Yukon College helps raise awareness and money for the Global Rotary Club Shelter Box Project. On Tuesday, February 9, Yukon College will donate all proceeds from the sales at the cafeteria to the Shelter Box Campaign. The students and staff of the Culinary Arts program will be serving a lunch special of either a mushroom chicken fettuccine or a vegetarian selection. As well, the Bookstore will contribute all money from sales on February 9th of their rice-crispy squares and sundry items. A display tent explaining the Shelter Box campaign is set up in front of the Bookstore.  
 
During the lunch hour, Catherine (Kip) Veale from the Rotary Club will give a talk about the campaign and show a DVD movie. Each Shelter Box costs $1000.00 dollars. The College’s efforts will try to purchase as many boxes as possible. Boxes are sent to areas that require emergency relief such as Haiti.

Whitehorse – Culinary Arts students at Yukon College will be getting some special tutoring in their craft on Thursday, February 4. The students will have the opportunity to learn from the Food Network Star Chef Massimo Capra who will demonstrate his mastery of Italian cooking techniques.

“We are pleased to collaborate with the high school cooking classes, Skills Canada Yukon, and the Epicurious fundraiser event to bring this opportunity to students,” states Clarence Timmons, Chair of Yukon College Board of Governors. “It gives our students great advantage to work for the day with a nationally acclaimed chef and it fits with the mandate of the College to build a valuable learning experience for the students.”

Whitehorse   Yukon  College students at the Haines Junction Community Campus are busy preparing for Friday’s Haitian Fundraiser Luncheon. Students from all program areas have joined forces to plan, organize, and prepare the event for an expected 200 people.

 

Students will be serving a spaghetti dinner with a choice of either moose meat or vegetarian sauce along with Caesar salad, garlic toast, and dessert. Haines Junction businesses, agencies, and residents have generously donated the provisions for the event. The money raised will go to Doctors Without Borders and the Red Cross Haiti Relief Fund.

 

Whitehorse Whitehorse – Students at Yukon College will be able to get a first-hand account on the subject of rejuvenation of ice-wedge cracking in the North. Carleton University researcher Dr. Chris Burn is at Yukon College this week as part of his role as Northern Chair for the Natural Sciences and Research Council of Canada (NSERC) who works with the Yukon Centre of Excellence. Dr. Burn is invited into the classroom to present permafrost science findings to the students.

 

Whitehorse – Yukon College and the University of Alaska Southeast are signing a Memorandum of Understanding to offer the web-delivered Master of Business Administration Program to Yukon students.

The purpose of the MOU is to expand opportunities for students interested in pursing an MBA and to meet the professional development needs of the Yukon business community.

The signing will take place Tuesday January 26th from 9:30 – 10:30 in the Yukon College Boardroom.

“This is a significant step that will allow Yukon College students to gain the necessary skills to become leaders in a variety of areas,” says Jeff Wolosewich, Acting Dean of the Division of Applied Science and Management. “It’s important that the Yukon work to develop and retain our leadership capacity.”

The program will offer a mix of theory and practice in areas such as, marketing, accounting, corporate strategy and human resource and personnel administration.

Yukon College has two visiting graduate students working at the Yukon Research Centre for Excellence this semester.

 

Vicki Sahanatien is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Biological Sciences, at the University of Alberta, Edmonton. She is completing her doctoral studies on Polar Bear Sea Ice Habitat Selection and Climate Change in the eastern Arctic. Her research is interdisciplinary, combining ecological, physical and social sciences. Sahanatien lived and worked for many years in the Canadian Arctic, and has conducted field studies from 66N to 83N. She finds the arctic an exciting place for research as it possible to explore exceptional landscapes, new ideas, and discover alternative ways of understanding.

 

Staff and faculty at Yukon  College have recently received territorial and national awards. At the Commissioner’s New Year’s Levee on January 1, 2010, Jennifer Moorlag received the Governor General’s Caring Canadian Award and Bunne Palamar, was awarded the Yukon Commissioner’s Award for Public Volunteer Service. David Mossop was awarded the Gerry Couture Stewardship Award in December.  

 

Yukon College will be closed for the holidays between December 25 and January 3, reopening on Monday, January 4, 2010. We look forward to serving you at that time!

 
Staff and students at Yukon College are being encouraged to sign up for a snowshoeing program in the New Year, which is aimed at increasing physical activity, relieving stress and improving focus.
 
Cultural Development Facilitator, Randall Tetlichi, will take participants around the College and provide snowshoeing instruction at lunch hour, every Wednesday, from January 6th to April 28th.
 
Tetlichi says he will teach the basics of snowshoeing, such as how to walk, run, jog and how to float on top of the snow. “I’ve been around snowshoes my whole life,” Tetlichi says.
Yukoners will soon have a new resource that will provide training and education to Yukoners in a wide variety of social justice fields and will also undertake related research.
The Northern Institute of Social Justice is preparing to deliver training programs in 2010. The institute will be based at Yukon College, Justice Minister Marian C. Horne, Education Minister Patrick Rouble, Health and Social Services Minister Glenn Hart and Yukon College President Terry Weninger announced today.
“Through the institute, employees in public and First Nation governments, organizations and businesses will deliver programs and services that will help Yukoners address a variety of challenges and possibilities,” Horne said.
About eight per cent of all jobs in Yukon – 1,390 in total – have been identified as having a social justice-related component.