News Archives

 

Whitehorse – Yukon College will be offering a tailor-made sheet metal program. This 5-month program stems from requests at the community level and from local industry that require skilled sheet metal workers to feed the growing economy. The College, in partnership with Advanced Education, created a winter pre-employment course to meet that demand. This new course specifically addresses the short-term training period over the winter.

 

Whitehorse –Winners of scholarship and bursary awards will be celebrated at a special awards reception on Thursday, November 18 at Yukon  College. The ceremony will take place at the Yukon Arts Centre where the recipients will meet their benefactors. Recipients of the following awards will be honoured:

 

Association of Canadian Universities for Northern Studies (ACUNS) Northern resident awards

Alice Donald Scholarship

Aron Senkpiel Scholarship

Hazel Fekete Scholarship

George Walker 8th International Congress on Circumpolar Health Scholarship

Whitehorse – The Dawson City Arts Society (DCAS), the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in First Nation, and Yukon College have renewed their partnership agreement for the governance of the Yukon School of Visual Arts (YukonSOVA) in Dawson  City. The collaborative effort continues with its Foundation Program in the Visual Arts that is transferable to partnering schools Emily Carr University of Art &  Design, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD), Ontario College of Art and Design (OCAD), and Alberta College of Art and Design (ACAD).  The program accepted its fourth contingent of students in September, and graduates of the first year are now completing their final year at the partner institutions.

 

Whitehorse – Yukon College announces the opening of its new culinary arts training facility, the “Hilltop Bistro”, which provides a practical environment for students. The facility is newly renovated with a fine dining room, a bar, and a gallery that exhibits and features local artists.

 

Whitehorse – Gayle Corry is the new director of Finance and Administrative Services with Yukon College. This position oversees Financial Services, Procurement Services, Facilities, Security, Shipping and Receiving, Print Room and Computing Services.

 

Corry has worked in the Yukon since 1996. She has recently moved from the Council of Yukon First Nations as the director of Finance and Administration, a position she has held since 2002, before seeking a new career challenge.

 

“I look forward to working at Yukon  College.  This was just the kind of change in employment that I had been seeking.  Having a post secondary institution like the College is very important for the Yukon, as education builds success. ”

Whitehorse Today Stephen Mooney started at Yukon  College as the Director of the Yukon Cold Climate Innovation Center (YCCIC). After seven years of commuting to Texas, in software development & implementations for Fortune 500 companies, Mooney relocated back to his hometown to work for Northwestel. He had been there since 2003 taking on roles in Business Development, Marketing, Wireless and most recently Manager, Customer Solutions Experts and Network Facilities Group.

 

 Mooney comes with a degree in Industrial Engineering from the Technical University of Nova Scotia, where he won several national design and engineering awards. He has also been certified as a Project Management Professional.

 

Whitehorse – The Applied Arts Division at Yukon College is considering offering a second graduate cohort program, Master of Education in Multidisciplinary Leadership with a possible start date of January, 2011.  Applicants require a four year undergraduate degree. This can be in any discipline. This is a three-year part-time program, offered weekends through the fall and winter semester and more intensive courses in the spring/summer semester.  As this program is run as a cohort, each course will be offered in sequence.

 

Please note that our ability to offer this program is dependent on student numbers.   

 

The Multidisciplinary Leadership specialization is designed to prepare graduates to take on roles of responsibility or leadership in a number of educational or community environments.

 

Whitehorse Decision makers now have the opportunity to learn strategies for integrating climate change considerations into their work while earning a certificate in Decision Making for Climate Change. Participants in this new course, offered by the Northern Climate ExChange (NCE), Yukon Research Center of Excellence, will be trained on tools and strategies for addressing climate change in their work.

 

Whitehorse – Two Yukon College students, Kayla Mintz and Kyle Cashin, have been selected as official staff for the upcoming United Nations Association of Canada Model Arctic Council being held in Whitehorse, October 27-30, 2010.  In conjunction with the UN International Year of Youth: Dialogue and Mutual Understanding, the Model Arctic Council is hosting a simulated UN council where high school students from across northern Canada and 7 other arctic countries gather to dialogue on northern issues. Mintz’ role will be the Official Press of the Model Arctic Council and Cashin will fulfill the responsibility of Delegate Resource Person.

 

Whitehorse – Yukon College’s Yukon Research Centre of Excellence will be hosting a 10th anniversary for the Northern Climate Exchange (NCE) on Friday, October 1. The NCE celebrates with a presentation of its past, its present, and its future accomplishments followed by a birthday cake.

 

The presentation begins with speakers Aynslie Ogden and Bob VanDijken who were at the NCE’s inception. Next, John Streicker and Joy Waters will present the important role that NCE plays in our current circumstances. Finally, the institute’s future development will be explained by Chris Hawkins, the new Vice President of Research.

 

Whitehorse, Yukon – The St. Elias Icefield is one of the largest non-polar icefield in the world and is home to the Kaskawulsh Glacier, a 70 km long glacier located in Kluane National   Park. The study explores the seasonal variations in the surface velocity of the Kaskawulsh Glacier using a combination of surface ice motion measurements (dGPS) and new satellite image analysis techniques. Velocity variations have been linked to seasonal and daily changes in air temperature and melt-water inputs. Results from the remote sensing techniques will be validated by the surface measurements to an accuracy of a few centimeters, so that slight speed up events can be documented.

 

Whitehorse – Yukon College’s Continuing Education Department has just completed a strategic restructuring that will further build upon its success in delivering high quality training in the Yukon. The Fall 2010 CE Calendar was released in late August with many new courses being offered. The course subjects range from self-interest to professional development.