Meet BA ’06 Alexandra Chu: The possibilities of Arts Co-op
The artist’s nickname is “Crabby Tanabe,” and despite his daunting reputation, Alexandra Chu wanted to interview him.
When Takao Tanabe finally called, the 80-year-old Governor General award-winning landscape artist wanted to know exactly what the UBC student knew about visual arts to write an article about it.
Chu, who graduated in May 2006 with a BA in English literature and minor in history, admits she didn’t know much, but she loved the artist’s work and, more importantly, she could write.
Chu considered her profile on Tanabe, which appeared in Ricepaper, the Vancouver-based magazine focusing on Asian Canadian arts and culture, as one of her favourites.
Other profiles she has written include Whistler’s own National Alpine ski racer and Olympic hopeful, Britt Janyk, and illustrator Marcos Chin, the artist behind the “look” of online dating giant, Lavalife.
“Anyone who does reporting, you feel so proud when you have your name out there,” Chu says. “You can google yourself and things come up.”
You could say Chu is building her future one word at time. Literally.
Chu was the recipient of the first-ever UBC Arts Co-op Student of the Year Award, a recognition she received after spending a term writing for FrontCounter BC, a one-stop shop for natural resource businesses wishing to obtain required paperwork.
From the pilot office in Kamloops, BC, Chu assisted in setting up nine other locations throughout the province. She developed content and layout for the agency’s website, created marketing brochures, and produced an online newsletter that caught the eye of an assistant Deputy Minister.
Impressed by the quality and language of Chu’s work, the agency continued publishing the newsletter past its scheduled end date of December 2006.
“She’s a good example of a student who really understood that career development is not something that happens overnight,” says Julie Walchli, founding director of the UBC Arts Co-op Education Program.
“So step-by-step, co-op term by co-op term, and freelance writing assignment by freelance writing assignment, she built a very impressive portfolio and is now graduating with a lot of experience under her belt and a lot of contacts.”
Chu got her big break at the Whistler Museum and Archives, her first co-op work term in 2004. Asked to do an independent research project to contribute to the museum’s records, Chu profiled the movers and shakers of the famed mountain resort community.
“I’d never interviewed, I didn’t know how it would go. I didn’t know if I’d follow the questions I’d set out, or if I’d talk freely,” Chu recalls.
“A few months later, the curator sent me an e-mail and she wanted to use parts of my project for a feature article that was on the cover of the news magazine The Pique for women’s history month.”
When the article appeared, the curator had written an introduction and a conclusion, but the rest was all Chu’s work. “And so that was my start,” she says.
From her first publication at Whistler to writing articles for the Faculty of Arts’ newsletter and website, to being the visual arts editor at Ricepaper, to helping launch FrontCounter BC, the judging committee was impressed, says Walchli.
“A lot of students in Arts want to be journalists, or professional writers in some way, and often it’s hard for them to know how to get started in that career,” Walchli says. “And Alexandra knew that each of her co-op terms and the things she did outside of co-op were building blocks to that ultimate goal.”
Chu’s spot on the Dean’s List during every term at UBC and her onerous role as the editor of the UBC Arts Co-op student newsletter were a some of the many reasons that set her apart from other award candidates, adds Walchli.
From having career goals of wanting to write for a living to interviewing prominent people, Chu has built a hefty portfolio.
“It’s been really exciting because [Ricepaper] is nationally published, and it’s nice to know that someone in Toronto might be reading your work,” says Chu of her feature articles.
Chu acknowledges she was intimidated by the prospect of interviewing Tanabe, but she was in for a surprise after his unexpected call, which produced a personal invitation to his retrospective exhibition.
“He was just so nice. He was the kindest person,” she recalls. “He talked — he was really candid. I love meeting people like that. And some articles, they just come. You just write them, they’re there.”
Today, Chu is the assistant director of marketing and client services at Canadian Education Centre Network, a non-profit company aiming to promote Canada as a study destination for international students. She is one of roughly 2,000 students graduating with an Arts degree this year.
Not bad for a girl who didn’t know what she wanted to do with her English degree. But after four co-op terms at UBC, Chu thinks of her degree as a valuable learning opportunity, helping her to develop her career.
“It’s been about finding what I could do with my English major,” she says.
“At first, with English literature, it seemed like there was not a lot to do,” recalls Chu. “But I think of my writing skills and my research skills as traits. And a lot of people don’t think of it that way, but I think of them as traits that I’ve developed because people commission me to write articles and pay me.”
Chu considers the network of contacts she has built to be invaluable.
“The people you meet are just as important as the jobs you do because you’ll meet people who will be really supportive, who will be references for you to get a career when you graduate, who will help you find other things you’re interested in,” Chu says.
“Like in Whistler, I was really interested in writing. They let me go with it. They helped me to make it something more than just a book in the museum that people may or may not look at.”
Chu, who spent the other co-op terms writing and researching for the Dean of Arts office, the Richmond Museum, and the Whistler Museum and Archives, credits her UBC degree for providing her with transferable skills.
“One of the things in Arts is thinking outside the box. You may not graduate with something like an accountant where you have a specific job, but you have these skills to do anything,” she adds.
“I have a wealth of experience working with children, working as a writer and reporter, working on websites, working with customers in museums, communicating through all sorts of avenues.”
By Bryan Zandberg (BA, 2006, in French and Spanish). Bryan is a former editor with The Ubyssey.
Meet BA ’07 Lisa Davidson: Witnessing Cambodia
While many students spend their summers backpacking through Southeast Asia, Lisa Davidson traveled to Cambodia for an entirely different reason — she wanted to learn about children’s rights and labour, not from a textbook, but in the flesh.
Meet Christiane McInnes: Acting with Art History and 19th-Century Studies
Ask Christiane McInnes about her most bizarre experience as an Arts Co-op and she’ll tell you it was her very first term.
An art history major working toward a minor in 19th century studies, McInnes lept at the chance to act as a British emigré from her favorite century for a theatre show called Storyeum.
For four months one summer in 2005, McInnes donned a costume consisting of “layers and layers” of cotton petticoats, corsets, skirts, gloves and hats, assume the requisite British accent, and traipse around Vancouver’s historic Gastown district, enticing tourists to come see the show.
“One thing I find most funny to think about in retrospect is how many family albums I’m in across the world, because my photograph was taken a million, million times,” McInnes says.
“But it was a lot of fun.”
As much as she enjoyed that summer, McInnes says her co-op experiences have helped toward what she wants to do after university.
This past summer, she finished her fourth and final placement with Vancouver’s Atira Women’s Resource Society, an experience she says cemented her decision to choose professional fundraising as her career.
“I’m really loving it,” she says of her job as writer of grant proposals. Much of her responsibilities had to do with winning funding for Atira, a non-profit that offers support, advocacy, and housing for women and children who have been victims of violence.
“I like the thought that some of these grant proposals will be successful and my work will have supported Atira in some endeavour.”
Aside from Storyeum and Atira, McInnes also spent two back-to-back placements as a research assistant with Arts Academic Advising.
There, she helped develop a pilot program called Peer Academic Coaching, an initiative that identified struggling students on academic probation and paired them with senior students, all in the interest of getting them off probation and pursuing their own personal and academic goals. The program eventually developed into a program that matched senior students with all incoming international students to the Faculty of Arts.
There’s no doubt in McInnes’s mind, Co-op is well worth the time and energy.
“It’s the only kind of program you can do where you gain skills over four months, get a really great reference — hopefully — and then, by the time you’re finished your degree, you have 16 months of work experience under your belt.”
In addition to volunteering and coordinating The Vagina Monologues at UBC in 2005 and 2006, McInnes was also the president of the Arts Co-op Students’ Association in 2006-07.
She says she is a true believer in the power of going out there and getting your hands dirty to strike a balance with what you learn in class.
“Not only does it help you become more employable, it helps you figure out what you want to do and where you want to go — and you’re doing all this while studying and earning money.”
By Bryan Zandberg (BA, 2006, in French and Spanish). Bryan is a former editor with The Ubyssey.
Meet Sheena Bell: Learning outside the classroom
A graduate in honours political science with a minor in French, Sheena has completed four work terms in both the private and public sector, and taken on a variety of roles that range from community outreach; to peer advising; to research and communications. In her co-op career, Sheena has managed to move to Victoria and Ottawa for work in addition to fitting in an academic term away on exchange in Grenoble, France.
Meet Bobby Huang: Working with the IRSRC during Arts Co-op
Bobby Huang first learned about First Nations culture in a Grade 6 classroom. His school had arranged for speakers from Aboriginal communities to present to his class and Bobby remembers how fascinated he was to hear a different perspective on Canada’s history.
“It’s so interesting and important, particularly because it’s a side of Canadian history that we rarely hear about,” says Bobby. “It’s also not the proudest moment in our history but I feel that it’s important that as Canadians, we are informed about the stories of other Canadians.”
Since then, Bobby has held an interest in Canada’s historic relationship with Aboriginal peoples and what can be done to move towards a stronger relationship with the First Nations of Canada. This interest encouraged him to take a seminar on Native History in his third year as a political science student at UBC.
It also led him to his first work term as an Arts Co-op student to Indian Residential Schools Resolution Canada (IRSRC), a federal department dedicated to strengthening partnerships within government and with Aboriginal people and other citizens to address and resolve issues arising from the legacy of Indian residential schools.
As a Litigation Information Analyst, Bobby’s current work at IRSRC involves managing dispute resolution claims filed by former residential school students. Bobby reviews their claims and prepares their cases for a hearing before an independent decision maker and a government representative.
Dealing with the cases of claimants is not always easy. They often involve stories of mistreatment, neglect, and abuse. However, Bobby says, “it is both humbling and inspiring to hear about individuals who have overcome so much adversity in their lives.”
“The most rewarding aspect of my job is the fact that I’m doing a small part to make a difference in other people’s lives,” says Bobby, “There’s a common stereotype that government workers do very little besides pushing paper, but having spent two work terms at a federal department, I have seen first hand that many individuals working in the public service care deeply and are very passionate about their work.”
For Bobby, the Arts Co-op Program has helped him build a career out of his interests. “It’s easy to know what you might want to do,” he explains, “Co-op helped me figure out the steps I needed to take to reach my career goals. Things like networking, being patient, managing expectations, and taking the time to explore career options to find out your likes as well as your dislikes are all valuable lessons I picked up from co-op.”
At IRSRC, Bobby works in what is described as a “sunset department,” a department that will ultimately close when its mandate has been fulfilled. Ironically, this means that if Bobby is successful at his job, he will also be out of a job. This does not sway Bobby, however, as he is confident that his co-op experiences have given him the knowledge, skills, and confidence to find other meaningful work opportunities.
“Within government, there is a broad spectrum of opportunities, particularly for Arts graduates, and there are so many departments and agencies that there’s bound to be something that suits your interest,” he says. “I had never seriously considered a career in the public service but my two work terms at IRSRC have opened my eyes to a potential career path.”
Bobby also serves as co-chair of the Arts Co-op Students’ Association Publishing Team, which publishes the tri-annual co-op online newsletter "arts at work."
By Carmen Chu (BA, 2008, Psychology and English Literature). Carmen is an Arts Co-op student.
Meet Erin York: Student education through the Arts
Hailing from Seattle, Washington, Erin is a film studies graduate with a drama minor and one of the 20 international students formally enrolled in the UBC Arts Co-op Program. While many students going into the program are still unsure about their career goals, Erin knew from the start what her ultimate dream job would be and how the co-op program would help get her there.
Meet Cornell Yeung: From Science to Arts
After spending his first year at UBC as a Science student, Cornell Yeung quickly discovered that working in a lab was not something he wanted to pursue as a career. Frustrated with his initial experiences with academia, Cornell made a somewhat surprising and unexpected decision to leave school altogether.
After a two-year hiatus Cornell made the conscious decision to return back to school, this time as an Arts student.
Cornell lists the Arts Co-op Program as one of his main incentives for coming back to UBC. “I believed that co-op would give me opportunities to acquire practical experience and that is what I wanted to gain most out of my university degree,” he notes.
The decision to join co-op turned out to be a good one for Cornell as he went on to complete four work terms which included a communications position with Vancouver Coastal Health in addition to two international placements in Australia and Japan.
“I enjoyed the diversity of tasks my co-op positions offered me,” Cornell says, “Through my work terms, I had opportunities to work as an English Teacher in Japan, plan an awards ceremony for Vancouver Coastal Health, develop and present an anti-smoking campaign for elementary school children, work as an advisor in an Australian university, and travel.”
Reflecting on the two years he spent out of school, Cornell has no regrets. The work experience he acquired during that time contributed to helping him get into the program as well as gave him experience to offer to employers during his early search for his first co-op placement.
“Everything is a learning experience,” Cornell states, “It’s important to be open-minded when it comes to acquiring experience in both life and work.”
In describing his philosophy when it comes to planning his career, Cornell quotes Oprah, stating, “Luck is opportunity meeting preparation. When I joined the Co-op program, I didn’t know what I wanted to do as a career but I did know that I wanted to be prepared for when I did decide.”
What the Arts Co-op Program offered Cornell was the chance to explore career options. Working in a variety of fields helped him to decide what he wanted and also, what he did not want to do. The Co-op Program gave him opportunities to apply and develop his strengths, acquire transferable skills, network, and build a strong resume.
Now in his final work term, Cornell is traveling to Shanghai, China to work for a land development company.
By Carmen Chu (BA 2008, Psychology and English Literature). Carmen is an Arts Co-op student.
Meet Dr. Mauricio Drelichman: Helping Economics students use research positions to get ahead
Economics professor Mauricio Drelichman believes undergraduates make excellent research assistants.
“I have had much better results in many cases with undergraduates,” Drelichman said, “Graduate students do not need to be research assistants to go to bigger and better places; undergraduate students are really hungry for these opportunities.”
Drelichman believes undergraduates are not given enough consideration for research assistant positions. “A lot of [positions] just require clear thinking and attention to detail,” he said, explaining these are skills most undergraduate students already possess.
“It’s amazing with undergraduates because they really get involved. They do a great job because the motivation is stronger.”
Anthony Wray, Honours History and Economics, and Yamila Simonovsky, Honours Economics, had the chance to work with Drelichman on a number of his research projects before they graduated this May.
“The first task that he’s given me is to go through secondary sources on his research related to Philip II in Spain and record any references to military expenditures,” Wray said, explaining he was also required to calculate exchange rates of the many currencies and coinage he was dealing with.
The project Wray is working on has to do with researching the beginnings of sovereign debt. Drelichman believes it to have begun during Philip II’s reign, and is using Wray’s record of military expenses in collaboration with Philip II’s demands for funding to explain its origin.
Wray started working with Drelichman in March and will continue until August. Drelichman is using the funds he received from the Arts Undergraduate Research Award (AURA) to finance Wray’s position. He believes the AURA should be used exclusively to employ students in research positions.
“I have my own grants for my work,” Drelichman said, “This way I can give students the opportunity to participate in research.”
“The AURA award has a huge impact as it […] makes faculty think of undergraduates.”
Simonovsky has worked on several projects with Drelichman. Her most recent task involved comparing a list of modern Spanish cities with a 16th century census. Simonovsky matched cities from the census to modern cities and recorded the population, a task that sometimes required her to use Google maps.
The research Simonovsky conducted helped Drelichman study the impact of Spanish nobility on economic activity. Using her updated lists of Spanish cities, he measured changes as related to the proportion of nobles.
Drelichman aims to make his research positions as meaningful as possible for the students involved, and play to their strengths.
“I involve them in key parts of the research,” he said, “I don’t assign menial tasks like photocopying.”
Simonovsky and Wray were given their opportunities after previously approaching Drelichman in hopes of being employed in research. Although he had no positions available at the time, Drelichman kept the students in the back of his mind. When positions freed up, he immediately thought of Simonovsky and Wray.
“It’s very important that students approach professors if they want to work with projects.” Drelichman asserted.
He also mentioned that these students were given opportunities to work with faculty members at other universities that needed research done in Vancouver. Simonovsky was involved in a project managed by a colleague of Drelichman’s that compared the prices of Safeway in the United States to those in Canada.
Simonovsky and Wray’s research experience came in handy when they were writing their theses, and helped prepare them for their upcoming endeavours in graduate school.
“Both of us are going to grad school in economics,” Wray said, “From that point of view it looks good; but more than that, […] you get that experience working on an intense research project.”
Drelichman was adamant that the best preparation for graduate school comes from experience in research.
“Grad officers have a difficult task identifying people that would produce good research,” Drelichman said from his personal experience as a graduate admissions officer.
Drelichman explained that excellent marks in undergraduate courses do not necessarily indicate that a student is ready for graduate studies: “[Graduate school] is about who can independently formulate and carry out a research project.”
“When you get an admission letter that says this person has research experience, it’s a sure win for admission,” he said.
“Experience speaks more than any transcript or standardized test.”
By Meghan Roberts (BA 2008, English Literature and International Relations).
Meet Postdoctoral Fellow Stefan Dollinger: Putting English students in the lab for the Dictionary of Canadianisms
UBC Postdoctoral Fellow Stefan Dollinger is taking English students out of the classroom and placing them into the lab as he heads the revision of the Dictionary of Canadianisms.
The project will be the first of many to come out of the Canadian English Laboratory and aims to provide an updated version of the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles (DCHP2). Published in 1967, the first edition was not consistently maintained, leaving it outdated. Dollinger hopes to update the Dictionary while adding new entries from the last 40 years.
The team behind the second version of the Dictionary of Canadianisms has already discovered several new “Canadianisms”, or words and phrases that are unique to Canadian English. There are even some examples of words that originated on the UBC campus.
They’ve found that the oldest citation of the word “creamo” dates back to a 1925 version of the Ubyssey newspaper. Similarly, the drink “Brown Cow” was traced back to a 1976 edition.
Dollinger, who is involved in many research projects with the Canadian English Laboratory, hopes for the success of the Dictionary to be widespread. He aims to make the Dictionary available to Canadian universities and libraries to ensure the general public has access.
The Canadian English Laboratory employs many volunteer and paid student workers, including third year English honours student Sam Chung, and fourth year English Language student Cicily Cooper.
“I’m a research assistant in the Canadian English Language Lab,” Cooper explained, “We ‘harvest’ citations from periodicals we get through huge databases and find words that are Canadianisms.”
“I’ve even found some from the 1700s and 1800s!” Chung said. “We enter the words into the Bank of Canadian English and that’s pretty much it.”
Chung and Cooper both got involved with the project after taking Dollinger’s English 229 class on Canadian English words. Students in the class were asked to research Canadian words for a project; those that did well were given the opportunity to volunteer or work with Dollinger in his lab. Dollinger tries to include some work with the Bank of Canadian English in most of his courses.
Cooper and Chung excelled in their positions and were given paid part-time positions for the summer.
In addition to working with the Dictionary, Chung and Cooper were able to present their research at the Multidisciplinary Undergraduate Research Conference (MURC) last year. They were part of a five person student research team that worked with Dollinger to create a presentation for the conference. Their panel was one of only two groups presenting research in English, which Chung thinks is a shame.
“People have a mentality that research is exclusively reserved for sciences,” Chung said, “MURC was predominantly Science students with the odd Arts students who were mostly from Psychology.”
“I really want to see more Arts students presenting!”
Chung cites Dollinger’s help in the MURC as invaluable, and is grateful for the close relationship they have developed.
“He taught me everything step by step; he’s really caring.” Chung said, “The thing about Professor Dollinger is that he uses students as instruments of research so you’re not just working under him, you’re working alongside him.”
“I’m very indebted to him,” Chung added.
Cooper enjoys being a part of something that hasn’t already been studied in a classroom.
“As an undergrad you rarely feel like you’re a part of something new and different,” Cooper explained. “That’s what’s cool about being in research. I’m finding things that haven’t been found before.”
“I think it’s helped me realize all the opportunities that are out there and feel less limited. Doing this research has made me see there’s more than I can imagine!”
By Meghan Roberts (BA 2008, English Literature and International Relations).
Meet Film Studies student Dax Sorrenti: Invisible Canada – Canadian film abroad
Undergraduate student Dax Sorrenti explores international perception of David Cronenberg’s film Eastern Promises. Sorrenti, a film studies major, is using the popular movie to gauge international opinion of Canadian film. For his research, he studied reviews to see if they mentioned any Canadian elements.