Item is the second part of a symposium on women in engineering that hopes to describe and provide concrete suggests on how to improve the experience of women working in the engineering field
Item is the first part of a symposium on women in engineering that hopes to describe and provide concrete suggests on how to improve the experience of women working in the engineering field.
Item is an interview with Michelle Otis, a needs analysis consultant with Groupe Valorex, that discusses the development of her career.
Item is an interview with Laura McCormack by Jenny Fry for Ainley's "Critical Turning Points" research.
Item is an interview about the censure by the Canadian Association of University Teachers of Simon Fraser University in 1968.
Item is a recording of a memorial service held for Margaret Benston with speeches and music by friends and colleagues.
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 with bacteriologist Dr. Christine Rice about her early life and university career at Queen's University.
Item is an interview in Wolfville, Nova Scotia in which Marianne Ainley asks Jaye Fraser about her early life, education and the development of her career, including the obstacles Fraser perceived herself to face and her work in New Brunswick and Montreal.
Item is the second 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 second part of an interview with Norah Toole about her and her husband Frank's lives and Toole's involvement with the University of New Brunswick.
Item is the second part of an interview with bacteriologist Dr. Christine Rice about her early life and university career at Queen's University.
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 interview about Allie Vibert's career, her involvement with the International Federation of University Women and her activities at Queen's University, during which she pushed for the enrolment of women into the Faculty of Medicine.
Item is the first part of an interview with Norah Toole about her and her husband Frank's lives and Toole's involvement with the University of New Brunswick.
Item is the second 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 presentation by Linda Scott on the role of women in the private sector scientific community and a workshop on families where both persons have professional roles.
Item is an excerpt from a presentation on women in geology with a presentation by Barbara Sheriff, a professor from the Department of Geological Sciences from the University of Manitoba, on successful female geologists in England, Canada and the United States; a presentation by Heather Jamieson, a professor in geology at Queen's University; an introduction by Ellen P. Metzger, a professor in geology from San Jose State University; Elizabeth Its, a professor at Clarkson University who spoke about her research in Saint Petersburg, Russia; an introduction by [Janice Regan?] a professor in geophysics and astronomy from Queen's University; and a group workshop discussion about problems related to fieldwork and how they can be reduced.
Item is an interview in which Jane Stewart discusses her career development and early life before she became a professor of Psychology at Concordia University.
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 Virginia Douglas about her career as a psychologist, including her early life, the obstacles she faced and her reason for choosing psychology as a science.
Item is the second part of the first half of a conference on the history of women in chemistry and discusses the historical contributions of women to chemistry.
Item is the second part of an interview in which Marianne Ainley interviews Sylvia Ruby about her early life and the development of her career including what influenced her choose a career in science and any impediments she perceived herself to face in becoming a scientist.
Item is the second part of the first half of a conference on the history of women in chemistry and discusses the historical contributions of women to chemistry.
Item is a radio program, the second in a series, on the use of technology in education with descriptions of the uses of multimedia by two educators and a debate between two educators and a woman opposed to technology-based education models.
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 with Monique Lortie, a professor at the Universite de Quebec a Montreal in biology, that discusses the development of her career.
Item is the first part of an interview in which Marianne Ainley interviews Sylvia Ruby about her early life and the development of her career including what influenced her choose a career in science and any impediments she perceived herself to face in becoming a scientist.
Item is an excerpt from a presentation on economics and immigration that details the globalization, the future of economics and how women can play a roles in the future of technology and engineering.
Item is two radio programs on women in geology broadcast on CBC's program Wild Rose Country, one of which interviews Marianne Ainley, originally broadcast on May 21, 1993 and May 25, 1993.
Item is an interview in which Marianne Ainley interviews Erica Kurbely about her reasons for becoming an engineer and the story of her coming an engineer.
Item is two interviews at Dr. Allin's home discussing the creation of an association of physicists in Canada and Dr. Allin's retirement and her teaching and research shortly before she retired. It was created as part of the University of Toronto Oral History Program.
Item an interview in which Dr. Dorothy Forward discusses her life at the University of Toronto, her time in student residences and the development of her career and some of the obstacles she faced. It was created as part of the University of Toronto Oral History Program.
Item is an interview with Robin Fisher about the history of Simon Fraser University, the founding of the school, a dispute between employees and the university administration and the Women's Rights Movements at Simon Fraser University.
Item is an interview about Sherry's work with Aboriginal communities for Marianne Ainley's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) grant, entitled "Re-explorations: New Perspectives on Gender, Environments and the transfer of Knowledge in 19th and 20th Century Australia and Canada."
Item is an interview about Sherry's work with Aboriginal communities for Marianne Ainley's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) grant, entitled "Re-explorations: New Perspectives on Gender, Environments and the transfer of Knowledge in 19th and 20th Century Australia and Canada."
Item is two interviews at Dr. Allin's home discussing the reasons for her attending University, choosing physics as a discipline and professors or others who had supported and influenced her. It was created as part of the University of Toronto Oral History Program.
Item is two interviews at Dr. Allin's home discussing her activities immediately following the completed of her PhD at the University of Toronto and the beginning of her teaching at the University of Toronto as well as her research during that period. It was created as part of the University of Toronto Oral History Program.
Item is an interview in Grimsby, Ontario with Helen McKenzie about her career progression and experience becoming an engineer.
Item is a lecture about Aboriginal peoples, their common experience and their seeking of reparations from the governments in their respective countries.
Item is the first part of an interview in which Madeline Fritz describes her early life, her reasons for choosing to study Geology and the development of her career at the University of Toronto. It was created as part of the University of Toronto Oral History Program.
Item is the fourth 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."