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College, University and Professional Education (20)

  • 5. Rebuilding Relationships
    5. Rebuilding Relationships
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    Jean-Martin Gagnon 2023 22 min
    Police Tech students meet with members of an Algonquin community. They learn about the realities of minority groups... and the consequences of not following the rules.
  • 4. Collective Responsibilities
    4. Collective Responsibilities
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    Jean-Martin Gagnon 2023 28 min
    The 2017 Quebec mosque attack renews the debate over radicalization. In this tension-filled period, the Maisonneuve community finds itself grappling with questions of personal and social responsibility.
  • 1. Collateral Damage
    1. Collateral Damage
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    Jean-Martin Gagnon 2023 27 min
    Collège de Maisonneuve is shaken by a shocking turn of events. Both students and faculty are deeply affected and try to make sense of this disturbing development.
  • 6. Daring to Risk Failure
    6. Daring to Risk Failure
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    Jean-Martin Gagnon 2023 30 min
    Students take stock of their turbulent time at Maisonneuve. They reveal how the remarkable and striking events of the last two years—and the reflections they brought on—have influenced their own journeys.
  • 2. Systemic Problems
    2. Systemic Problems
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    Jean-Martin Gagnon 2023 26 min
    The student association engages in critical self-assessment over diversity and considers the best way forward. Meanwhile, students question the association’s practices.
  • Acadia Acadia?!?
    Acadia Acadia?!?
    Michel Brault  &  Pierre Perrault 1971 1 h 15 min
    This feature-length documentary is an on-the-spot record of the student protests that shook the Université de Moncton in 1968-69. Led by students desiring greater recognition of the French fact in New Brunswick, the protests spawned street marches, petitions and a sit-in, but also many discussions among students seeking to re-establish an Acadian identity.
  • Acadia Acadia ?!?
    Acadia Acadia ?!?
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    Michel Brault  &  Pierre Perrault 1971 1 h 57 min
    In the late 1960s, with the triumph of bilingualism and biculturalism, New Brunswick's Université de Moncton became the setting for the awakening of Acadian nationalism after centuries of defeatism and resignation. Although 40% of the province's population spoke French, they had been unable to make their voices heard. The movement started with students-sit-ins, demonstrations against Parliament, run-ins with the police - and soon spread to a majority of Acadians. The film captures the behind-the-scenes action and the students' determination to bring about change. An invaluable document of the rebirth of a people. In French with English subtitles.
  • Discordia
    Discordia
    Samir Mallal  &  Ben Addelman 2004 1 h 8 min
    On September 9, 2002, a scheduled appearance by former Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu sparked heated debate at Montreal's Concordia University. By the end of the day, the "Concordia riot" had made international news, from CNN to Al-Jazeera. This film documents the fallout from that eventful day, following three young campus activists as they negotiate the most formative year of their lives. Filmmakers Ben Addelman and Samir Mallal jump into the fray with street-smart bravado and a handheld camera. Buoyed by the songs of hip-hop artist Buck 65, this film offers a tonic reflection on the current state of Canadian student activism and the enduring value of tolerance.
  • Eye Witness No. 47
    Eye Witness No. 47
    1952 11 min
    Their Clinic's the World: Operating from Geneva, Switzerland, the World Health Organization brings improved health and living standards to remote parts of the world. Home on the Campus: Manitoba University's coeds qualify for degrees in home economics as they learn to grapple with the problems of housekeeping and baby care. The Plane that Beats the Bush: The De Havilland Beaver, an aerial pack-horse designed to meet the needs of the bush pilot, demonstrates it versatility.
  • For the Cause
    For the Cause
    Rodolphe Caron 2011 52 min
    This feature documentary tells the story of the Notre-Dame-du-Sacré-Cœur Congregation which was formed in 1924 when 53 French-speaking nuns separated from their unilingual English community, forming a new religious community that immediately began to campaign for the preservation of Acadian language, faith and culture. Convinced that education was essential for Acadian women, in 1943 the Congregation founded Collège Notre-Dame d’Acadie, where young women were able to study in French for the first time in New Brunswick.
  • Maritime Montage
    Maritime Montage
    Julian Biggs  &  Rollo Gamble 1955 30 min
    There are two subjects in this film--the cooperative movement stemming from St. Francis-Xavier University in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, and a rural fair at Egmont Bay, Prince Edward Island.
  • No Apple for Johnny
    No Apple for Johnny
    John Weldon 1977 9 min
    This animated short is the visual enactment of the year-long obstacle course run by a teacher trainee. Rich in humor and anecdote, it is a comedy of educational manners seen through the autobiographical and unflinching eye of the trainee-turned-filmmaker.
  • Occupation
    Occupation
    Bill Reid 1970 46 min
    In this documentary, striking political science students concerned with the democratization of their university occupy the offices of the Political Science Department at McGill University. The issue: greater student control over the hiring of faculty. The film crew lives with the students and follows their action through confusion, argument, dissent, and negotiations with faculty. The result is an intimate view of a student political action.
  • Professor Norman Cornett: "Since when do we divorce the right answer from an honest answer?"
    Professor Norman Cornett: "Since when do we divorce the right answer from an honest answer?"
    Alanis Obomsawin 2009 1 h 20 min
    This feature documentary by Alanis Obomsawin is a thoughtful tribute to Norman Cornett, a McGill University professor celebrated by scores of students appreciative of his unconventional yet powerful teaching methods who was controversially dismissed from his teaching duties in 2007.
  • Ridley: A Secret Garden
    Ridley: A Secret Garden
    Robert Lang 1981 26 min
    This short documentary invites us inside Ridley College, a private boarding school founded in 1889 and located in St. Catharines, Ontario. This film goes beyond the walls and groomed lawns of this institution to show how it molds its students into the leaders of the future. Although the private school system has its critics, Ridley continues to uphold a strong British tradition with its emphasis on moral training, strict supervision, a strong academic education, conformity, sports and relative isolation from the community.
  • The Scholar in Society: Northrop Frye in Conversation
    The Scholar in Society: Northrop Frye in Conversation
    Donald Winkler 1984 28 min
    This film interview affords a glimpse of a bold and learned mind illuminating important social issues. Responding to questions on the related topics of language, democracy, and the role of the modern university, acclaimed literary critic Northrop Frye explains why education is crucial: "A democracy cannot function without articulate citizens." Frye claims that the university is a place where individual liberty becomes possible, as students learn to question beliefs imposed by society. For Frye, reading and writing are "instruments of freedom."
  • Travelling College
    Travelling College
    Ernest Benedict 1968 9 min
    Produced by the Indian Film Crew (IFC) for showing to fellow Indigenous peoples across North America, this film demonstrates the concept of self-help of the Indian Travelling College, an educational venture designed to teach Indigenous students what they want to know, be it business knowledge, handicrafts or marketing of products.
  • Universities at War
    Universities at War
    1944 11 min
    Canadian universities made many contributions to the war effort through research and applications in many disciplines including engineering, medicine, psychiatry, chemistry, agriculture and sociology. Many of these developments were also envisioned as having important peacetime applications.
  • Walls of Memory
    Walls of Memory
    Léonard Forest 1964 27 min
    A wealth of archival images offers a glimpse into Québec City’s social history in this tribute to French Canada’s first classical college, the Seminary of Québec.
  • Zulu Time
    Zulu Time
    Jonny Silver 1999 52 min
    Best known as the amicable Director of the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto, Derrick de Kerckhove is at the core of a world think-tank dedicated to probing the rapid changes of our global village. The documentary Zulu Time follows this "wired man" in his globe-trotting career as media prophet and probes into some of the most fascinating questions confronting us in our new electronic galaxy. As the spiritual inheritor of McLuhan's thought, de Kerckhove lives in perpetual oscillation between himself and his double, Marshall McLuhan, with whom he has become publicly identified and virtually assimilated.