Student showcase
Lives and Times: Professional Writing students profile retirees for UVic's 50th birthday
L to R: Grant, Rutherford, Pearce, Best
To celebrate the AVÌìÌÃ’s 50th anniversary, professional writing students interviewed and profiled UVic retirees who had seen the university's transformations at first hand.
Profile: Prof. Michael Best: Shakespeare scholar and digital pioneer
by Nicole Rutherford
Dr. Michael Best enters the room in an energetic flurry, five minutes late, but eager to get started with the interview. He shakes off his jacket and sits down. Filling out the pre-interview papers, he mumbles to himself.
Profile: Dean Goard, emergency planner
Brittany Schina
Dean Goard unzips a brown leather case and sifts through a well-organized collection of media releases and stories, each of which documents an event that shaped his 18 years as an employee of the AVÌìÌÃ. He is a planner by nature, and his careful planning shaped UVic’s emergency response strategies.
Profile: Laura Proctor, ed tech pioneer
Clarke Duggan
Three decades ago, computing students at UVic didn't use computers—they used pencils, paper and what were known as “punch cards”– pieces of paper in which holes represented digital information. However, those olden days are long gone, and UVic has since become one of Canada’s leading centers for digital scholarship. This transformation didn’t happen overnight. For more than two decades, Laura Proctor, a woman with a vision, worked behind the scenes, teaching UVic’s faculty and staff how to incorporate new technologies into their research and instruction.
Profile: James Pearce, master maintenance man
Rowan Grant
Different kinds of people experience UVic from different vantage points. Academics know it as a hotbed for research and knowledge. For activists, it introduces a world of issues and opportunities. The socially inclined are able to appreciate the broad diversity of its population. But no one understands the AVÌìÌà quite like James Pearce.