File consists of research materials and note concerning the life and career of Helen S. Hogg.
File consists of photocopied archival materials concerning the life and career of Lucy Winnifred Bryce.
File consists of handwritten notes on women in science in Universities colour coded with paperclips.
File consists of photocopies of correspondence sent to Parr Traill and an accompanying list, which provides the senders and send dates of the correspondence. It also includes a family tree.
File consists of Ainley's book chapter, "Science in Canada's 'Backwoods'?: Catharine Parr Traill (1802-1899)" for "Natural Eloquence: Women Reinscribe Science," a book edited by Barbara T. Gates and Ann B. Shteir and published by the Wisconsin University Press in 1997.
File consists of drafts of "Circulating Gendered Knowledge: Catharine Parr Traill's Colonial Science Lessons, 1836-1895" and forms and correspondence regarding publication.
File consists of Ainley's ethics approval form for the University of Northern British Columbia to which the description of "Critical Turning Points" submitted to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) is attached.
File consists of the description of and budget for "Critical Turning Points" submitted to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).
File consists of lists of information about interviewees interviewed by Ainley's research assistant, Jenny Fry.
Item is an interview with Michelle Otis, a needs analysis consultant with Groupe Valorex, that discusses the development of her career.
File consists of lists of contact information about potential interviewees, some of which contain short biographies; correspondence relating to interviews; notes; a budget report for "Critical Turning Points"; and a blank copy of the questionnaire sent to female engineering graduates from Queen's University by Alison Bowe.
File consists of responses to Alison Bowe's questionnaire by female engineering graduates from Queen's University who graduated in 1984.
File consists of financial records from Ainley's oral history research at Concordia along with related correspondence.
File consists of research materials related to wives in science, including an interview with [Joan Hochbaum]. File also includes photocopied archival and secondary research materials and a pamphlet for a university symposium.
File consists of interview transcript of Nancy Turner in both print and digital form.
File consists of transcript of interview with Elizabeth Allin.
File consists of transcript of interview with Dr. Ainley and Helen Reynolds.
File consists of an article, by Ainley, hosted on Chinook Media's website, entitled, "Women and Science."
File consists of two articles: "Women Becoming Professional Scholars: Historians and Physicists" and "The Early History of Women in University Physics: A Toronto Case Study."
File consists of and handwritten notes and lists of female scientists, divided according to discipline and arranged into categories based on generation, with an indication of whether or not they had been interviewed.
File consists handwritten notes, a photocopy of a photograph of a surveyor sitting at his desk, an obituary for Alice Willard Turner, a draft chapter of the monograph from 1997 about women working in government institutions and correspondence.
File consists of correspondence with requests for archival material and information on the salaries of professors. File also contains notes on William Rowan's salary and correspondence on the salaries of professors at Victoria University (now part of the University of Toronto).
File consists of correspondence, notes, booklets, lists and research requests relating to the Chemical Institute of Canada, their archives and the Women's Committee of the Chemical Institute of Canada. File also contains articles on women in chemistry and the history of chemistry.
File consists of notes, rough drafts of chapters and sections of the monograph; research planning; and article lists.
File consists of notes on the progress and planning of research for the monograph and an analysis and organization of data.
File consists of sound recordings of oral history and research interviews by Ainley and others, conferences, symposia, radio programs, and a literary reading.
Item is an interview completed for a Canadian Studies 390/391 course at Simon Fraser University about the life and career of Margaret Benston.
Item is the first part of an interview discussing the career development of Helen Hogg as a scientist, including her early education. It was created as part of the University of Toronto Oral History Program.
Item is the first part of an interview in Fredericton, New Brunswick in which Marianne Ainley interviews Delphine Maclellan about the development of and perceived impediments to the development of her career
Item is the first part of an interview in which Marianne Ainley interviews Isabel K. Williamson about the development of and perceived impediments to the development of her career as well as the disciplinary culture of astronomy and the relationship between amateur and professional astronomers.
Item is an excerpt from a presentation on women in geology with a section of a group workshop discussion on problems related to fieldwork and how these problems can be reduced.
Item is an excerpt from a symposium on Kathleen Gough, at which Marianne Ainley presented a talk entitled on Kathleen Gough's career, that contains a short biography of Gough and some discussions about and presentations on the difficulties of Gough and other women in finding university employment
Item is the first part of an interview in which Marriane Ainley interviews Dolores Pushkar Gold, director for Centre for Research in Human Development at Concordia University, about her early life and the development of her career.
Item is the second part of an interview in which Marianne Ainley interviews Dolores Pushkar Gold, director for Centre for Research in Human Development at Concordia University, about her early life and the development of her career as well as her upcoming research.
Item is part of an interview with Carol Anne Robertson Mass, a physical chemist, in Toronto in which she discuss her early life and the development of her career in chemistry.
Item is an interview in which Marianne Ainley interviews Elvi Whittaker, a professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia, about her early life and what influenced her to pursue a career in anthropology
Item is a reading by Rae M. Taylor with some music and a reading of several works and works-in-progress.
Item is an interview in Grimsby, Ontario with Helen McKenzie about her career progression and experience becoming an engineer.
Item is an interview in which Muriel Roscoe describes her early life and education as well as her appointment as an assistant professor at McGill University and her activities during her time at McGill University.
Item the second part of a presentation on the history of women in science, which includes a question and answer section.
Item is the first part of an interview with Dixie Pelleut, a former professor in biology at Dalhousie University, about her life and academic career as research for Fingard's monograph, "Gender and Inequality at Dalhousie: Faculty Women before 1950."
Item is an interview in which Mary Bryan describes her family, early life, education and professional career.
Item is an interview in which Magda Jones, founder of the Scientists' Wives' Association of the National Research Council, describes her family, early life, education and professional career.
Item is an interview in which Phyllis Atkinson, a chemist and detonation tester during World War II, describes her family, early life, education and professional career.
Item is an interview in which Helen Hogg, an astronomer, describes her family, early life, education and professional career.
Item consists of recordings of music by Saami people.
Item is a presentation of research about the transfer of Aboriginal knowledge to early female scientists for Ainley's Social Science and Research Humanities Council (SSHRC) project, "Re-explorations: Gender, Science and Environment in the 19th and 20th Century Canada and Australia."
File consists of handwritten notes on lined paper and cue cards as well as photocopied research materials and newspaper on Canadian universities.
File consists of correspondence requests for reprints of Ainley's publications.
File consists of documents concerning Ainley's contribution to the New Dictionary of National Biography.