Faculty of Education /edu/ Reinventing education for a diverse, complex world. Mon, 29 Jun 2026 13:56:29 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/28/2020/07/favicon.png Faculty of Education /edu/ 32 32 Exploring Equity Through Hair and Science /edu/2026/06/23/exploring-equity-through-hair-and-science/ Tue, 23 Jun 2026 19:51:59 +0000 /edu/?p=47705 Teacher candidates in the EDPJ 2000 Science & Technology in Primary Junior class participated in Visions of Science’s “Equity in STEM Instruction in Ontario Classrooms” workshop with an additional “Hair & Hustle” module, learning how Culturally Responsive and Relevant Pedagogy can be woven into daily STEM lessons and align with the Ontario curriculum.

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Teacher candidates in the EDPJ 2000 Science & Technology in Primary Junior class participated in Visions of Science’s “Equity in STEM Instruction in Ontario Classrooms” workshop with an additional “Hair & Hustle” module, learning how Culturally Responsive and Relevant Pedagogy can be woven into daily STEM lessons and align with the Ontario curriculum. 



At 91ɫ’s Faculty of Education, teacher candidates are continually invited to rethink what teaching and learning can look like in today’s diverse classrooms. A recent workshop “Equity in STEM Instruction in Ontario Classrooms”, featuring the interactive Hair & Hustle module offered a powerful example of how Culturally Responsive and Relevant Pedagogy (CRRP) can transform STEM education. 

Partnering for Change: Visions of Science
Course Director, Nadia Qureshi, partnered with Visions of Science, a non-profit organization dedicated to advancing equity in STEM. Visions of Science guests Jawahir Mohamud, Manager of In-School Programs & Partnerships, and Ali Raza, Senior Specialist in Curriculum Integration, facilitated the workshop. 
Visions of Science works with schools, families, educators, and community partners to increase access to STEM learning for Black and racialized youth from low-income communities. Nadia shared “As a researcher in science education, I have investigated the ways in which equity and anti-racism impact student experiences in science learning. The findings show incorporating equity and anti-racism is foundational to meaningful science experiences for Black and racialized youth. So, organizations like Visions of Science are excellent resources to introduce teacher-candidates to in their journey.”

Centring Equity in STEM Learning
The session focused on how Culturally Responsive and Relevant Pedagogy (CRRP) can be meaningfully integrated into everyday STEM teaching while remaining aligned with the Ontario Science Curriculum. Teacher candidates explored how STEM is not confined to labs, but instead exists in everyday life and lived experiences. 
Through Visions of Science’s adaptable 30-minute modules, participants saw how equity-centred lessons can be seamlessly embedded into classroom practice.  

Learning Through "Hair & Hustle"
The highlight of the workshop was the hands-on Hair & Hustle module. Teacher candidates were challenged to create their own hair care products using accessible, everyday ingredients such as coconut oil, shea butter, aloe vera, avocado oil, and glycerin. This activity opened the door to rich scientific inquiry, from exploring solute and solvent interactions to understanding protein structures in hair. Crucially, it also grounded science in culturally meaningful contexts. 

Bridging Science and Identity
For teacher candidates who may feel uncertain about teaching science the workshop was transformative. It reframed science as something familiar and accessible. 
By connecting concepts to everyday practices like hair care or cooking, participants began to recognize that they have always been engaging with science, even if it wasn’t previously framed that way. This realization builds confidence while expanding what counts as scientific knowledge. 
“When students see their identities reflected in what they learn, it fosters a deeper sense of belonging and curiosity,” Nadia reflected.  

Voices from the Classroom
Teacher candidates also reflected on the workshop’s impact: 

“I really enjoyed the Hair & Hustle workshop. As a hijabi, it reminded me how important it is to take care of and maintain the health of our hair, even when it’s covered… The inclusion of different hair textures made the activity feel reflective of the diversity in the room. It was practical, accessible, and empowering.” 
—&Բ;Huda Ali, PJ Teacher Candidate 

“This workshop introduced me to a creative way of interacting with science… Hair care is a critical part of Black culture, identity, and pride. This experiment demonstrated how culturally responsive approaches can meaningfully integrate diverse backgrounds into teaching and learning.” 
—&Բ;Nimo Jimale, PJ Teacher Candidate

Looking Ahead
Workshops like this invite future educators to reimagine STEM as a space where science, culture, and identity intersect. By embedding equity into the foundation of teaching practice, 91ɫ teacher candidates are equipped to create classrooms where every student can see themselves as scientists. 

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PhD student brings Indigenous food to Ontario hospital menus /edu/2026/06/10/phd-student-brings-indigenous-food-to-ontario-hospital-menus/ Wed, 10 Jun 2026 19:33:43 +0000 /edu/?p=48031 The third-year doctoral student at 91ɫ's Faculty of Education is a Red Seal-certified Indigenous chef, an Ontario College of Teachers-certified educator and a member of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, Oneida Nation of the Thames, Bear Clan.

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a person making bannock

The third-year doctoral student at 91ɫ's Faculty of Education is a Red Seal-certified Indigenous chef, an Ontario College of Teachers-certified educator and a member of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, Oneida Nation of the Thames, Bear Clan.

He was also the primary consultant on an initiative led by Compass Group Canada to bring Indigenous meals into Ontario hospitals – a project that recognizes the role of traditional and cultural food in healing.

His contributions also serve as a testament to his work to advance meaningful cross-cultural engagement.

Rick Powless
Rick Powless

"It was emotional for me," he says of the menu’s launch in Sudbury. At 91ɫ, his PhD research draws on Indigenous food sovereignty, food insecurity in urban centres and strategies to integrate traditional foods and land-based knowledge into Kindergarten to Grade 12 education.

Much of Powless's work focuses on how traditional foods and land-based knowledge support well-being, identity and learning for Indigenous people living in urban communities. His research explores the impact of food and cultural disconnection on mental health while also examining how Indigenous knowledge is taught – or overlooked – in Ontario’s Kindergarten to Grade 12 classrooms. For Powless, that means pushing beyond superficial, checkbox-driven approaches and creating space for stories, reciprocity and food-based learning rooted in Indigenous ways of knowing.

“If you give somebody a recipe to cook Indigenous food but don't have the stories or the history behind those recipes then the students aren't getting anything out of it,” he says. “Beyond mere sustenance, our food is also a form of cultural transmission.”

Part of what makes his work distinct is its attention to access. Indigenous ingredients – such as sun chokes, wild rice, butternut squash – have been more commercialized, driving up prices and making them less accessible.

Read the full story in the June 3, 2026 issue of Yfile

SDG 4,10 and 11

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Study led by 91ɫ U tracks decade-long rise in high school absenteeism /edu/2026/06/08/study-led-by-york-u-tracks-decade-long-rise-in-high-school-absenteeism/ Mon, 08 Jun 2026 17:01:34 +0000 /edu/?p=47867 As Ontario moves to make attendance and participation part of high school students' final marks, 91ɫ research offers context for what rising absenteeism may signal and why there may be no simple fix.

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male high school student sitting at a desk in an empty classroom doing school work

As Ontario moves to make attendance and participation part of high school students' final marks, 91ɫ research offers context for what rising absenteeism may signal and why there may be no simple fix.

Gillian Parekh and Robert Brown

The study, co-authored by Faculty of Education's Robert Brown, adjunct professor, and Gillian Parekh, associate professor and Canada Research Chair in Inclusion, Disability and Education, along with collaborators from the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) and Wilfrid Laurier University, uses the 2011-12 academic year as a baseline to track absenteeism trends in TDSB schools through 2023-24.

One of the study's key findings complicates the common assumption that rising absenteeism is mainly a post-COVID issue. While student absence rates surged dramatically during and after the pandemic, the researchers found that roughly one-third of this increase was already underway before the pandemic.

"COVID took existing trends and put them on steroids," says Brown. "This isn't something just caused by COVID."

The study finds that absenteeism roughly doubled over the 12-year period, with increases evident across grades. Brown says attendance tends to be relatively high in kindergarten, stable through much of elementary school, then rises in senior elementary grades before accelerating in high school. More recent 2023-24 data show some decline in absence rates among early and mid-elementary students, but rates continued to climb across all secondary grades.

Read the full article in the June 3, 2026 issue of Yfile

image of SDG-4, Quality Education and SDG-10, Reduced Inequalities

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First-year BEd student leads printmaking field trip at 91ɫ /edu/2026/06/03/first-year-teacher-candidate-leads-printmaking-field-trip-at-york/ Wed, 03 Jun 2026 20:09:02 +0000 /edu/?p=47508 In this reflection, first-year BEd student Bennett De Medeiros shares their experience leading their practicum class through an engaging and creative introduction to print media.

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In this reflection, first-year BEd student Bennett De Medeiros shares their experience leading their practicum class through an engaging and creative introduction to print media.


Introduction
My name is Bennett De Medeiros (he/they), a first-year Education student at 91ɫ. My primary focus within my Visual Arts teachable is to provide students with diverse hands-on opportunities within the Arts. Grade 11 and 12 students from St. Edmund Campion were welcomed into the Print Media Studio at 91ɫ for a school workshop. As a Print Representative for the Visual Arts Student Association (VASA), I worked alongside David Scott Armstrong, the Print Media Associate Professor here at 91ɫ.

Exploring the Creative Process through Monoprinting
In planning this workshop, our goal was to provide an experience unavailable at St. Edmund Campion. We chose Monoprinting, a unique disciplinary art form. While most Printmaking is defined by its ability to create repeatable images (like the everyday use of an ink stamp), Monoprinting produces a singular, non-repeatable design. To prepare for the workshop, I introduced my students to the global history of Printmaking and taught how to develop templates to ensure a smooth transition of the creative process once they arrived at the studio.

The SHSM Experience
This event was programmed as an Arts and Culture Specialist High Skills Major (SHSM) workshop, designed to introduce visiting students to post-secondary facilities. Under the demonstrations and the guidance of Professor Armstrong, students toured the studio, analyzed existing 91ɫ student work, and dove into the technical process of Printmaking by preparing their plexiglass surfaces to roll and draw ink to create their designs. Then to produce their design, students collaboratively used Printing presses to transfer designs onto specialized paper and how to safely prepare the printing bed. A crucial component of the Printmaking is learning the essential habits of studio maintenance and safety, students handled and cleaned the ink and tools for the future Printmakers of the studio.

Reflections of Community
Beyond the technical skills, the workshop emphasized the importance of the shared studio environment. Learning to maintain a clean, safe space as it is integral to the post-secondary experience and fosters the loving creative community here at the Department of Visual Art & Art History (VAAH). To conclude the day, each student was awarded a SHSM certificate of my own design. Overall, I am incredibly proud of how these students navigated a professional studio space for the first time as their results truly exceeded my expectations.

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Celebrating the Art of Education and Scholarship at the Faculty of Education /edu/2026/05/28/celebrating-the-art-of-education-and-scholarship-at-the-faculty-of-education/ Thu, 28 May 2026 20:22:56 +0000 /edu/?p=47655 On May 21, the Faculty of Education community came together for its annual End-of-Year Celebration. This year's event centred on the theme of arts and scholarship.

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Presenter Elena Rakitskaya

On May 21, the Faculty of Education community came together for its annual End-of-Year Celebration. This year's event centred on the theme of arts and scholarship.

The event featured a variety of engaging presentations exploring the many intersections between art and education — from art in education and the art of teaching, to research and scholarship inspired by creative practice. Faculty members and presenters shared innovative ideas and thoughtful reflections that highlighted the important role of the arts in teaching, learning, and research.

Graduate Student Presentations

As part of the celebration, Dean Robert Savage presented two awards recognizing excellence in research and teaching within the Faculty. The event served as both an informative and celebratory occasion, marking a positive conclusion to another successful academic year.

Faculty Award Recipients

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Research aims to close literacy gap /edu/2026/05/27/research-aims-to-close-literacy-gap/ Wed, 27 May 2026 13:29:05 +0000 /edu/?p=47606 Robert Savage, dean of the Faculty of Education at 91ɫ, is leading research that asks a deceptively simple question: What actually helps children learn to read – and how early can schools intervene to make a lasting difference?

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Robert Savage, dean of the Faculty of Education at 91ɫ, is leading research that asks a deceptively simple question: What actually helps children learn to read – and how early can schools intervene to make a lasting difference?

Years of experience as a school teacher and psychologist have framed his thinking about research, which since 2023 has focused on how children learn to read, both typically and atypically.

Robert Savage
Robert Savage

His research has also informed literacy policy and classroom practice in Ontario.

For instance, Savage served as a consultant to the Ontario government on its reading curriculum following a 2022 Ontario Human Rights Commission report on human rights issues affecting children with reading disabilities. Drawing on his research expertise and experience in schools, he contributed to the revised curriculum and helped develop supporting videos and scripts to make the changes easier for teachers to understand and incorporate into the classroom.

“I’m always interested in a mix of theory and practice and in how to use theory to develop better programs for developing reading,” he says. “I also like to collaborate.”

During another project, while working with colleagues at Concordia University, he co-created the web-based literacy program  that offers activities for learners and is free to the public.

More recently, with funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the Max Bell Foundation, Savage and a colleague at the University of Alberta have partnered with school boards in five provinces, including Ontario, to develop new screening tools, assess existing ones and share literacy resources. School boards in Alberta, Ontario, Quebec, B.C. and Saskatchewan have used the tools to screen incoming Grade 2 students, assess reading skills, identify areas of concern and implement targeted reading programs to help prevent reading difficulties.

Read the full article in the May 22, 2026 issue of Yfile

image of SDG-4, Quality Education and SDG-10, Reduced Inequalities

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Student leadership shines as 91ɫ U presents Tiffin Awards /edu/2026/05/12/student-leadership-shines-as-york-u-presents-tiffin-awards/ Tue, 12 May 2026 14:03:53 +0000 /edu/?p=47490 From launching mentorship programs to creating inclusive spaces and tackling food insecurity, 12 91ɫ students are being recognized with the Robert J. Tiffin Student Leadership Award for leadership that contributes to the growth, development and vitality of the University. Now in its 14th year, the award honours Robert J. Tiffin, who served as 91ɫ […]

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From launching mentorship programs to creating inclusive spaces and tackling food insecurity, 12 91ɫ students are being recognized with the Robert J. Tiffin Student Leadership Award for leadership that contributes to the growth, development and vitality of the University.

Now in its 14th year, the award honours Robert J. Tiffin, who served as 91ɫ’s vice-president, students, for nine years. University community members nominate individuals who demonstrate leadership and make valuable contributions to 91ɫ.

This year’s recipients represent a wide range of disciplines and leadership pathways, says Yvette Munro, vice-provost, students.

“The depth and breadth of leadership shown by our students is remarkable and we continue to see the meaningful ways they contribute to 91ɫ," says Munro. “Whether they are supporting students across the University, within their Faculty or in groups built around shared interests or lived experiences, their leadership helps strengthen the 91ɫ community.”

Recipients of the award play a vital role in shaping the 91ɫ student experience and enhancing the character of 91ɫ, says Tiffin. “They have led, not because they were asked, but because they cared enough to step forward. Through their contributions they have nurtured a 91ɫ tradition of a university that embraces new ideas and innovative thinking.”

The winners were celebrated on May 6 at 91ɫ’s Keele Campus.

This year’s award winners included 4 students from the Faculty of Education: Devonte Ellis, Cheyenne Schmidt-Harlick, Isabella Gouveia, and Anaum Fatima Iqbal.

Read the full article in the May 8, 2026 issue of YFile.

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Education Alumni Recognized in 91ɫ’s 2026 Top 30 Under 30 /edu/2026/04/16/education-alumni-recognized-in-york-universitys-2026-top-30-under-30/ Thu, 16 Apr 2026 12:57:38 +0000 /edu/?p=47599 The recipients of the sixth annual recognition demonstrate a deep commitment to giving back and are tackling complex social issues across various industries – all before the age of 30.

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headshots of 4 of this year's recipients

Three alumni from the Faculty of Education have been recognized in 91ɫ’s 2026 Top 30 Under 30 program.

The recipients of the sixth annual recognition demonstrate a deep commitment to giving back and are tackling complex social issues across various industries – all before the age of 30.

This year’s honourees are making great strides in fields such as aviation, entrepreneurship, sustainability, health care, technology, AI and more. Together, they are working toward building an innovative and sustainable future, paving the way for future generations.

“Each year, the Top 30 Alumni Under 30 program highlights the remarkable achievements and impact of 91ɫ’s global young alumni community,” says Julie Lafford, assistant vice-president, alumni engagement. “This year’s cohort features a diverse group of innovators who are shaping the future through their leadership, creativity and volunteerism.”

Since 2021, the Top 30 program has celebrated the success and diversity of the University’s alumni community, while inspiring the next generation of young alumni leaders. 

To view the full list of the 2026 Top 30 Alumni Under 30, and learn more about their accomplishments,  visit the Top 30 Alumni Under 30 webpage.

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91ɫ researcher rethinks math education for Black students /edu/2026/04/14/york-researcher-rethinks-math-education-for-black-students/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 13:10:58 +0000 /edu/?p=47023 For Molade Osibodu, creating what she calls “liberatory futures” begins in the mathematics classroom. An associate professor of math education at 91ɫ’s Faculty of Education, Osibodu focuses her research on how Black students experience math and how education systems can better support equity.

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Edited by Ashley Goodfellow Craig | April 10, 2026

Happy high school student writing on the chalkboard

For Molade Osibodu, creating what she calls “liberatory futures” begins in the mathematics classroom.

An associate professor of math education at 91ɫ’s Faculty of Education, Osibodu focuses her research on how Black students experience math and how education systems can better support equity.

Molade Osibodu
Molade Osibodu

“I want Black learners who enter a mathematics classroom to be fully, completely themselves instead of feeling like they don’t belong,” says Osibodu, who is keenly aware of the persistent and unfounded stereotypes about Black learners’ abilities in math – and how those beliefs intersect with Canada’s colonial legacy and history of immigration.

Osibodu’s teaching experience across three continents has fuelled her interest in and passion for addressing challenges faced by Black students in Canada. Before joining 91ɫ, she taught secondary school mathematics in South Africa and later taught mathematics and mathematics education courses in the U.S. and Canada. Her research has since documented a range of obstacles faced by Black students in Canadian classrooms.

“It’s impossible to look at course syllabi without realizing that it’s important for equity to be at the core of the teaching practice,” she says. “My ultimate goal is to create math education where Black learners are thriving.”

A key aspect of her work is understanding how Black students experience math, which, in Canada, requires knowledge of the population’s demography. As her colleague Carl James, the Jean Augustine Chair in Education, Community and Diaspora at 91ɫ, has long emphasized, the Canadian Black community is diverse – including descendants who arrived via the Underground Railroad, families who immigrated from the Caribbean decades ago and more recent immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa – leading to a variety of educational experiences.

Read the full article in the April 10, 2026 issue of Yfile

With files from Elaine Smith

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91ɫ research results in guide to support children’s museum educators /edu/2026/03/30/york-research-results-in-guide-to-support-childrens-museum-educators/ Mon, 30 Mar 2026 14:06:47 +0000 /edu/?p=46793 Professor Lisa Farley and her research colleagues have developed a reflection guide for museum educators to support their efforts to discuss challenging topics and ideas with children.

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Edited by: Ashley Goodfellow Craig | March 27, 2026

Black female teacher teaching a group of four diverse elementary age kids about the planets

91ɫ Faculty of Education Professor Lisa Farley and her research colleagues have developed a reflection guide for museum educators to support their efforts to discuss challenging topics and ideas with children.

The guide builds on the team’s 2025 study of programming and practices at children’s museums in Canada and the United States.

Lisa Farley

Farley says museum educators are navigating increasingly constrained environments when addressing equity, diversity, accessibility and inclusion with young audiences. Often, the idea of “childhood innocence” is cited as a reason to censor or downplay controversial and challenging ideas.

At the same time, Farley says, "children live within the social and political world, and are themselves subjects of and/or witnesses to injustices, violences and inequities."

She adds that the question then becomes "not how to protect them from difficult knowledge, but what it can mean to facilitate meaningful engagements.”

Farley and her colleagues, including 91ɫ’s Gillian Parekh, associate professor of education and doctoral candidate Suad Ahmed, conducted the original study in partnership with the Association of Children’s Museums (ACM). Their research found that while many children’s museums focus on exploration, play or self-expression, addressing social and historical issues with young audiences were secondary.

Read the full article in the Friday, March 27, 2026 issue of Yfile

Article written by Elaine Smith, special contributing writer

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