Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Life

New Directors Join Vancouver Opera Board

Darpan News Desk, 06 Oct, 2016 02:49 PM
    Two highly esteemed community leaders were elected to the VO Board of Directors at the company’s Annual General Meeting on September 17, 2016, joining a group of 24 members chaired by Pascal Spothelfer. The meeting also reviewed the company’s artistic and financial successes in 2015-2016 and looked ahead to the exciting 2016-2017 Season and Festival.
     
    Nika Collison (Jisgang) belongs to the Ts’aahl clan of the Haida Nation. She has worked in the field of arts and heritage for almost 20 years, specializing in historic and contemporary Haida art and culture.
     
    Serving as curator of the Haida Gwaii Museum at Kay Llnagaay since 2000, she also works as an independent consultant. Throughout her career, Nika has worked with institutions in the creation of major exhibitions and publications. She is a senior negotiator for Haida repatriation initiatives and works on a global scale to build relationships between the Haida Nation, museums, other institutions, and the public.
     
    Dr. Judy Halbert has extensive experience in K-12 education. She has served as a teacher, principal, district leader and policy advisor with the Ministry of Education in the areas of innovative leadership, accountability and Aboriginal education.
     
    She is a co-founder of the British Columbia Networks of Inquiry and Innovation and the Aboriginal Enhancement Schools Network and recently served as a Canadian representative to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)’s international research program on Innovative Learning Environments. 
     
    With Dr. Linda Kaser, Dr. Halbert co-authored Spirals of Inquiry for Equity and Quality (2013), Leadership Mindsets: Innovation and Learning in the Transformation of Schools (2009) and, with Helen Timperley, A Framework for Transforming Learning in Schools: Innovation and the Spiral of Inquiry (2014). 

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    People with social anxiety disorder make good friends too

    People with social anxiety disorder make good friends too
    People with social anxiety disorder may find it difficult to make new friends, but the relationship that they have with their friends is not as terrible as they imagine, says a new study....

    People with social anxiety disorder make good friends too

    Skin contact bolsters mother-baby bonding

    Skin contact bolsters mother-baby bonding
    Skin-to-skin contact can make breastfeeding easier by relaxing the mother and baby, enhancing their bond, and helping the baby to latch better...

    Skin contact bolsters mother-baby bonding

    Emotional awareness promotes healthy eating

    Emotional awareness promotes healthy eating
    Learning to pay attention to your emotions could enhance the choices you make with regard to food, thereby helping you lose weight, says a new research....

    Emotional awareness promotes healthy eating

    Big Booty Business: Some Businesses Cash In As More Women Chase Bigger Butts

    Big Booty Business: Some Businesses Cash In As More Women Chase Bigger Butts
    Gym classes that promise a plump posterior are in high demand. A surgery that pumps fat into the buttocks is gaining popularity. And padded panties that give the appearance of a rounder rump are selling out.

    Big Booty Business: Some Businesses Cash In As More Women Chase Bigger Butts

    What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes

    What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes
    They are finicky and fickle, and might be updating their wish lists as often as their Instagram accounts. Do you have any idea what to buy the teenagers on your holiday shopping list this year?

    What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes

    As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall

    As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall
    TORONTO — Deep in the bowels of a building on Toronto's hospital row, some scientists are taking the fall for you, Canada. In fact, over and over again. The researchers are slipping, flailing, losing their balance. It's all in the hope that someday you won't have to.

    As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall