File consists of notes relating to a guest lecture by Kent Sedgwick on using geography for historical research for UNBC course "HIST 200 Historical Methodology".
File consists of notes and letters relating to Kent Sedgwick's guest lecture for UNBC course "GEOG 207 Historical Geography of Canada".
File consists of notes, clippings, and reproductions relating to a book chapter titled "Frontier Outpost to 'Northern Capital': the functional transformation of Prince George, B.C., Canada" written by Kent Sedgwick and Greg Halseth for "Beyond the Metropolis: Urban Geography as if Small Cities Mattered". Includes: "RE: Book Chapters" printed email from Ben Ofori-Amoah to Greg Halseth and Kent Sedgwick (14 Sept. 2004). Includes a CD containing notes and material relating to the book chapter co-written by Kent Sedgwick and Greg Halseth (2004).
File consists of notes and clippings relating to a workshop entitled "Prince George Perspectives" by Kent Sedgwick. Includes: "Continuing Education" course booklet for UNBC Continuing Studies (2003).
File consists of drafts of advertisements for GEOG 163 Historical Geography of the Central Interior, a College of New Caledonia continuing studies course taught by Kent Sedgwick.
File consists of notes and reproductions relating to an Environmental Studies Diploma offered at the College of New Caledonia.
File consists of notes and reproductions relating to historical geography methodology.
Collection consists of a selection of academic research papers from Bill Morrison. Consists of academic works written by Morrison (often in collaboration with Ken Coates), papers presented at conferences, and background material that related to his research.
File consists of a first draft of Masters thesis entitled "The Grand Trunk Pacific in Prince George: A Study in Mismanagement, 1909-1918" by Rhys Pugh. Also includes printed emails and notes regarding the thesis.
File consists of notes, clippings, and reproductions relating to the South Fort George Elementary School.
File consists of notes and reproductions relating to the Millar Addition High School.
File consists of notes, clippings, and reproductions relating to Duchess Park Secondary School. Prince George Junior High changed its name in 1958 to Duchess Park Junior High School when Connaught Junior High School opened. The school was named after the existing city park where it was located. The first building used as Duchess Park Junior High School was the old Prince George High School located at 9th and Winnipeg. This was across the school grounds from the new Prince George Senior Secondary School, which was built on Ross Crescent in 1956.
File consists of notes, clippings, and reproductions relating to Ron Brent Elementary School (formerly Connaught Elementary School). Includes: "Official Opening of Connaught Elementary School" pamphlet by School District No. 57 (11 May 1954).
File consists of notes and reproductions relating to the Prince George Secondary School (formerly Baron Byng High School and Prince George High School).
File consists of written and typed notes relating to the Sylvan Glade Elementary School. Also includes photographs depicting the Sylvan Glade School site (2001?).
File consists of notes and clippings relating to the Summit Lake Elementary School.
File consists of notes and reproductions relating to Reid Lake Elementary School and Chief Lake Elementary School. Includes photographs depicting the old Reid Lake school building and various other old school sites (Sept. 2002).
File consists of notes and reproductions relating to Mud River Elementary School. Also includes photographs depicting old Mud River buildings and roads.
File consists of notes relating to the Ferndale Elementary School.
File consists of notes and clippings relating to schools along the East Line.
File consists of notes relating to the Cranbrook Mills Elementary School. Also includes photographs depicting the old Cranbrook Mills School (2005).
File consists of notes relating to the East Line and field trips taken for research.
Series consists of pamphlets, posters, guides, reports, and other publications created by the UNBC Office of Communications.
Digital video recording is an episode of Spotlight on UNBC from September 1993. Features include an interview with students regarding why they attend UNBC; development of the co-op education program; UNBC's new faculty in the International Studies, Nursing and History departments; plans for convocation 1994; the UNBC academic calendar; the promotion of UNBC in southern media; public bus tours of UNBC; and a tour of the regions with Iona Campagnolo and other UNBC officials. Includes interviews with Fred Gilbert (Dean of Natural Resources and Environmental Studies), Dan Lousier (BC Forest Service), Larry Woods (International Studies), Dana Edge (Nursing), Robin Fisher (History), Carmen Pickering (UNBC Tour Guide), Ken Coates (UNBC VP Academic), Eileen Heir (Yirka Dene Language Institute), Iona Campagnolo (UNBC Chancellor), Ron Sebastian (First Nations artist), and Herb Russell (Executive Director, Gitanyow). Also includes interviews with UNBC students and graduates Kelly Breen, Jackie Watson, Brad and Beverly Freathy, Kathy Vagt, and Terri Stewart (Northwest Community College student advisor).
Digital video recording is an episode of Spotlight on UNBC from November 1993. Features include the development of the UNBC calendar for 1993-1994, the construction of the lab building, the needs of students in the laboratory, space allocation, the UNBC rotunda, a 1 million dollar endowment for UNBC by Northwood, the First Nations forum, the anticipation of the opening of UNBC by Queen Elizabeth, a breakfast held by the UNBC Women's Caucus for women's history month, UNBC is the newsmaker of the year, the federal election results and opinion from UNBC faculty, and views of UNBC by helicopter. Includes interviews with Martin Cocking (Assistant Registrar), Nicole Lyotier (UNBC Liaison Officer), Conchetta di Francesco (UBC Liaison Officer), Lynda Mychaluk (SFU Liaison Officer), Houston Secondary School grade 12 students, Ann McNaughton (BCIT Liaison Officer), Jerry Hurn (Hemingway Nelson Architects), Mark Bernards (Chemistry), Peter McEwan (Lab Manager), Geoffrey Weller (UNBC President), Deanna Nice (Nisga'a), Clive Keen (Director of Communications), Myra Rutherdale (UNBC Women's Caucus), Greg Poelzer (Political Science), and Paul Bowles (Economics).
Digital video recording is an episode of Spotlight on UNBC from February 1994. Features include the construction of the UNBC Prince George campus, a spotlight on heart month, the appointment of the Northwest Regional Coordinator, UNBC updates on CKPG TV, and a spotlight on natural resource management and environmental studies. Includes interviews with Peter Heaton (Project Manager), Dean Cooper (former VP Administration), Ken Prkachin (UNBC program chair of Psychology), Maureen Salton (BC Heart and Stroke Foundation), Dana Edge (UNBC Nursing), Margaret Anderson (Northwest Regional Coordinator), Bob Harkins, Fred Gilbert (Dean of Natural Resources and Environmental Studies), Darwyn Coxson (UNBC Biology), Doug Baker (Environmental Studies), Annie Booth (Environmental Studies), Ellen Petticrew (UNBC Geography), Dave Robinson (Outdoor Recreation and Tourism), Winifred Kessler (UNBC Forestry), and Jackie Watson (UNBC student).
Digital video recording is an episode of Spotlight on UNBC from December 1995. Features segments on UNBC technology, including fibre optics, use of technology for teaching, video conferencing, high-tech microscopes, the importance of technology for reaching the regions, internet access, and online courses. Additional highlights include a discussion on the recent Quebec referendum, an acquisitions endowment for the UNBC library from Royal Bank, Safety Awareness Week at UNBC, and a visit from Santa. Includes interviews with Lyle Watkins (BC Tel), Tim Beekman (Dynacom President), Alex Hawley (UNBC Biology), Eva Doerksen (UNBC student), Glenda Prakchin (UNBC Psychology), Reg Horne (UNBC Geography), Hugues Massicotte (UNBC Forestry), Richard Lazenby (UNBC Anthropology), Jerry Windsor-Martin (Phillips Electronics), David Dowling (UNBC English), and Stan Beeler (UNBC English).
Digital video recording is an episode of Spotlight on UNBC from March 1997. Features segments on the 3rd annual UNBC Winterfest; the creation of the William Ferry endowment fund; a measles prevention strategy campaign at UNBC; a visit from the Government Leader of the Yukon, Piers McDonald; UNBC students went to Harvard for a UN Model simulation; Chinese Cultural Days at UNBC for Chinese New Year; a survey at the Ice Fishing Derby; a UNBC hosted math conference for high school students; and the importance of marketing UNBC due to competition. Includes interviews with Pat Appavoo (UNBC Librarian); Harold Moffatt (former Prince George mayor); Judge William Ferry; Murray Sadler (UNBC Founder); Robin Johnson (UNBC Health Centre); Piers McDonald (Government Leader of the Yukon); Lily Chow (UNBC faculty); Max Blouw (UNBC Fisheries); Jennifer Hyndman (UNBC Math); Clive Keen (UNBC Communications); Sue Kubik (CASE International); Suzy Mink (CASE director); and UNBC students Karen More, James Sztyler, Diane Stover, and Anna Velasco.
File consists of an audio recording of an interview with Bob Harkins. Includes two original recorded audio cassettes and one copy.
File consists of an audio recording of an interview with Jean May. Includes one original recorded audio cassette and one copy.
File consists of Dr. Fisher's application to the Royal Society of Canada along with his Curriculum Vitae for 1996.
File contains records relating to Dr. Fisher's renewal as Dean of the College of Arts, Social and Health Sciences at the University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC) in 2001. Includes a 2001 UNBC organizational chart for the College of Arts, Social and Health Sciences as well as Fisher's resume for 2001. Also includes correspondence relating to his resignation as Dean in 2002 upon his appointment as Dean at the University of Regina.
Series consists of course development material created by Dr. Robin Fisher for his UNBC undergraduate and graduate courses. Dr. Fisher primarily taught in the Department of History and was instrumental in the development of the History Program at UNBC. Records include syllabi, course readings, resource material, and correspondence.
File consists of course development material for Dr. Robin Fisher's UNBC HIST 100 course "Headlines in History". Includes HIST 100 syllabus. Also includes a syllabus for Barrie Ratcliffe's Fall 1994 HIST 250 "Europe in the Age of Expansion" course.
File consists of course development material for Dr. Robin Fisher's UNBC HIST 100 course "Headlines in History".
File consists of course development material for Dr. Robin Fisher's UNBC HIST 100 course "Headlines in History". Includes HIST 100 syllabus.
File consists of course development material for Dr. Robin Fisher's UNBC HIST 702 course "Themes in Native History". Includes HIST 702 syllabus.
File consists of course development material for Dr. Robin Fisher's UNBC HIST 702 course "Themes in Native History". Includes HIST 702 syllabus.
File consists of records relating to the early development of the UNBC Faculty Association, including meeting minutes, a draft constitution, and correspondence.
File consists of correspondence, presentation notes, and a program for the "Northern Perspectives: Visions of Northern Canadian History" workshop. The workshop was part of the Canadian Historical Association Meeting, held as part of the Congress of Learned Societies, Sherbrooke/Lennoxville, Quebec in June 1999.
File consists of correspondence, presentation notes, and a program for "Native Title in Comparative Perspective: Australia, New Zealand and Canada". This seminar was held at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia on 29 July 1999.
File consists of correspondence, presentation notes, and a program for the 1999 BC Studies Conference at Simon Fraser University. Dr. Fisher presented a paper ntitled "Native History in British Columbia in the Twenty First Century".
Item consists of the panel on "Applying Traditional Knowledge to Future Initiatives: First Nations Historical and Future Relationships with the Forests" at the the "Exploring Our Roots: Forest History in Our Communities Annual Conference of the Forest History Association of BC" at UNBC in Prince George, September 19, 2009.
File consists of a single slide depicting people on tour at the McGregot Model Forest.
File consists of slides noted by Arocena as relating to his FSTY 205 course. People and places depicted include: UNBC Forestry faculty, Aleza Lake, Klinka, Tabor Creek, Lake Babine, Bell Mine site, Smithers, Kitwanga, Alaska Highway, Bear Glacier, Muncho Lake, Mt. Robson, and UNBC Campus.
File consists of slides depicting Bear Lake, West Lake, Williams Lake, 10 Mile Lake, Smithers, Fort St. John, WAC Bennett Dam, and UNBC campus.
File consists of slides depicting FSTY 205 students, Tyner Boulevard, Forests for the World, Chilcotin River, FSTY 425 students, Aleza Lake, soil profiles, and luvisol.
File consists of slides depicting a tour of paper mill and forest research plots.
File consists of slides depicting Vernon and research soil profiles.
File consists of slides depicting FSTY 205 students, UNBC campus, and a science lab.