Shown here at L’Arc de Triomphe, students in the EU Study Abroad Program visited Paris as part of the course, accompanied by UWindsor professor Emmanuelle Richez.Shown here at L’Arc de Triomphe, students in the EU Study Abroad Program visited Paris as part of the course, accompanied by UWindsor professor Emmanuelle Richez.

Course gives students a first-hand look at European Union

Not many people get to question a Russian official about interference in the American election, but a select group of UWindsor students have done just that.

Students enrolled in the European Union Study Abroad Program got a hands-on appreciation for international relations with a trip May 5 to 18. They visited NATO’s new headquarters in Brussels, met with representatives of non-governmental organizations, and had discussions with officials from the major EU institutions and country representatives, including the first secretary of the permanent mission of the Russian Federation to the EU.

“That was interesting for me because we were able to ask some tough questions,” said political science major Justin Grainger, one of 10 UWindsor students who participated in the course.

He said the meeting was one of several highlights of the trip. There were day trips to Paris and Bruges, the medieval capital of West Flanders in Belgium, cultural meccas Grainger and other students had never visited before this trip.

Grainger said he also especially liked an address by Clare Hutchinson, the NATO Secretary General’s Special Representative for Women, Peace, and Security. Grainger said Hutchinson discussed NATO’s new focus on the disproportionate effect of violence on women in combat zones.

“It’s a new lens that NATO looks through,” Grainger said.

Students also got a first-hand look at the workings of the European External Action Service, an organization that operates as the foreign and defence ministry of the European Union to enact humanitarian and security policies.

The course, which also included seven students from Western University, was serendipitously timed for the days leading up to the European Parliament elections, held every five years.

UWindsor’s Emmanuelle Richez, a political science professor who accompanied the students on the trip, said the elections were top of mind for students.

Students were able to sit in on a taping of the Euronews NBC television show Raw Politics where the special guest was Jan Zahradil, a Member of the European Parliament and the lead candidate of the European Conservatives and Reformists Group running for the presidency of the next European Commission.

Students had backstage access and were part of the live studio audience. They stayed at the Irish College in Leuven, Belgium, home of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, a European university founded in 1425.

“It’s a wonderful experiential learning opportunity,” said Richez of the course.

While on the trip, students were expected to make daily journal entries. Now home, they must produce a research paper worth 60 per cent of the final grade in the course.

“I would definitely recommend this course,” said Grainger, who spent about $3,500 on the trip. “I knew it would be great exposure, but I never imagined the kind of access we had. We had candid discussions. It was a real discussion about real issues.”

Founded by UWindsor professor Stephen Brooks, the EU Study Abroad Program is in its 11th year. While most of the program participants study political science or international relations, this year’s course also attracted students in mathematics and science.

─ Sarah Sacheli

scene of man swimming with shark from the documentary feature “Sharkwater Extinction.”UWindsor film professor Nick Hector won a national award for his work editing the documentary feature “Sharkwater Extinction.”

Prof swims away with film editing award

UWindsor film professor Nick Hector received the 2019 Canadian Cinema Editors Award for Best Editing in a Documentary Feature for his work on Sharkwater Extinction at an awards ceremony May 30 in Toronto.

The film exposes the illegal fishing industry that threatens the survival of the world’s sharks. It premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2018 and opened the following month in theatres across Canada.

Hector produced and edited the film, directed by Rob Stewart. He is an inaugural member of the Canadian Cinema Editors honours society, a professional association of film editors.

In a 30-year career, Hector has worked in the film and TV industry, cutting more than two dozen feature documentaries and 100 TV documentaries. He joined the UWindsor faculty last year, teaching film production to students of Communications, Media and Film and the School of creative arts with an emphasis on documentary filmmaking and post-production.

Paul Brereton, Jeremy MillerUWindsor MBA grads Paul Brereton and Jeremy Miller are the founders of a data analytics company supported by the EPICentre.

Analytics service hoping to serve small and medium-sized businesses

UWindsor MBA grads Paul Brereton and Jeremy Miller hope to use their time in the RBC EPIC Founders Program to build a network of potential customers for their start-up, the Data Company.

The two learned about the program through an earlier experience with the Entrepreneurship Practice and Innovation Centre (EPICentre) and thought it a perfect vehicle to launch their new venture.

“We want to put the power of data analytics into the hands of businesses of all sizes,” says Miller. “We’ve noticed that while businesses in 2019 are collecting more data than ever, they often lack the knowledge and human capital needed to extract its value.”

Brereton says they would like to develop a solid product by Pitch Day.

This program is also an excellent opportunity to really test our business model and get a better understanding on what’s going to work, what’s not going to work and what our customers really want from us,” he says.

The program is intended to help startup founders launch viable ventures, working over 12 weeks to test out their entrepreneurial dreams. This is the first of a series of articles introducing this summer’s participants leading up to a showcase of their prototypes in August at EPICentre. Learn more on the centre’s website.

graphic of flowersA workshop for faculty and staff offers training in responding to disclosures of experiences of sexual violence.

Response to sexual assault survivors subject of workshop

A workshop for faculty and staff aims at increasing their capacity to respond safely and respectfully to disclosures of experiences of sexual violence.

The three-hour Responding to Disclosure Support Workshop includes an overview of trauma and responses, including empathetic responding, concrete responding skills, and resources for survivors of sexual violence.

Co-facilitated by Caiti Casey and Anne Rudzinski, the workshop was first offered in May and will be repeated this month in two sessions:

  • 9 a.m. Tuesday, June 11, or
  • 1 p.m. Thursday, June 27.

Workshops are also available upon request.

Register at https://uwindsor.ca1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_enxp3tMaf6HnDpz.