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TEDxUNBC announces speaker line-up for upcoming Prince George event

Ten speakers will take to the stage for TEDxUNBC this fall
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(via Facebook/TEDxUNBC)

TEDxUNBC is coming back to Prince George and 10 speakers will take to the stage to share inspiring and engaging talks.

A variety of entrepreneurs, scientists, educators, and a performing artist will speak at the Oct. 5 event held in UNBC’s Canfor Theatre.

The theme for the 2019 TEDxUNBC event is Past the Future.

If you’re unfamiliar, TEDx events are local independently organized TED conferences, which deliver short inspiring talks by leading thinkers from a variety of disciplines.

“We have a wonderful slate of speakers, a mix that complements the entire University from faculty and alumni to students and community members,” said TEDxUNBC co-organizer Kirk Walker, adding it wasn’t easy to select the speakers this year.

“On Oct. 5, the audience will experience an interdisciplinary journey through inspirational ideas about science, education, the arts, and more.”

Now, let’s meet your 2019 TEDxUNBC speakers:

Daryl Hatton

Daryl Hatton - light background-webDaryl Hatton. (via TEDxUNBC)

Hatton is the founder and CEO FundRazr, an innovative, award-winning global enterprise crowdfunding platform. He is a serial entrepreneur who loves the challenge of building companies from scratch, has founded multiple start-ups and helped bring one, Optio Software, to a successful NASDAQ IPO in 1999. Hatton currently serves as a board member and advisor to multiple Canadian and Silicon Valley based start-ups including Canadian securities crowdfunding site FrontFundr.

James Steidle

 

James Steidle-webJames Steidle. (via TEDxUNBC)

Steidle grew up south of Prince George in the bush and worked as a tree planter and at Clear Lake Sawmills in his youth before receiving a Master’s degree in Public Policy at Simon Fraser University after which he worked in the Legislative Assembly and the Canadian Labour Congress. He then started a woodworking company called Steidle Woodworking. He focuses on using local woods, and mills up the lumber himself. He works with aspen wherever he can. He currently spends his free time advocating for aspen and broadleaf forests as part of Stop the Spray BC.

Brittany Doncaster

Brittany Doncaster-webBrittany Doncaster. (via TEDxUNBC)

Doncaster is a mental health and addictions clinician who emphasizes education, accountability and empathy in her practice. An evolutionary psychology perspective informs her position on favourite topics such as stress, boundaries, and technology. She is a UNBC alumna, having received a Bachelor of Science in Psychology and is currently working toward a Master of Arts in Counselling Psychology at Yorkville University.

Dr. Ronny Priefer

Ronny_Priefer_HeadRonny Priefer. (via TEDxUNBC)

TEDxUNBC marks the return for Dr. Ronny Priefer to UNBC and his hometown. He is currently a Professor of Medicinal Chemistry in the School of Pharmacy at the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences in Boston.

He earned a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry degree at UNBC and a PhD from McGill University that focused on organic and polymer chemistry. Prior to joining MCPHS, Priefer was at the College of Pharmacy at Western New England University. Before that he was at in the Chemistry and Biology department at Niagara University. He has expanded his range of projects to include medicinal, analytical, educational, and materials chemistry. He has had more than 50 students working with him, publishing 44 scientific articles and six patents as a principal investigator.

Edōsdi / Dr. Judy Thompson

 

Judy Thompson - headshot-webJudy Thompson. (via TEDxUNBC)

Edōsdi /Dr. Judy Thompson is a member of the Tahltan Nation and was born and raised in Lax Kxeen (Prince Rupert, B.C.) on Ts’msyen territory.

For the last three decades, she has been learning the Tāłtān language, which has included learning the culture, knowledge, wisdom, and ways of knowing her people.

As the Tahltan Language Reclamation Director, her research and work has involved the development and implementation of a Tāłtān language reclamation framework. In 2018, based on her language revitalization work, Edōsdi received the Distinguished Academic – Early in Career Award from the Canadian University Faculty Associations of B.C. That same year, she was also a recipient of the Excellence in Teaching Award at UNBC where she was an Assistant Professor in First Nations Studies at UNBC from 2015-19.

She is currently an Associate Professor in Indigenous Education at the University of Victoria an adjunct Professor at UNBC.

Reanna Bradley

Reeanna Bradley_IMG_20190722_-webReanna Bradley. (via TEDxUNBC)

Based in Seattle, Bradley is a diversity and inclusion consultant working with software engineers across multiple industries. She facilitates trainings and conducts workshops to reevaluate data decisions, interrogate assumptions, and imagine new relationships between computers and humans. With a Master's degree in Gender Studies from UNBC, she is equipped to think beyond outdated models of identity and society.

Bradley’s talk explores the incredible powers of data to reinforce social inequity or liberate us from bias. She invites deliberate co-creation of artificial intelligence by outlining interventions for computer people, policy works, and the rest of us.

Shelby Richardson

Shelby Richardson-webShelby Richardson. (via TEDxUNBC)

Richardson is a choreographer, curator and designer in Prince George. Her research over the years has spanned various disciplines including Performance Art, Museology, Anthropology, as well as Art and Design History. Shelby first completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Criticism in Curatorial Practice from the Ontario College of Art and Design, in Toronto. She then went on to complete her Master’s Degree in Anthropology from the University of Victoria in 2012.

Over the years, Richardson has taught and choreographed for various studios and companies across Canada. Her choreographic work has been recognized internationally and she has received numerous awards and grants pertaining to her research in the realms of Anthropology and the Arts. Her current research focuses on the ways in which dance, and other art forms, can be integrated into local communities to help prompt social exchange and dialogue.

Dr. Guido Wimmers

Guido Wimmers-webGuido Wimmers. (via TEDxUNBC)

Dr. Wimmers is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Master of Engineering Program in Integrated Wood Design at UNBC. He holds a Master Degree in Architectural Engineering and a Ph.D. in Engineering Science from the University of Innsbruck. Dr. Wimmers is a Registered Architect in the EU and a Professional Engineer in British Columbia.


Prior to moving to Canada in 2007, he worked on modern timber design and Passive House Projects in Austria, Germany, and Italy, including large non-residential buildings and various research projects in the field of massive timber construction and prefabricated building envelopes. In 2018, he was pivotal for the construction of the Wood Innovation Research Laboratory, a certified Passive House in a harsh climate, which became the most airtight building in North America.

Dr. Lisa Dickson

Lisa dickson photo-webLisa Dickson. (via TEDxUNBC)

Dr. Dickson is an Associate Professor of Renaissance Literature in the English Department at UNBC. As a 3M National Teaching Fellow, she dedicates a lot of her time to thinking about teaching and learning, and to supporting others who are doing the same.

She is a founding member and Project Leader of the 3M National Teaching Fellowship Mentoring Network, and a member the 3M NTF Council Executive. She has also been an adjudicator and mentor for the 3M National Student Fellowship.

Currently, she is working on a book with two other 3M Fellows, focusing on the pedagogy of critical hope and empathy in the teaching of Shakespeare, a project that is equally exhilarating and terrifying, as any worthwhile thing can be.

Ann Duong

Ann Duong-webAnn Duong. (via TEDxUNBC)

Duong is a UNBC alumni with a bachelor honours degree in Biochemistry and Molecular biology. She joined the Northern Analytical Laboratory Service in the Summer of 2018 where she has been in an awesome team of individuals who care about making the planet better.

In her past life prior to UNBC, she studied in a 15th century English castle, couchsurfed around the world and performed in many theatre performances, including at the Edinburgh and Toronto Fringe Festival. Although she loves science, music and art is her other half and she likes to jazz up her life by capturing the beauty of the world on canvas or violin.

When she’s not making a mess in the lab, she likes to play with her wolf, Romca, she enjoys jamming out with her friends and hiking in the beautiful outdoors of Prince George. If you would describe her as a molecule, she is probably water, since she loves to dissolve everything! So, keep your head open, as she would say.

Tickets for the event are on sale now and are $100 each.

You can get them online.