CEL Faculty Roundtable: Respectful and Reciprocal Partnerships with Indigenous Community Organizations

The Centre for Community Partnerships (CCP) invites you to attend a roundtable focused on building respectful and reciprocal partnerships with Indigenous community organizations. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s recommendations have importantly stressed the value of an expanded and deepened education for settler, displaced and Indigenous students on Indigenous histories, cultures and issues and have led […]

EES1137 Lecture 23

In this course data analysis techniques utilizing the Python and R languages will be introduced, as well as the basics of programming and scientific computing. The goal of this course is to prepare graduate students for performing scientific data analysis. Successful students will learn how to use statistical inference tools to gain insight into large […]

Scientific Computing Lecture (2023)

This course is aimed at reducing your struggle in getting started with computational projects, and make you a more efficient computational scientist. Topics include well-established best practices for developing software as it applies to scientific computations, common numerical techniques and packages, and aspects of high performance computing. While we will introduce the C++ language, in […]

Depositing Research Data in U of T Dataverse (Borealis)

Are you interested in sharing your data with other researchers? Has a journal or funder asked you to share your data? Would you like to house your research team’s data in one place? In this session, participants will learn how to organize and publish research data in the University of Toronto Dataverse, U of T’s […]

Franklin Lecture: Dr. Charlton McIlwain

Innis Town Hall Theatre 2 Sussex Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

The Franklin Lecture returns with Dr Charlton McIlwain's talk Black Software: Retrospect to Prospect. Book signing and reception to follow. About this event Black Software showcases computing technology's origin story amidst the turbulent racial confrontations of the 1960s, connecting it to the rise of the Black internet who helped to birth the Internet as we […]

BCH2202 – Lecture 9

SciNet Teaching Room

In this course students will be instructed in how to program in R. Ultimately students will learn how to use R to analyze, process and visualize data. This course is designed for students with little to no experience in programming. This is a graduate course that can be taken for credit by UofT Biochemistry graduate students. […]

UTSC OVPRI Research Excellence Lecture Series – with Professor Alan Saks – Apr. 05, 2023

“TheNeed for Caring in and around Organizations” with Professor Alan Saks Does yourorganization care about its employees? Do you care about your organization?These are questions that all employees should be asking themselves today.Caring for employees has become more important than ever as the consequences ofnot caring for employees became especially evident over the last two years. […]

Scientific Computing (2023)

This course is aimed at reducing your struggle in getting started with computational projects, and make you a more efficient computational scientist. Topics include well-established best practices for developing software as it applies to scientific computations, common numerical techniques and packages, and aspects of high performance computing. While we will introduce the C++ language, in […]

Scroll to Top