
PhD Prize Money
Illustration of pills and capsules scattered on a coloured background, forming the shape of a brain
Health
Understanding Addiction: Five Fundamental Facts
Illustration of a person flying a kite in the wind, the shape of the string attached to the kite is a profile of a human face
Thesis
I Can Do Whatever I Want
Aerial photo of a combine harvester in a rapeseed field
Feature
Rubik’s Food
Photo of the Rideau Canal in Ottawa on a nice, summer day, Canada Geese on the water in the foreground, buildings and blue sky in the background
Living
Happy Cities
 colour photo of Robert Philp, dark green background
2024 Distinguished Alumni Award
A Lawyer for the People
Photo of Colin Baril at an alumni art tour event
Profile
Five Things I’ve Learned About Making Connections Count
Illustration of people on different paths
Profile
Six Things I’ve Learned About Careers
One yellow piggy bank in a group of purple piggy banks
Money
Five Things I Learned About Managing My Money
Taylor McPherson and Katie Mulkay
Profile
Five Things We Learned Competing in The Amazing Race Canada
false
Continuing Education
Winning Actually Isn’t Everything
false
Alumni Impact 2024
Playing With Food, Seriously
Grads Matt and Jalene Anderson-Baron sitting at a table and looking at a laptop
Alumni Impact 2024
Thinking Tiny to Go Big
Glowing orb with emanating binary code and light.
Did You Know
What’s Up With Quantum Science?
An illustrated silhouette of a human head surrounded by stylized electronic waves
Discovery
AI Research in Action
a photo of Deena Hinshaw
2023 Distinguished Alumni Award
Calm in the Eye of the Pandemic Storm
a photo of Gordon Wilkes
2023 Distinguished Alumni Award
He Helped Give Patients Confidence to Face the World
Colourful grid of different coloured bananas
Did You Know
Does ChatGPT Really Understand Us?
hildren telling scary stories in a tent at night
Just for Fun
How to Tell a Terrifying Tale
Mature male adult with headphones on, taking a hearing test in a soundproof booth
Health
Breaking the Silence on Hearing Loss
Lazina Mckenzie at a November Project workout
Health
How to Become a Morning Exercise Person in Any Season
false
Profile
Nine Questions With Your New Alumni Association President
People rock climbing
Thesis
Reading, Riding and Arithmetic
false
Feature
Why You Should Care About Small Molecule Drugs
Corridor of people with a man at the center
Tiny
What Is the Smallest Small?
Helping child to read
How-to
How to Help a Child Read Better
false
Tiny
Teeny Words Expose Societal Changes
Couple walking outside
Health
One Small Step
false
Distinguished Alumni Award
Scientist-Entrepreneur Creates Drug Molecules That Can Change Lives
false
Profile
Five Things I’ve Learned About Preserving Indigenous Languages
false
Thesis
It Lies in the Making
false
Continuing Education
A Matter of Meat
false
At Work
How to Manage Imposter Syndrome
false
Thesis
Linger In the In-Between
false
Society
‘We Can Hear the Fighting From Afar’’
false
Society
Pitch Perfect
false
Society
5 Things I've Learned About Black History on the Prairies
false
Living
Let It Snow
false
Discovery
What Has a Nobel Prize Ever Done For You?
false
Relationships
Friends Forever
false
Thesis
Route of Memory
false
In Memoriam
To My Unknown Friend
false
Living
How to Be Media Literate
false
At Home
What Is the Pandemic Doing to My Young Child?
false
Continuing Education
Don't Be Boring!
false
Environment
The Future of Farming is Smarter
false
Discovery
A Nobel Search
false
Environment
How to Fashion a Sustainable Future
false
Living
See Spot Cope
false
New Trail 100
Lawnmowers and Rabbits: A Tale of Progress
false
New Trail 100
Then and Now: Discoveries That Keep on Giving
Photo of Michael Houghton
Health
In Conversation: Michael Houghton
false
New Trail 100
Mystery on Campus
false
Alumni Awards
Stanley Read Brought Compassion to Families Living with HIV/AIDS
false
At Work
How To Network
false
Thesis
Wrong Way, Again
false
At Work
Rethink Your Next Job Interview
false
Discovery
COVID-19-Fighting Tools
false
Environment
Renewable Energy Myths, Busted
false
Profile
Coming Home
false
Just For Fun
A Great Catch
false
Feature
The Virus of Social Unrest
false
Commentary
Reflections on Flight PS752
false
Money
The Dos and Don’ts of Investing After a Market Crash
false
Alumni Recommend
Feed Your Inner, Isolated Art Lover
false
At Work
Business As Unusual
false
At Work
When the Lectern Is in the Living Room
false
At Home
Tips to Help School Your Kids at Home
false
How-to
Support Your Kids During the COVID-19 Pandemic
false
In Memoriam
‘He Was One of a Kind’
false
Thesis
When Your Thoughts Run Away With You
false
Feature
Cinnamon Buns: A Love Story
false
Did You Know
What Baseball Fights Tell Us About Ourselves
false
Commentary
Opining the Opinions
false
Thesis
Seen One, Seen ’Em All
false
Thesis
More Than the Sum of Your Parts
false
Thesis
Whole Medicines
false
Environment
Tips to Free You From Plastic
false
Just For Fun
Are You a Sucker for Pseudoscience?
false
Energy
From Research to Reality
false
Energy
Lost in Transmission
Energy
Decontaminate Water With Chicken Feathers
false
Energy
Reworking the Flywheel for Better Energy Storage
false
Just for Fun
How to Start a Podcast
false
Health
New Food Labels Will Help You Choose
false
Just For Fun
How to Find a Great Podcast
false
Just For Fun
How to Skate Like Connor McDavid
false
Did You Know
How to Feed Your Inner Genealogist
false
Just For Fun
How to Make a Paper Airplane to Challenge Your Assumptions
false
Did You Know
How to Take Part in a Round Dance
false
Living
How to See Like an Artist
false
Relationships
How to Avoid Death by Small Talk
false
Health
Sugar Highs Are Not a Real Thing
false
Continuing Education
That Time I Enrolled in a Community
false
Thesis
Good News for Picky Eaters
Alumni Awards
For being a coach and a leader
false
Thesis
Deserts and Swamps
false
Just For Fun
Registration Woes
false
Environment
Not a Drop Wasted
false
At Home
How to Hang Art Like a Boss
false
Thesis
Your Tech, Your Self
false
Thesis
When Medicine Is Designed Just for You
false
Trails
In Lister Town
false
Feature
The Advance of AI: Should We Be Worried?
false
Tech
Have You Heard the One About the Robot Comedian?
Tech
Unexpected insights from an AI rock star
false
Trails
Modern Campus Life
false
Tech
Fighting Fire With Data
false
Health
Keeping Gym-Class Dropouts in the Game
false
Living
7 Things You Should Know to Rock Your Look
false
Profile
A Sport Psychologist Was Among the Supporters and Athletes Hurrying Hard in Pyeongchang
false
Health
Clearing the Smoke on Cannabis
false
Feature
Seen/Unseen
Feature
Words and Images
Alumni Awards
For finding new ways to succeed in sports
Alumni Awards
For being a powerful voice for change
Alumni Awards
For Being a Model of Leadership
Alumni Awards
For devoting his life to serving the public
false
Feature
How We Can Work Together
false
Feature
A Hard Walk
false
Feature
Facing the Painful Truth
false
Feature
More From the TRC
false
Commentary
Fake News and Surviving a Post-truth World
false
Society
A Cultural Space in a Natural Place
false
Did You Know
Salt Could Save Lives
false
Health
Research Rises From the Ashes
false
Did You Know
The Power of his Song
false
Health
A Healthier Future for Women and Children Is Closer Than Ever
Did You Know
For the Public Good
false
Tech
Changing the Game: Why Teaching AI to Play is More Than Fun and Games
Discovery
Research in the News
false
News
News Briefs
false
Living
Beyond the Books in Italy
false
Did You Know
Milk in Tea Can Reduce Teeth Stains
false
News
Campus News
false
News
Alumni in the News
false
News
David Turpin Named Next U of A President
News
University Plans Land Trust
News
News Briefs
false
Just For Fun
Hiding and Seeking Fun
Discovery
Research in the News
false
Did You Know
Alumna in Judge's Seat at Olympics
false
Just For Fun
Superlative U
false
Just For Fun
Raise a Glass for the Bears and Pandas
false
Society
The Accidental Protestor
false
Health
New Horizons in Health Care
false
Did You Know
The Alumni Effect
false
Profile
The New Kid on Campus
false
Health
Mastering Health Sciences Education
false
Discovery
Research VP Wins Top Prize
false
Discovery
Water Bearers
false
Relationships
Team Building
Continuing Education
High School Reunion
Society
Biotechnology Meets Art
false
Living
One Village at a Time
Notes
Alumni in Australia
false
News
Ultra-Sonic Performance
false
Discovery
Hot Tip
false
Feature
Easy Rider Endowment
false
Health
Master Mind
false
Discovery
Cell Mates
false
Did You Know
Mission to Mars
false
Discovery
You Do the Math