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U of S University Club will not dissolve after meeting Thursday night
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Sink into the dry as dust soil : What historic droughts mean for today
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Indigenous enrolment increases slightly at U of S during COVID-19 pandemic
In spite of the COVID-19 pandemic, Indigenous enrolment increased slightly at the University of Saskatchewan during the 2020/2021 school year.
From May 1, 2020 to April 30, 2021, the number of First Nations and Métis students enrolled at the university increased by one per cent.
Alison Pickrell is the assistant vice-provost of strategic enrolment management at the U of S.
“I think it speaks well to how the university community came together to move our programming online to remote delivery and our services and supports to remote delivery,” she said. “I think it also speaks to the resilience of students and their willingness to continue their post-secondary education in a remote mode as well.”
Date Time
What psychology says about COVID non-compliers People who purposefully breach COVID-19 regulations tend to share certain characteristics, finds a study of attitudes and behaviours in Australia, the UK, the US and Canada.
When people protested the COVID-19 lockdown in Sydney last week, many were speculating about whether a certain type of person was more likely to be involved. Does science back that up?
A new University of Sydney study assessed people’s behaviours and attitudes towards pandemic regulations in Australia, the UK, the US, and Canada. It found that roughly 10 percent
[1] of people were noncompliant.
Those individuals were mostly male, less agreeable (cooperative, considerate), less intellectual as a personality trait (less willing to try new experiences), and more extroverted.
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The appointment to the Senate of Canada for Arnot, also a former federal treaty commissioner for the province, was announced Thursday by the Prime Minister’s Office.
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“This is a great honour and I am truly humbled,” Arnot said in a statement.
“The Prime Minister was clear when he spoke to me that he expects me to make a significant contribution to the work of the Senate, and to help tackle the broad range of challenges and opportunities facing our country.”
Arnot has been in the role of chief commissioner since 2009, after starting his legal career in Saskatchewan in 1976.
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