SDGs Archives | Faculty of Education /edu/tag/sdgs/ Reinventing education for a diverse, complex world. Wed, 10 Jun 2026 19:34:46 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/28/2020/07/favicon.png SDGs Archives | Faculty of Education /edu/tag/sdgs/ 32 32 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 91亚色'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 91亚色'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 鈥 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鈥檚 launch in Sudbury. At 91亚色, 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 鈥 or overlooked 鈥 in Ontario鈥檚 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.

鈥淚f 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,鈥 he says. 鈥淏eyond mere sustenance, our food is also a form of cultural transmission.鈥

Part of what makes his work distinct is its attention to access. Indigenous ingredients 鈥 such as sun chokes, wild rice, butternut squash 鈥 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 91亚色 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, 91亚色 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, 91亚色 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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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 91亚色, is leading research that asks a deceptively simple question: What actually helps children learn to read 鈥 and how early can schools intervene to make a lasting difference?

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Robert Savage, dean of the Faculty of Education at 91亚色, is leading research that asks a deceptively simple question: What actually helps children learn to read 鈥 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.

鈥淚鈥檓 always interested in a mix of theory and practice and in how to use theory to develop better programs for developing reading,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 also like to collaborate.鈥

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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91亚色 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 鈥渓iberatory futures鈥 begins in the mathematics classroom. An associate professor of math education at 91亚色鈥檚 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 鈥渓iberatory futures鈥 begins in the mathematics classroom.

An associate professor of math education at 91亚色鈥檚 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

鈥淚 want Black learners who enter a mathematics classroom to be fully, completely themselves instead of feeling like they don鈥檛 belong,鈥 says Osibodu, who is keenly aware of the persistent and unfounded stereotypes about Black learners鈥 abilities in math 鈥 and how those beliefs intersect with Canada鈥檚 colonial legacy and history of immigration.

Osibodu鈥檚 teaching experience across three continents has fuelled her interest in and passion for addressing challenges faced by Black students in Canada. Before joining 91亚色, 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.

鈥淚t鈥檚 impossible to look at course syllabi without realizing that it鈥檚 important for equity to be at the core of the teaching practice,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y ultimate goal is to create math education where Black learners are thriving.鈥

A key aspect of her work is understanding how Black students experience math, which, in Canada, requires knowledge of the population鈥檚 demography. As her colleague Carl James, the Jean Augustine Chair in Education, Community and Diaspora at 91亚色, has long emphasized, the Canadian Black community is diverse 鈥 including descendants who arrived via the Underground Railroad, families who immigrated from the Caribbean decades ago and more recent immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa 鈥 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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91亚色 research results in guide to support children鈥檚 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聽Lisa Farley聽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

91亚色 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鈥檚 2025 study of programming and practices at children鈥檚 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 鈥渃hildhood innocence鈥 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.鈥

Farley and her colleagues, including 91亚色鈥檚 Gillian Parekh, associate professor of education and doctoral candidate Suad Ahmed, conducted the original study in partnership with the Association of Children鈥檚 Museums (ACM). Their research found that while many children鈥檚 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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91亚色 research challenges how healthy aging is defined /edu/2026/03/25/york-research-challenges-how-healthy-aging-is-defined/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 15:12:35 +0000 /edu/?p=46687 A new study led by聽Natalia Balyasnikova, associate professor in the聽Faculty of Education聽at 91亚色, is calling for a shift in how healthy aging is understood globally.

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A group of diverse happy seniors taking a selfie

A new study led by Natalia Balyasnikova, associate professor in the Faculty of Education at 91亚色, is calling for a shift in how healthy aging is understood globally.

Published in the , the study responds to the United Nations Decade of Healthy Ageing, an international framework aimed at improving the lives of older adults through age-friendly environments, better care systems and efforts to combat ageism. While these priorities are important, Balyasnikova and her co-authors 鈥 all co-conveners of the Educational Gerontology Special Interest Group at the British Society of Gerontology 鈥 felt it reflected a recurring gap

Natalia Balyasnikova

鈥淎cross global health and aging policy frameworks, learning is largely absent or treated as peripheral,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e wanted to examine this omission more systematically and, importantly, to offer examples that demonstrate how participation in learning environments contributes to healthy aging and well-being.鈥

To do so, the researchers turned to three real-world learning initiatives in Canada and the U.K. 鈥 projects they helped design, lead or facilitate. This first-hand involvement allowed them to analyze participant experiences in depth, rather than observe programs from a distance.

In Canada, older immigrants participated in the Seniors Storytelling Club, a 10鈥憇ession, arts-based language-learning program where learners created oral, written and multimodal stories while building community with peers. In the U.K., the team examined two initiatives: a one-day intergenerational co-creation workshop that used movement, drawing and collaborative activities to explore sustainability; and the Ageing Well Public Talks, an ongoing public education series launched in 2019 that has reached more than 90,000 participants worldwide.

Read the full article in the March 20, 2026 issue of Yfile

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91亚色 experts contribute to action plan on education for a better future /edu/2023/12/14/york-experts-contribute-to-action-plan-on-education-for-a-better-future/ Thu, 14 Dec 2023 16:32:11 +0000 /edu/?p=38428 91亚色鈥檚 UNESCO Chair in Reorienting Education towards Sustainability Charles Hopkins, along with Executive Coordinator to the UNESCO Chair Katrin Kohl, will be among 250 experts presenting concepts toward implementing education for sustainable development (ESD) at a global UNESCO meeting in Japan.

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tablet on desk with image of the UN SDGs on the screen

91亚色鈥檚 UNESCO Chair in Reorienting Education towards Sustainability Charles Hopkins, along with Executive Coordinator to the UNESCO Chair Katrin Kohl, will be among 250 experts presenting concepts toward implementing education for sustainable development (ESD) at a global UNESCO meeting in Japan.

鈥淭ransforming education together: ESD-NET Global Meeting鈥 takes place Dec. 18 to 20 and aims to highlight progress on ESD through new country-led initiatives, trends and innovations for the 2030 Agenda 鈥 an action plan to encompass the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Charles Hopkins, UNESCO Chair in Reorienting Education towards Sustainability at 91亚色, and Katrin Kohl, executive coordinator to the UNESCO Chair.
Charles Hopkins, UNESCO Chair in Reorienting Education towards Sustainability at 91亚色, and Katrin Kohl, executive coordinator to the UNESCO Chair.

The UNESCO Chair at 91亚色 focuses on developing and strengthening global networks, as well as creating and fostering research that supports responsible and inclusive policymaking in reorienting education toward sustainability in the SDGs and beyond.

In light of the global climate crisis, humans must learn to live together sustainably and change the way they think and act as individuals and societies, says Kohl. 鈥淓ducation has an important role to play and, in turn, must change to create a peaceful and sustainable world for the survival and prosperity of current and future generations.鈥

ESD has been identified by the United Nations as an empowering concept to address growing sustainability challenges. The global meeting will serve as a forum to understand how educators can enable learners to develop the knowledge and awareness to act for a better future.

Experts from around to world will unlock ideas for concrete, transformative action and identify specific interventions that can be carried out by UNESCO麓s member states, says Hopkins, who will contribute perspectives on higher education鈥檚 unique roles and how the whole-institution approach, or even a whole-community approach, can come to life. Canada aims to launch its own country initiative on ESD with a pan-Canadian working group in early 2024.

The session 鈥溾 aims to discuss how to enable higher education institutions to inspire societal change through the lens of education, research and innovation, and how to embed core sustainability competencies within educational programs.

Kohl will co-moderate the 鈥溾 to create shared projects and research focusing on transformation, technology and governance as future priorities for ESD.

The meeting will take place as a hybrid event at the United Nations University Main Campus in Tokyo. Plenary sessions on the first day will be livestreamed. For more information, visit the .

Article originally published in the December 13, 2023 issue of

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91亚色 launches report on progress toward the UN Sustainable Development Goals /edu/2022/01/24/york-university-launches-report-on-progress-toward-the-un-sustainable-development-goals/ Mon, 24 Jan 2022 14:04:32 +0000 /edu/?p=30539 91亚色 is marking the United Nations International Day of Education theme of 鈥淐hanging Course鈥 with the release of a dynamic new report and website documenting its progress toward the United Nations (UN) 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

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image of the 91亚色 Commons pathway in the spring with trees and bushes all lush and green

91亚色 is marking the United Nations International Day of Education theme of 鈥淐hanging Course鈥 with the release of a dynamic new report and website documenting its progress toward the United Nations (UN) 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).


The UN Sustainable Development Goal Report is 91亚色鈥檚 first annual progress report on the SDGs. Both the report and its accompanying website share stories of progress and facts about 91亚色鈥檚 leadership, commitment and progress toward the 17 goals through inspirational stories, facts and figures, and forward-looking action.

鈥淚t is inspiring to see how our faculty, course directors, staff and students are taking action to embed the UN Sustainable Development Goals in their work as we further our commitment to contributing to positive change on a local and global level,鈥 said Rhonda Lenton, president and vice-chancellor.

The United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals as an infographic
The United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals

In 2020, 91亚色 formally declared its commitment to the SDGs, which align with its values, mission and core strengths. The University pledged to become an agent of positive change through global leadership and action on the goals and the converging challenges of a pandemic, rapidly accelerating climate change, racism and xenophobia, increasing global poverty and inequality. In June 2020, the University took a further step in its commitment to the goals when it launched its blueprint for action, , and issued a pan-University challenge to its community to collaborate and act.

The report and website offer an overview of a fraction of the many actions, innovations and research by faculty, staff and students at 91亚色. Both have been created with view that each will continue to evolve as new actions and innovations emerge in the University鈥檚 journey toward contributing to the SDGs. Community members can share their work that relates to the SDGs through a story submission button on the website. As part of the launch of the report and the website, 91亚色 will be sharing stories the SDGs on social media at #91亚色USDGs.

First launched in 2015 and adopted by 193 member states of the UN, the 17 SDGs offer a framework for the global community to take concrete, measurable action in areas considered essential to mitigating humanity鈥檚 harmful impacts on the planet and to ensuring global peace and prosperity.

To learn more about 91亚色鈥檚 demonstrated progress toward the UN SDGs, visit www.yorku.ca/unsdgs, or follow #91亚色USDGs.

Article originally published in the January 21, 2022 issue of .


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