With my five hour commute to UBC cut down to five seconds from my bed to my desk, the pandemic has also provided me more time to get my school work done, which in turn, has left me with more time to do things I enjoy.
Latest articles from Tianne Jensen-DesJardins
Through all the Zoom lectures and the ever-changing physical distancing restrictions, we found that music, in all its forms, was the throughline that kept us going.
Hua Ki’i is an app designed to use AI technology to turn your phone into a visual dictionary.
Being perpetually afraid of missing out, in addition to being isolated from everything and everyone, allowed me to explore university from the safety of my childhood bedroom.
As a Cree lawyer, poet and writer, Good’s representation of residential school survivors and intergenerational survivors in her novel, Five Little Indians, comes from lived experience.
If you aren’t blessed by the air-conditioning gods, this heat wave might feel like a preview of a fiery afterlife.
In the midst of a global pandemic, Martens found herself enjoying the phone calls, even if it may not have been the original plan for the project.
One new event this year is a collaboration with the Thunderbirds Dance Team: flash mobs. With the places and times kept under wraps, students should be on the lookout for these choreographed performances.
I’ve always been a big planner; I get off on colour-coordinated ‘To-Do’ lists. But there’s no way I could have planned for last year.
When you look past the tentacles, the show transforms into a highly-personal story of self-understanding.
As I excitedly got ready for my first class, I thought back to those long Zoom calls, staring at little black boxes briefly illuminated in yellow as microphones were turned on to complete the minimum participation remarks.
With only one night to haunt, I knew exactly where I was headed.
“We want you to be part of the interaction and feel like you’re socializing instead of making it a passive experience,” said Saeed.
It’s officially December, and that means two things: cold weather and exam season
“The beauty of Shakespeare is that just by watching it, you can interpret it to be anything you like,” said Ava Maria Safai.