universités

Avec USF, McMaster dynamise une culture de recherche et d’apprentissage innovante dans le monde en développement

Cette année marque le cinquième anniversaire d’un partenariat unique entre l’Université McMaster et Universitaires sans frontières (USF), qui conjuguent leurs efforts pour rehausser la qualité de l’enseignement supérieur dans des économies en émergence.

En 2016, McMaster a été l’un des premiers établissements à se joindre au Réseau des universités et collèges canadiens d’USF. Depuis, le personnel enseignant et administratif de McMaster a accès à des partenariats avec des établissements d’enseignement d’un peu partout au monde. Grâce à ces nouvelles perspectives, notre personnel de premier ordre contribue à l’amélioration de l’enseignement supérieur et de la recherche, en particulier dans le domaine scientifique.

« Grâce à notre partenariat avec USF, nous répondons à un besoin essentiel de collaboration à l’enseignement supérieur des pays en développement. Ensemble, nous aidons les universités à endiguer l’exode des cerveaux et à répondre aux besoins de leurs pays en professionnels qualifiés au vu d’une économie mondialisée et en constante évolution. »

– Pr Peter Mascher, membre du Conseil d’administration d’USF depuis 2019

En 2019, fidèle à sa volonté de promouvoir le rôle de l’enseignement supérieur dans le développement mondial, McMaster a accepté d’être l’établissement hôte d’USF, dans le prolongement d’une collaboration fructueuse de nombreuses années déjà. À ce titre, McMaster contribue financièrement d’une manière particulière au travail d’USF et joue un rôle d’impulsion au sein du Réseau, fort de 32 universités et collèges canadiens.

Des membres du corps professoral de McMaster ont participé au fil des ans à d’importants projets d’USF. Ainsi, de 2015 à 2019, le Dr Karl Stobbe, de l’École de médecine Michael G. DeGroote, a assuré bénévolement la coordination de nombreux autres bénévoles affectés à un projet innovant consistant à former des médecins de famille pour les régions rurales mal servies du Népal. Il siège au conseil d’administration d’USF depuis 2018.

Quand la pandémie a frappé en 2020 et que les déplacements sont devenus impossibles, USF a travaillé une fois de plus avec des universitaires bénévoles de McMaster pour que les projets entrepris au Kenya et en Ouganda soient menés à bien, même si leurs collègues africains se trouvaient à des milliers de kilomètres.

Les Prs Thomas Marlin, David Wilkinson et Sarah Dickson, tous trois de la Faculté de génie, font partie de l’équipe de base des bénévoles qui ont créé le programme Renforcer la recherche en génie, qui se déroule en ligne à l’Université de sciences et de technologie de Mbarara, en Ouganda, et à l’Université Bahir Dar, en Éthiopie.

La Pre Andrea Hemmerich, de l’École de pratique et de technologie en ingénierie de McMaster, autre bénévole d’USF, travaille en ligne avec des collègues de l’Université de sciences et de technologie de Meru, au Kenya, à la création d’une maîtrise en sciences spécialisée en physique médicale, en vue d’améliorer le traitement du cancer dans la région.

« Nous sommes convaincus de l’importance d’une collaboration à long terme des universités et collèges canadiens au développement mondial. Le travail avec USF est gratifiant. Notre personnel y découvre la possibilité de concevoir des projets transformatifs, qui profitent à des étudiants et à des collectivités hors de nos frontières. »

– Pr Bonny Ibhawoh, vice-recteur, Affaires internationales

USF se réjouit à tous égards du prolongement de cette relation pour une cinquième année.

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U of T researchers volunteer to help Brazilian university build its first qualitative health research program

3 women standing side by side and smiling

U of T Associate Professor Denise Gastaldo, Margarida de Aquino Cunha, the rector of Brazil’s Federal University of Acre and Rozilaine Redi Lago

Anglais seulement.

“Rozilaine Redi Lago, a visiting PhD student at the University of Toronto’s Centre for Critical Qualitative Health Research (CQ) four years ago, taught the only qualitative research course at the Federal University of Acre (UFAC) in Brazil following her graduation. But she saw a pressing need for an entire program – a goal that U of T’s Denise Gastaldo and Brenda Gladstone, both volunteers with Academics Without Borders (AWB), are now helping to realize.”

Read more of this December 4, 2019 article about AWB volunteers from the University of Toronto.

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Brock volunteers enhancing education across the globe

Brock Faculty of Education Instructor Mary Katherine Rose

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“Through an international partnership, members of the Brock community have been busy travelling the world offering their expertise to developing nations.

A handful of volunteers have taken advantage of the University’s connection to Academics Without Borders (AWB), a non-governmental, Canadian organization of which Brock International Services has been a member since 2016. With success stories now under its belt, the University is hopeful more participants will soon follow.

Among the helping hands that have travelled abroad is Faculty of Education Instructor Mary Katherine Rose (MEd ’06), whose lifelong passion for global health and education drew her to AWB.”

Read more of this article about our recent volunteers from Brock University.

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What internationalization means to three higher ed leaders

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“Mention the word “internationalization” to Canadian higher ed professionals and many will immediately think of international student recruitment. Others might think of the benefits that having more international students on campus can provide to campus culture and diversity, while others still might think about the need to create more study abroad opportunities for domestic Canadian students. Working in tandem with these significant aspects of internationalization, though, are the global collaborations that Canada’s forward-thinking institutions are engaging in with partners around the world.”

Read more of this article featured in Academica’s Today’s Top Ten in Higher Ed on September 13, 2018.

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February 9, 2018 – Volunteer blog from Malawi

En anglais seulement.

Blantyre KCN campus – Gertrude Mwalaba and Gibson, Dean of Research

My goodness – our third and final week in Malawi! Our work with the Kamuzu College of Nursing (KCN) faculty, students and key stakeholders has flown by.

This past week, Pammla and I divided our energies. Pam assisted individual faculty members, doctoral students and small groups with individual manuscripts and grant proposals; nine manuscripts and at least three grants were reviewed and critiqued. In contrast, Dean Gertrude, Dean of Research Gibson, and I left Monday afternoon to spend two days at the Blantyre Campus of KCN. It was a drive of over 400 kilometers (one way) on a two-lane highway that runs through many villages. Our capable driver Peter deftly threaded his way through the countryside.

Cows have the right of way

Still, I found it a hair-raising journey, as the villagers – men, women and children and livestock – travel both narrow shoulders of the highway until well after dark. With many pedestrians, bicycles, heavy rain, and the oncoming headlights of rumbling lorries, it was more than challenging. Oh, and did I mention that in Malawi one drives on the left-hand side of the road?

Tuesday morning dawned bright and fresh. The Blantyre campus proved to be a pastoral miniature of the Lilongwe Campus. We proceeded to enjoy a delightful all-day workshop, primarily with KCN master’s students. Together, we identified a compelling research interest area related to the developing roles and responsibilities of Malawian birth companions, and then developed a scoping review of the literature in the morning, and a related grant proposal in the afternoon. I have worked with many graduate students in my time, but this was one of the most engaged and appreciative groups I have ever worked with. Energizing!

Wednesday, Gertrude and I met with the Blantyre faculty to discuss their scholarly interests, issues related to the inclusion of knowledge users in research, the advantages of working in research groups, and issues pertaining to the balance between faculty teaching and research. Clearly, the struggle to balance workload is an international issue we share. In Malawi, where faculty members, nurses and midwives are in short supply, finding that balance is even more daunting.

Traditional Malawian musicians under the mahogany tree

Our final two days were devoted to numerous external stakeholder consultations as we sought to ground KCN’s scholarship more firmly within the context of Malawi’s developing health and health human resource priorities. Our visits included meeting with the Principal, Malawi College Health Sciences, the Department Head of Environmental Health, University of Malawi Polytechnic, and a repeat visit to the National Director of Nursing Midwifery, where we compared and discussed, in far more detail, the emergent health and health human resources priorities of Malawi.
Dr. Pammla Petrucka and I were honoured to have this opportunity to work with KCN and KCN’s stakeholders, to help them build nursing scholarship and research capacity. We were impressed by the passion, knowledge, skills and experience we found here and we will continue to review grant proposals and manuscripts for our Malawian friends upon our return to Canada. We salute our new friends and colleagues for their passion and commitment in the face of challenges far beyond the experience of most Canadians. On behalf of KCN, Dean Gertrude, Pammla and I, we want to formally thank Academics Without Borders for this wonderful opportunity.

In closing, it has become clear to us that nursing research, including student research, is a rare and precious resource in Malawi! It is imperative that it is focused upon the most pressing patient, family and community health and health system challenges. And, it is equally important that research teams engage with patients, families and communities, and with health system and government knowledge users, to help guide scholarship that produces practical and affordable solutions that can and will be taken up by the Malawi health system.


Martha E. (Beth) Horsburgh, RN, PhD has provided academic nursing and research leadership in three Canadian provinces. Her scholarship is typified by practical community and health system partnerships designed to tackle recurrent health challenges faced by patients, families and communities in Canada and around the world.

Joining the Academics Without Borders family of volunteers has enabled Beth and her colleague Dr. Pammla Petrucka, to work alongside the nursing faculty at Kamazu College of Nursing, University of Malawi, to address local health challenges through sustainable research partnerships.

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