Graduate Program in Education Archives | Faculty of Education /edu/tag/graduate-program-in-education/ Reinventing education for a diverse, complex world. Thu, 15 Jan 2026 13:03:34 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/28/2020/07/favicon.png Graduate Program in Education Archives | Faculty of Education /edu/tag/graduate-program-in-education/ 32 32 Graduate Program in Education: OPEN HOUSE /edu/events/graduate-program-in-education-open-house/ Thu, 30 Oct 2025 13:25:48 +0000 /edu/?post_type=mec-events&p=44747   Thinking about pursuing your MEd or PhD degree? Join us for the Graduate Program in Education Info Session Night (Open House) to learn more about 첥Ƶ's Graduate Program in Language, Culture & Teaching – one of Canada's most innovative and interdisciplinary programs. Date: Wednesday, November 19, 2025 Time: 4:00 - 5:30 p.m. Location: Grad […]

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Thinking about pursuing your MEd or PhD degree?

Join us for the Graduate Program in Education Info Session Night (Open House) to learn more about 첥Ƶ's Graduate Program in Language, Culture & Teaching – one of Canada's most innovative and interdisciplinary programs.

Date: Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Time: 4:00 - 5:30 p.m.

Location: Grad Lounge - 113 Winters College

During this session, prospective students will:

  • Learn about the program's structure and areas of specialization
  • Meet current students and faculty
  • Get guidance on the application process
  • Discover how York supports graduate students in advancing their scholarly and professional goals

RSVP by November 10, 2025 to attend this in-person event.

For more information about the Graduate Program in Language, Culture & Teaching, visit //ٳܻԳٲ/ܲٱ-Dz/

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Minister’s Award of Excellence honours 첥Ƶ Innovators /edu/2025/07/23/ministers-award-of-excellence-honours-york-u-innovators/ Wed, 23 Jul 2025 16:40:55 +0000 /edu/?p=43639 Two 첥Ƶ community members – Professor Satinder Kaur Brar and Faculty of Education PhD candidate Anna Pearson – have been recognized with a 2024 Minister’s Award of Excellence from Ontario’s Ministry of Colleges and Universities.

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Two 첥Ƶ community members – Professor Satinder Kaur Brar and Faculty of Education PhD candidate Anna Pearson – have been recognized with a 2024 Minister’s Award of Excellence from Ontario’s Ministry of Colleges and Universities.


The annual awards celebrate the work of faculty and staff at publicly assisted colleges and universities who are making a difference in students’ lives, in their communities and in the province. This year, there were more than 170 nominations and only six recipients selected, including professors, researchers and post-secondary leaders.

Brar, a professor in the Department of Civil Engineering at York’s , received the award in the category of Innovation and Entrepreneurship. The category recognizes faculty and staff who work with industry and business to drive economic development in Ontario.

A globally recognized leader in green technologies for removing contaminants from drinking water and wastewater, Brar was recognized for her pioneering research in enzyme-based environmental remediation. Working in collaboration with researchers at the Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique and engineering consulting firm TechnoRem Inc., Brar helped develop and implement a faster, more sustainable method for cleaning petroleum-contaminated sites using enzymes rather than traditional microorganisms. The method, which is 100 times faster and achieves an 80 per cent reduction in contaminants without toxic residues, is especially effective in cold northern climates where other microorganisms are less viable.

Satinder Kaur Brar and Anna Pearson at the June 25 ceremony where they received their Minister's Awards of Excellence.
Satinder Kaur Brar and Anna Pearson at the June 25 ceremony where they received their Minister's Awards of Excellence.

The approach has been supported by the Federal Contaminated Sites Action Plan and is already in use at several polluted sites across Canada, addressing surface water, groundwater and soil contamination. “Once it [the method for cleaning sites] gets into the field, that is where the real magic starts,” says Brar, noting how rewarding it is for her team to see their lab work result in real-world environmental improvements.

She describs receiving the award as a “fantastic surprise” and emphasizes the recognition is a shared achievement with her research team. “It’s a great boost for them to understand that whatever we do in the lab does see light of the day at some point,” she says.

Brar also highlights the importance of collaboration with stakeholders and industry. “This kind of recognition reinforces the belief that we can transition from lab to field,” she says, “and when we see the results in the field, it can have fantastic repercussions.”

Pearson, a PhD candidate at York, received the award in the category of Future-Proofing Ontario’s Students. The category highlights individuals whose work helps students build the skills and resilience needed for success in a rapidly evolving world.

Pearson, who has taught in both elementary and secondary settings across Ontario for nearly two decades, was recognized for her contributions to program design, policy leadership and community-based learning initiatives aimed at preparing teacher candidates to meet the demands of a changing educational landscape.

Reflecting on the award, she credits those who shaped her own academic path. “It means I've had some wonderful teachers in my life,” she says. “And it also means that now I'm giving my students the same kind of mentorship that I received.”

She also sees the recognition as an opportunity for thoughtful evaluation. “It means that I have an opportunity to see what's working and what's not,” she says. “And that's the hard part.”

Brar and Pearson’s achievements exemplify 첥Ƶ’s commitment to excellence in teaching, innovation and societal impact.

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Graduate Program in Education - Prospective student INFORMATION SESSION /edu/events/graduate-program-in-education-prospective-student-information-session/ Mon, 28 Oct 2024 14:31:43 +0000 /edu/?post_type=mec-events&p=41372 Join us for an Information Session for prospective students to learn more about the Graduate Program in Education: Language, Culture & Teaching in the Faculty of Education at 첥Ƶ

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Graduate Program in Education INFORMATION NIGHT flyer

 

Are you interested in learning more about the Graduate Program in Education: Language, Culture and Teaching at 첥Ƶ's Faculty of Education? Come learn more about our Master of Education (MEd), Master of Leadership & Community Engagement (MLCE) of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree programs. Program advisors, faculty, current students and staff will be available to answer all of your questions related to the program and the application process.

Please RSVP at  by November 11th.

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Graduate Program in Education - Information Session /edu/events/graduate-program-in-education-information-session/ Mon, 18 Sep 2023 20:25:48 +0000 /edu/?post_type=mec-events&p=36846   Are you interested in pursuing a MEd or PhD degree? Come learn more about the GRADUATE PROGRAM IN LANGUAGE, CULTURE & TEACHING. The Graduate Program in Education: Language, Culture & Teaching is internationally known for its interdisciplinary approach to engaging the most pressing educational research, ideas and issues of our time. For over twenty-five […]

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Graduate Program in Education Information Session flyer

 

Are you interested in pursuing a MEd or PhD degree? Come learn more about the GRADUATE PROGRAM IN LANGUAGE, CULTURE & TEACHING.

The Graduate Program in Education: Language, Culture & Teaching is internationally known for its interdisciplinary approach to engaging the most pressing educational research, ideas and issues of our time. For over twenty-five years, the program has supported researchers, scholars and students to advance ground-breaking thinking, studies and policies in education. Our graduate students are leaders across the private and public education sectors and continue to make positive change in the field of education wherever they are.

Learn more about the program, how to apply, and meet current students and faculty.

 

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Mobilizing to Shift Power /edu/2023/04/24/mobilizing-to-shift-power/ Mon, 24 Apr 2023 13:31:45 +0000 /edu/?p=35268 The Faculty of Education is proud to showcase the work of Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) professional degree program student Shava McLean, who is making a significant impact in the field of education through her capstone project, "Mobilizing to Shift Power."

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Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) degree program student Shava McLean presenting her capstone project "Mobilizing to Shift Power"
Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) degree program student Shava McLean presenting her capstone project "Mobilizing to Shift Power"

A closer look into Shava McLean’s Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) professional degree program Capstone Project

The Faculty of Education is proud to showcase the work of Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) professional degree program student Shava McLean, who is making a significant impact in the field of education through her capstone project, "Mobilizing to Shift Power."

“The project sets out to better understand how non-profits and grassroots leaders might reimagine mobilization approaches as a vehicle that enables Black and Brown voices to direct and to be in control of policies that affect them in pushing for police reform and broader access to justice,” Shava says. “And to further share recommendations for inclusive policy-making practices that lawmakers and community organizers should be aware of.”

Through this project, McLean had the chance to ally with grassroots leaders and community organizations in Toronto's Regent Park neighborhood to complete her research.

One such leader was Joseph K. from Regent Park, a dedicated community activist who has been making positive change in the community through using media documentation and community storytelling as a tool to challenge dominant narratives that are harmful to racialized communities. McLean also collaborated with Community leader Sureya Ibrahim from Toronto Centre for Learning and Development (TCCLD), who played an integral role in ensuring that her research authentically centered BIPOC voices. To complete her research, McLean also worked closely with Mothers of Peace – Regent Park, a grassroots group, comprised of racialized female-identified resident leaders who have been impacted or provide leadership support to victims of gun violence in Toronto Downtown East. The group engages in numerous community mobilization efforts, served as a community crisis response collective, while advocating for neighborhood safety, racial justice and economic opportunities for low-income residents.

Members of Mothers of Peace – Regent Park working on a project
Members of Mothers of Peace – Regent Park working on a project

“The capstone work contextualizes Black and Brown communities’ socio-historical experience of excessive use of police force and broader systemic injustices as symptomatic to a much larger problem of lack of equitable access to public participatory processes and decision-making power over the policies that impact them,” Shava says. “A number of processes, techniques, program materials, oversight bodies were drawn on to bring this project to life.”

image of a mural with a black fist and wording about systemic injustices

McLean notes that her research drew on a number of theoretical frameworks, which included: Critical Race Theory, Design Thinking, community centered leadership, and anti-oppressive research practices. "Part of that included recognizing that, in the search to understand and challenge the way power is constructed, research in itself is laden with power,” she says. “Traditionally, researchers hold significant decision-making over the research process and framing.

“In my capstone research work, I took a decentralized approach by creating pathways for research participants to have input and control over the research". The significance of McLean's work is not only felt in the University's Faculty of Education, but also in the broader Ontario education community. Her research shines a light on the importance of inclusive policy-making and the need to empower marginalized voices in the fight for justice.

"It's important for the education community to understand the impact of systemic injustices on marginalized communities and to work towards creating inclusive and equitable policies," says McLean.

Article by Dennis Bayazitov special contributing writer.

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Lessons from a former Superintendent with the TDSB /edu/2022/07/20/lessons-from-a-former-superintendent-with-the-tdsb/ Wed, 20 Jul 2022 18:21:03 +0000 /edu/?p=32429 In his time as Superintendent with the TDSB, Duffus chiefly served students, communities and schools within the Jane and Finch corridor. A central part of his role focused on serving as system lead for equity and inclusion, which involved asking what teachers should be doing as a system to support underserved students to change their trajectories from underachievement to achievement.

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Glenford Duffus sitting and posing for a picture wearing a navy blue suit
Glenford Duffus

Glenford Duffus always wanted to be a lawyer in his youth. That is, until his studies brought him to Coffee Piece All-Age School in Coffee Piece, Jamaica—a school where the principal’s focus was on assisting students who were from deep-rural communities to be engaged in academic achievement, he recalls.

 “The strategies the principal employed at the time to help underserved kids were excellent,” he says. "The way she engaged the community in the effort really attracted my attention.”

So when the principal approached Duffus and asked if he had ever considered Teacher’s College, he did not hesitate. “It was the first thing I did [after school]. I went off to Teacher’s College at the age of 19, and have been a teacher ever since.”

Duffus is now retired, but this fateful decision brought him 45 years of service in education.

Duffus began his career in the Jamaican education system where he served for over 15 years—nine as principal, after which he moved to Canada. His new pedagogical practice in Canada brought him back to his roots in Jamaica as a classroom teacher which he drew on in order to perfect his craft in a new cultural context. Such mastery would lead him to positions as VP, Principal and ultimately Superintendent with the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) for nine years.

Along the way, Duffus pursued a PhD with the Faculty of Education, his focus being on Language, Culture and Learning.

In his time as Superintendent with the TDSB, Duffus chiefly served students, communities and schools within the Jane and Finch corridor. A central part of his role focused on serving as system lead for equity and inclusion, which involved asking what teachers should be doing as a system to support underserved students to change their trajectories from underachievement to achievement.

“Do we have open access to high quality educational offerings that all students can tap into that will help them advance their academic aspirations and lead them to some kind of gainful employment?” he says. “That will move them out of poverty and into accessing the kind of wealth through their education that other groups do?”

Duffus says that a key takeaway from this time was to recognize that many students have undergone trauma and oppression. “Such students cannot leave those aspects of their experience at the door when entering the classroom,” Duffus emphasizes. "Such students must bring who they are into the school and learning environment, which then becomes a part of their identity.”

“Just like we have the Reconciliation Deal to support our Indigenous individuals, we need not only some kind of specific things to support Black and Hispanics, who are at the bottom of the pyramid in terms of achievement, but we also need to some kind support to help them climb,” he says.

These are the sorts of lessons Duffus can reflect on after a 45+ year career as an educator. Teachers like him have a truly unique viewpoint about the role classroom teachers have in bringing these broader-scale visions to fruition.

He considers students today who might be in a similar headspace as the young student in Jamaica who nearly went into law so many years ago. To those students on the fence about whether teaching is for them, he says: “You have to have a love for the advancement of humanity. You have to be passionate about service.”

To him, service means putting yourself aside to take on the causes of others—something that he himself, over his entire experience as an educator, has had to continuously do: support students and their families in order to help those who were disenfranchised.

“I could have made big bucks in some other profession or career, but nothing would have given me the self-actualization and satisfaction that I feel having served 40-something years as a teacher,” he says. “So if you’re looking for something where you will be satisfied that you’ve done your best and have served humanity, this is the route to go.”

Article by Dennis Bayazitov, special contributing writer


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Grad students invited to share work at annual Conference in Education /edu/2022/01/19/grad-students-invited-to-share-work-at-annual-conference-in-education/ Wed, 19 Jan 2022 14:48:41 +0000 /edu/?p=30495 첥Ƶ graduate students are invited to present their creative and scholarly works in a collaborative, professional and welcoming environment during the 18th annual 첥Ƶ Graduate Student Conference in Education

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word image depicting the theme of the 첥Ƶ Graduate Student Conference in Education which is "re."
The theme of the 첥Ƶ Graduate Student Conference in Education is “re:”

첥Ƶ graduate students are invited to present their creative and scholarly works in a collaborative, professional and welcoming environment during the 18th annual 첥Ƶ Graduate Student Conference in Education, March 24 to 26.

This year’s event will be offered in a hybrid format, with virtual and in-person sessions (pending changing COVID regulations), and will highlight the theme “re:.” As society moves toward a re-opening, the theme invites presenters and attendees to explore the preposition re: as an intersection of pasts, presents and futures as we re-imagine and re-consider our ‘re’sponsibility as researchers, educators, scholars, storytellers, makers and creators.

Graduate students interested in submitting proposals for the conference should do so by Feb. 9 at 11:59 p.m.

For more information on the call for submissions, or on the conference theme, visit the . Questions can be directed to the conference committee by emailing gradconf@edu.yorku.ca.

Article originally published in the January 19, 2022 issue of


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In the media: Soul searching: Are you ready for a meaningful career change? /edu/2021/03/02/in-the-media-soul-searching-are-you-ready-for-a-meaningful-career-change/ Tue, 02 Mar 2021 19:29:00 +0000 /edu/?p=26552 Associate Professor Vidya Shah speaks to HRD magazine about the Faculty's Master of Leadership and Community Engagement degree program (MLCE) – which focuses on leading and fostering social change.

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Finger pressing a new career start button.

Sixty percent of employees are now considering a real career change. COVID-19 has inadvertently sparked an era of soul searching – pushing employees to really think about their lives, their goals, and their future plans.

Human Resources Director (HRD) magazine spoke to Dr Vidya Shah, assistant professor in the Faculty of Education at York University and staunch follower of issues of equity and justice. Dr Shah revealed how to know if it’s time to put your career soul searching into action.

“It all starts with the five C's,” Dr Shah told HRD. “The first theme is contribution - asking yourself real questions around how you are contributing to the wellbeing of others. Are you doing the most you can to build a humane world?

Shah revealed a new program on offer at 첥Ƶ - Master of Leadership and Community Engagement degree program (MLCE) – which focuses on leading and fostering social change.


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Faculty launches new Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) program /edu/2017/05/30/faculty-launches-new-master-of-leadership-and-community-engagement-mlce-program/ Tue, 30 May 2017 17:19:26 +0000 https://edu.yorku.ca/?p=15248 The Faculty of Education officially launched its new Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) program earlier this month. The first cohort of 11 students gathered at 첥Ƶ on Saturday May 6th for an orientation and for their first two blended courses “Critical Issues in Leadership and Community Engagement” and “Engaging Research in Professional […]

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MLCE student cohortThe Faculty of Education officially launched its new Master of Leadership and Community Engagement (MLCE) program earlier this month. The first cohort of 11 students gathered at 첥Ƶ on Saturday May 6th for an orientation and for their first two blended courses “Critical Issues in Leadership and Community Engagement” and “Engaging Research in Professional Practice”.

The MLCE degree program, the first of its kind in Ontario, is a professional master’s degree offered by the Graduate Program in Education that prepares graduates to advance in leadership roles in public sector organizations and communities with a focus on community engagement and innovation.

The program is designed for candidates who are working in a wide range of contexts, including educational settings, community organizations, and other public sector areas, such as health care, child and youth services, libraries, arts and culture institutions, and recreational programs.

“I decided to take the MLCE program because as an Academic Advisor at 첥Ƶ I want to be able to learn about and develop strategies to increase student retention and engagement with students from the immediate York community,” said April, a student in the program and Academic Advisor at York. “I believe that the MLCE will provide me with the knowledge and skills to do this.”

A central component of the program is experiential learning where students will participate in two community placements. These placements provide participants with arenas in which to reflect, consolidate, integrate, synthesize and deepen their understandings of their future roles as leaders in their various professions.

“The MLCE will give students in-depth understandings of leadership, community, and engagement while enhancing their research capacity,” said Sue Winton, Associate Dean of Research & Community in the Faculty of Education. “The program was designed for public sector professionals who are interested in developing their professional skills and knowledge to leverage community-based research and practice for social change. We want to equip students with what they need to advance in their careers and to improve their communities.”

For more information about the Master of Leadership and Community Engagement program, visit the Faculty of Education .

 

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