Author Archives: Michael K. Barbour

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About Michael K. Barbour

Michael K. Barbour is the Director of Faculty Development and a Professor of Instructional Design for the College of Education and Health Sciences at Touro University California. He has been involved with K-12 online learning in a variety of countries for well over a decade as a researcher, teacher, course designer and administrator. Michael's research focuses on the effective design, delivery and support of K-12 online learning, particularly for students located in rural jurisdictions.

The Duke of Edinburgh 1921 – 2021

From https://www.royal.uk/


The Duke of Edinburgh 1921 – 2021

The Duke of Edinburgh

It is with deep sorrow that Her Majesty The Queen announces the death of her beloved husband, His Royal Highness The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.

His Royal Highness passed away peacefully this morning at Windsor Castle.

Further announcements will be made in due course.

The Royal Family join with people around the world in mourning his loss.

Friday, 9 April 2021

Only 1 Month until VE Day, who’s ready? 🎉

An item from the organization formerly known as There But Not There.


Hi,

Only one Month to go until VE Day; Get Ready!

We can help you celebrate!

It is safe to say that all of us at RBLI have been completely overwhelmed with the national support behind the launch of our VE Day 2021 efforts.

With one month to go until the big day, it is clear to see that the nation is preparing to celebrate in style. In the short time since our VE Day products were launched, we have already had thousands of orders from the RBLI Shop.

This huge support means that RBLI can continue to provide life-changing help and employment to veterans and those with disabilities.

One thing is for certain, this year’s VE Day will be one to remember!

NEW Special Edition VE Day 2021 Tankard

Available for a limited time only!

RBLI has been working closely with Royal Navy Veteran Mike on producing a new Tankard design to celebrate VE Day 2021.

Mike, who is a Royal Navy Veteran of 22 years, had to take on a less physical career after he was diagnosed with cancer. Nowadays, he makes bespoke, high quality glassware for RBLI.

These are available for a limited time only, so get your orders in before it’s too late!

£29.99
SHOP NOW

VE Day 2021 Top Sellers

Our entire VE Day range has been very well received, with our veterans being kept very busy creating the products and packing up orders.

If you haven’t already, check out our top three best sellers below!

VE Day 2021 Union Jack Tommy Bunting
VE Day 2021 Union Jack Tommy Bunting
£9.99
SHOP NOW
VE Day 2021 Flag Large
VE Day 2021 Flag Large
£15.99
SHOP NOW
VE Day 2021 Lapel Pin
VE Day 2021 Lapel Pin
£9.99
SHOP NOW
SHOP OUR FULL VE DAY 2021 RANGE

Take a look at the RBLI VE Day Hub

RBLI is planning big things for VE Day 2021, including our most ambitious event yet, the Race to Victory! Check out all of our activities at VE Day Hub below:
GO TO THE RBLI VE DAY HUB
Thank you.
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Link
Website
Copyright © 2021 Royal British Legion Industries. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Royal British Legion Industries Ltd, Hall Road, Aylesford, Kent, ME20 7NL

Art of the war horse

An item from Legion Magazine.


Legion Magazine
Front Lines
Art of the war horse

Art of the war horse 

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

Mercifully, the First World War was the last major confrontation in which horses played a major role.

British cavalry were among the first units to see action in WW I, but they didn’t last. The war’s most impactful weapon—the machine gun—along with the mud and barbed wire of trench warfare would ultimately spell the end for equine-borne military.
READ MORE

Celebrating Canada 5-Tea Set
Military Milestones
Witnessing genocide

Witnessing genocide

Story by Sharon Adams

In late 1993, Canadian General Roméo Dallaire was tasked to head a force of 2,500 United Nations peacekeepers sent to Rwanda to help implement a peace accord to end three years of civil war between the Hutus and Tutsis, a minority ethnic group.

The mission was a disaster.

READ MORE

Belair

If you think a CHIP Reverse Mortgage could be the right option for you, find out more about your $500 Cash Back Rebate from @HomeEquityBank – Be sure to mention that you’re a member of The Royal Canadian Legion. Visit www.chipmoney.ca/Legion

Explore

Canvet Publication Ltd.

We are seeking your help to create a special video for ANZAC Day

Our branch is taking a leading role with the Australian American Chamber of Commerce SF and the SF Kiwis – New Zealand American Association San Francisco in organizing this event – both the video that will be available in advance and the live event.

The Royal Canadian Legion encourages all members in the San Francisco Bay Area to attend this event.  For those that are unaware, ANZAC Day is celebrated on the anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli.  While the main Allied combatants were from Australia and New Zealand, there was a British contingent there in the form of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment.  This was some ~35 years before Newfoundland would join Canada.  For more information about the role of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment at Gallipoli, visit:


AACC OUTREACH 
ANZAC 2021
Dear Aussie Community,

 

We are seeking your help to create a special video for ANZAC Day since we are not able to get together once again. It would be wonderful if the community of those who have attended any past ANZAC Services at the Log Cabin would submit some photos.

PLEASE UPLOAD YOUR PHOTOS BELOW
UPLOAD PHOTOS
 

Please save the date to watch the live stream of the small ANZAC Service in San Francisco on Sunday April 25th at 10am.

https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_z8P32gA8TIiycnJB4Cbb5w

SAVE THE DATE
 
OUR VALUED AACC SPONSORS
ANNUAL BENEFACTOR MEMBER
HOTEL PARTNER
BEVERAGES PARTNER
BEVERAGES PARTNER
BENEFACTOR MEMBER
 
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JOIN OUR ONLINE COMMUNITY >

Tomorrow: Is Canada’s healthcare system a model for the US?

A reminder of some up-coming events from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Event tomorrow: Is Canada’s healthcare system a model for the US?
  • Hildebrand Fellow Jonathan Holmes explains insurance risk pools
  • Funding opportunities open for grad & undergrad research
  • Upcoming event: “Canada’s Role in a Psychedelic Renaissance”
  • External event: Book talk on Canada’s lost citizens
  • External event: Western Washington U celebrates 50 years of Canadian Studies
Event Tomorrow
Panel Discussion: The Canadian Healthcare System: A Model for the US?
April 6 | 12:30 p.m. | RSVP here
Most Canadians are proud of their national healthcare system, widely considered one of the best in the world. But when it comes to US healthcare reform, the Canadian example is much more divisive. A growing number of Americans view Canada as a model for a potential US single-payer system. However, for many others a “Canadian” system conjures images of long waits and rationing. Join Canadian Studies for a special panel exploring how Canada’s healthcare system really works, and why its perception in the US is so polarized.
Gregory Marchildon is a professor of comparative healthcare at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto. He specializes in Canada’s healthcare system and has written extensively on comparative policy.
Amanda Aronczyk is a journalist and co-host of the NPR show Planet Money. Her 2020 episode “Frame Canada” investigated the US insurance lobby’s long-running PR campaign to block major healthcare reform by discrediting Canada’s healthcare system.
Daniel Béland is the director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada and James McGill Professor in the Department of Political Science at McGill University. He studies social policy and health care reform, and their relationship to fiscal policy.
Hildebrand Fellow Jonathan Holmes: Why You Should Care About Health Insurance Risk Pools
Jonathan Holmes is a Ph.D. candidate in economics at UC Berkeley, and he will graduate this spring. Jonathan will be joining the faculty at the University of Ottawa in 2022 after a one-year post-doc at the National Bureau of Economic Research. The recipient of a 2016 Hildebrand Research Fellowship, his current work focuses on public economics and health economics
I study how risk is pooled in health insurance markets. To understand risk pools, consider Berkeley’s student health plan. While undergraduate and graduate plans have identical benefits, a graduate plan is 60% more expensive than an undergraduate plan. Why? Because the graduate student risk pool is higher cost relative to the undergraduate risk pool.
For private health plans in the U.S. and Canada (private plans in Canada are called “supplemental” plans, and cover many services not covered by the public health plan, like prescription drugs), each employer is considered its own risk pool, and there is also a separate market for individuals.
Pooling risk in this way leads to large differences in the price of coverage. In the U.S., it is common for self-employed workers to pay 50% more than firms for identical coverage, because the individual market has a costlier risk pool. In a similar way, firms that employ mostly women pay higher premiums relative to male-dominated firms. Pooling risk in this way is arbitrary, and it encourages firms to avoid hiring individuals with chronic health conditions, to keep premiums low.
Fortunately, there exist policy solutions to eliminate these distinctions. Policymakers wishing to maintain private markets can legislate a common risk pool, like is currently done for the insurance exchanges created by the Affordable Care Act. Proposals for universal public healthcare, like Medicare for All (in the U.S.) or Canada’s national pharmacare program, would also eliminate or reduce the importance of risk pools.
Research Funding Opportunities with Canadian Studies
Deadline: May 7, 2021
The Canadian Studies Program is currently accepting applications for funding opportunities for both graduate and undergraduate students at UC Berkeley. Applications for AY 2021-22 will close next month, on May 7, 2021. Learn more and apply by clicking the links below.
The Edward E. Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship provides travel and research support for Berkeley graduate students whose work focuses primarily, or comparatively, on Canada. Fellowships typically range in the $5,000 – $10,000 range.
The Rita Ross Undergraduate Prize in Canadian Studies provides a cash prize of $250 to the Berkeley undergraduate who has produced the best research project engaging with a Canadian topic for a class or independent study program.
Please circulate this information to your students, peers, and networks!
Upcoming Event
Psychedelics, Eh? Canada’s Role in a Psychedelic Renaissance
April 27 | 12:30 p.m. | RSVP here
In the 1950’s, the Canadian province of Saskatchewan was on the cutting edge of research into hallucinogenic drugs. Under the province’s massive healthcare reforms, researchers received grants to pursue LSD treatments they thought could revolutionize psychiatry. What do these experiments say about Canada’s healthcare system and society at the time? And what can we learn from the program’s successes and failures at a time when psychedelics are attracting renewed scientific and public interest?
Erika Dyck is the Canada Research Chair in the History of Health & Social Justice at the University of Saskatchewan. She specializes in the history of psychiatry, and has written several books on the history of psychedelic research and eugenics in Canada.
Affiliate/External Events
Book Talk: The Lost Canadians with Don Chapman
April 9 | 4:00 p.m. | RSVP here
What does it mean to be Canadian? The history of Canadian citizenship is complicated, and many have had their citizenship revoked or denied to many as a result of archaic and obscure legislation. As many as half a million of these “Lost Canadians” reside in the U.S., probably unaware that they are now Canadian citizens.
Don Chapman, a University of Washington alumnus and former United Airlines pilot, discovered his own revoked citizenship status; thus began his fight to restore citizenship rights to himself and others. Chapman has been the inspiration and force behind seven Parliamentary bills to amend the Citizenship Act, with the result that Canadian status has been granted to somewhere between one and two million people, retroactively.
Join the University of Washington’s Canadian Studies Center for an engaging discussion with Chapman centered around his 2015 book, The Lost Canadians: A Struggle for Citizenship Rights, Equality, and Identity. He will talk about citizenship as a basic human right, what it means to be rendered stateless, present-day discrimination, and his own experiences as a private individual changing federal legislation in Canada.
Book Talk: Bridging the Longest Border with Dr. Donald Alper
April 29 | 7:00 p.m. | RSVP here
As part of its 50th anniversary celebration, Western Washington University’s Center for Canadian-American Studies is sponsoring a talk by Dr. Don Alper on his new book, “Bridging the Longest Border”. The book is a story of how a handful of visionaries built a program at Western Washington University to educate students and community leaders about Canada. While not a history lesson, this book traces the journey of creating a place for developing knowledge about this important country just a stone’s throw away.
Dr. Alper is an emeritus professor of political science at Western Washington University, and the former director of Western’s Center for Canadian–American Studies and the Border Policy Research Institute. Known nationally for his advancement of Canadian Studies in the United States, he has taught courses on Canadian politics and Canada-U.S. relations for more than 40 years. Don Alper will be joined in conversation with Cat Wallace, journalism instructor at Whatcom Community College and editor.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720