A new book, Research in Teacher Leadership in Canada: Transformative and Contextualized Agency, provides fresh perspectives on the role of teachers as leaders in schools and communities.
Section: Publications and Projects
The Government of Canada today recognized Chanie Wenjack as a person of national historic significance, sparked by a student’s public history project at Brandon University.
Wenjack was an Anishinaabe boy from Marten Falls First Nation in northern Ontario who lived for three years at the Cecilia Jeffrey Indian Residential School near Kenora.
The Arizona State University Wind Ensemble will present the world premiere of the band version of Arcadia Trombonica, an innovative composition by BU alumnus Kenley Kristofferson
Living and Learning with Feminist Ethics, Literature, and Art, a groundbreaking new collection, invites readers into critical conversations on ethics, care, and reciprocity across academic and creative disciplines.
The highly anticipated second edition of Brandon University (BU) sociology professor Dr. Christopher J. Schneider’s seminal book, Policing and Social Media: Social Control in an Era of Digital Media, has been published by Lexington Books.
Self-Regulated Learning and Culturally Responsive Pedagogy: An Integrated Approach to Fostering All Learner’s Engagement and Motivation by Dr. Aloysius C. Anyichie, a leading expert in educational psychology from Brandon University, is now available through Lexington Books.
Brandon University (BU) proudly highlights a unique collaboration between Dr. Jonathan Allan, Canada Research Chair in Men and Masculinities, and undergraduate visual art student Michael Vachon.
Brandon University is proud to announce the publication of Uncut: A Cultural Analysis of the Foreskin, the latest scholarly work by Dr. Jonathan A. Allan.
BU Dean of Arts Dr. Gregory Kennedy has had his monograph, “Lost in the Crowd: Acadian Soldiers of Canada’s First World War,” recognized with New Brunswick Scholarly Book Award 2024.
The call of an owl becomes an omen for Eddie, a former residential school student in Brandon University professors Darrell Racine and Dale Lakevold’s new play Owl Calling. But what kind of an omen will it be for a man who has just opened up about his residential school experience?