##  [Get Educated](/EDI.I/get-educated) 

## Applied Science Courses and Resources

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Learn strategies to build respectful and inclusive communities using resources made for APSC faculty, staff and students.

#### [**Celebrating Disability &amp; Neurodiversity**](https://apsc.ubc.ca/celebrating-disability-and-neurodiversity)

To celebrate and amplify stories of disability and neurodiversity, we’ve launched the Disability Profile Series, which highlights Faculty, Staff, and Students with lived experiences in Applied Science. This resource aims to normalize disability and neurodivergence by sharing how members of our community manage their disabilities and offering insights on how we can better support them on their journeys.





#### [**Cascades** **of Change: Inclusive Leadership and Respectful Engagement**](/cascades-of-change-inclusive-leadership-and-respectful-engagement "Cascades of Change: Inclusive Leadership and Respectful Engagement ")

Cascades of Change: Inclusive Leadership and Respectful Engagement is a self-paced course that provides participants with the tools needed for inclusive leadership and respectful engagement, through two focused streams of learning: Anti-Oppression and Indigeneity.





#### [**Indigenous Design &amp; Engagement in Applied Science and Land and Food Systems (IDEAL) Certificate**](/ideal-certificate "IDEAL Certificate")

Participants will explore a variety of learning opportunities, including Speaker Series, guided walks, and engagement opportunities, and then have the opportunity to engage in reflection using journaling prompts via Canvas and participating in facilitated sharing circles.





#### [**Grounding Anti Oppression**](https://apsc.ubc.ca/grounding-anti-oppression)

Grounding Anti-Oppression is a self-led Canvas course that explores systems of power and oppression at individual, interpersonal, and institutional levels.





#### [**Weaving Relations**](https://apsc.ubc.ca/weaving-relations)

Developed jointly by the Faculties of Applied Science and Land and Food Systems, this self-directed course explores Indigenous histories, people, and contexts, as well as settler colonialism in Canada, through the lens of Indigenous-Canadian relationships.





## UBC Courses

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Build your EDI.I competencies and meet others who are doing this work. Open to all members of the UBC community.

#### [Anti-Racism Awareness](https://pdce.educ.ubc.ca/anti-racism-awareness/)

This course will systemically cover and uncover implicit and explicit forms of historic, systemic and institutional racism and their colonial and intersectional impacts on marginalized peoples and their communities in the past and in contemporary times.





#### [Positive Space Foundations](https://wpl.ubc.ca/browse/equity-and-inclusion/courses/wpl-eio-psfnd)

The Positive Space: Foundations online course provides low-barrier access for students, staff, and faculty to learn about sex, sexuality, and gender diversity.





#### [Centre for Teaching, Learning, and Technology (CTLT) ](https://ctlt.ubc.ca/programs/)

CTLT offers a variety of programs such as workshops, sessions, networking events, and speakers series for faculty, staff, graduate and undergraduate students, teaching assistants, heads, and directors.





#### [Equity and Inclusion Office (EIO) ](https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/)

Explore resources to help you navigate UBC or to support your individual or departmental efforts to advance equity, diversity, inclusion and anti-racism.





#### [Facing Human Wrongs: Navigating Paradoxes and Complexities of Social and Global Change](https://blogs.ubc.ca/facinghumanwrongs/)

Developed jointly by the Faculties of Education and Land and Food Systems, this self-directed course addresses the ethical and practical complexities and paradoxes of mainstream approaches to global challenges.





## Other Resources

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Here are some of our favourite external EDI.I resources.

#### [San'yas Anti-Racism Indigenous Cultural Safety Training Program ](https://sanyas.ca/)

San’yas means ‘way of knowing’ in Kwak’wala, the language of the Kwakwaka’wakw Peoples. This program uproots anti-Indigenous racism and promotes cultural safety for Indigenous people. These efforts provide a foundation that is necessary for reconciliation between Indigenous and Settler peoples across Canada.