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Since the circulation of books at UBC is getting lower every year, the university is relying less on library fines.
The AMS has released preliminary results of its university-wide COVID-19 survey.
The selected projects look to address the questions arising from the pandemic to better inform policy-makers around control of the disease moving forward.
According to a recent study, nearly 46 per cent of Canadians believe in at least one COVID-19 conspiracy theory circulating online.
Dr. Patrick Keeling, a biologist and professor in the UBC department of botany, was awarded the prize under the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s Symbiosis in Aquatic Systems Initiative.
And what the assignment, asking students to pitch the Queen of Spain as Christopher Columbus, says about ethics instruction at the faculty.
Despite economic benefits, continued construction comes with concern over noise for neighbouring residents and health risks to workers themselves.
The planning committee is currently on track to launch the plan in September 2020, with implementation and evaluation to follow in coming years.
Online course material and instructor flexibility have provided some leeway for all students, including those with diverse abilities. Meeting the needs of each student, however, still proves a challenging task.
UBC students now have the opportunity to study the COVID-19 pandemic as it unfolds in a new course, COVID-19 and Society.
64 per cent of study participants who tested positive for fentanyl reported knowingly using the substance. This number is up from 2015 where a previous study found that the majority of people (73 per cent) who tested positive for fentanyl did not know they used it.
On May 6, the BC government announced that it would be shifting the province back into some sense of normalcy amid the COVID-19 pandemic in four phases. Here’s how the phases will look at UBC moving forward.