Reading at the Seed Library: Creativity in the Garden

Blog written by Rachael Huegerich
March 17, 2024

Art, play, and imagination flourish alongside seedlings in the garden! Cooking, dyeing, crafting, game playing, and daydreaming are only some of the possibilities. Find creative inspiration at the seed library display at the Education Library. You can find the seed library just past the reference desk—or learn more about UBC Library’s seed lending libraries here. Feel free to “borrow” some seeds, or some of the books on display now.

Natural dyeing with plants: glorious colors from roots, leaves & flowers

By Franziska Ebner & Romana Hasenöhrl

TP919 .E26 2018

The fascinating luminosity of colours from plants can be easily transferred to wool, silk, or other materials at home.

Necessary materials, pickling, the preparation of fibers or substances, and different dyeing methods are described in detail.

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Plant, cook, eat! : a children’s cookbook

By Joe Archer & Caroline Craig

TX801 .A73 2018

For beginners and green-thumbed foodies, this unusually all-inclusive garden-to-kitchen cookbook is part lesson in gardening and part collection of healthy, delicious, kid-friendly recipes.

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Let’s get creative: art for a healthy planet
By Jessica Rose; illustrated by Jarett Sitter

N8217.E28 R67 2024

There’s no question that creating art makes our lives better.

Just think about how happy you feel when you’re dancing, singing, painting or crafting.

But have you ever stopped to think about how creating art might make the world better, too?

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The garden classroom: hands-on activities in math, science, literacy, and art
By Cathy James

SB457 .J36 2015

Packed with garden-based activities that promote science, math, reading, writing, imaginative play, and arts and crafts, The Garden Classroom offers a whole year of outdoor play and learning ideas—however big or small your garden.

After 64 years, book finally returned to UBC Library

In January, UBC Library received an unexpected package containing a 1931 edition of the book Camping and Woodcraft, a letter explaining the borrower’s tardiness and a $100 cheque.

New Books at the Law Library – 25/03/11

LAW LIBRARY level 3: HD7658 .D93 2023
D.E.G. Dyck, Occupational Health & Safety: Theory, Strategy & Industry Practice, 5th ed (LexisNexis Canada, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): HV7936.P75 P37 2024
J. Pardy, Conflict Management in Law Enforcement, 5th ed (Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): HV8073 .W38 2025
K. Watkins, G.S. Anderson & W. Bulmer, Evidence and Investigation: From the Crime Scene to the Courtroom, 3rd ed (Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): HV9960.C2 G75 2025
C.T. Griffiths, Canadian Criminal Justice: A Primer, 7th ed (Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: K94 .B67 2024
D.L. Borman, A Short & Happy Guide to Legal Writing, 2nd ed (West Academic, 2024)

LAW LIBRARY level 3: K552 .V44 2024
Y. Vega C̀rdenas, Methodology and Epistemology of Comparative Law: A Variety of Methods and Schools (LexisNexis, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): K1401.A41994 G47 2021
D. Gervais., The TRIPS Agreement: Drafting History and Analysis, 5th ed (Sweet & Maxwell, 2021).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: K3240 .E87 2024
M.R. Bueckert & D.B.M. Ross, Equal and Inalienable Rights: Essays on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (LexisNexis Canada, 2024)

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): K3400 .M67 2024
K. Yeung, S. Ranchordás & L.G. Carli, An Introduction to Law and Regulation: Text and Materials, 2nd ed (Cambridge University Press, 2024). Online access: https://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=13675977

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KD1369 .T47 2024
D. Campbell, T. Austen & S. Baran, Terrell on the Law of Patents, 20th ed (Sweet & Maxwell, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KD1554 .L49 2024
K. Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, 8th ed (Sweet & Maxwell, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KD1641 .K4 2025
V. Ramsey, S.Hughes & P. Stansfield, Keating on Construction Contracts, 12th ed (Sweet and Maxwell, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KD2051 .L5 2022
R.I. Banks, Lindley and Banks on Partnership,21st ed (Sweet & Maxwell, 2022).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KD2051 .L5 2022 suppl
R.I. Banks, Lindley and Banks on Partnership First Supplement to the Twenty-First Edition (Sweet & Maxwell, 2022).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KD7519.A77 P37 2024
C. Passmore, Privilege, 5th ed, Sweet and Maxwell, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KD7644 .F67 2024
D. Foskett, Foskett on Compromise, 10th ed (Sweet & Maxwell, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE452.C6 L58 2021
J.R. Presser, J. Beatson & G. Chan, eds, Litigating Artificial Intelligence (Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2021).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE539.2 .C66 2024
R.M. Halpern, ed, Contracts for the Family Law Client (LexisNexis Canada, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE1259 .P86 2024
G.S. Pun, M.I. Hall & I.M. Knapp, The Law of Nuisance in Canada, 3rd ed (LexisNexis Canada, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE1462 .O46 2024
D.M. Olofsson et al, The Practitioner's Guide to Privacy in M&A (LexisNexis, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE1462 .P75 2024
P. Blyschak, Private M&A in Canada: Transactions and Litigation (LexisNexis Canada, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE9260.A62 G64 2024
A.D. Gold, The Practitioner's Criminal Precedents, 7th ed (LexisNexis Canada, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE9265 .G37 2025
D.M. Garg, A. Kapoor & B.H. Greenspan, Detention, Arrest, and the Right to Counsel (Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE9270 .F66 2024
J.A. Fontana & D. Keeshan, The Law of Search and Seizure in Canada, 13th ed. (LexisNexis Canada, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE9355 .K68 2023
G. Koturbash, A Guide to Conducting Sentencing Hearings in Canada (LexisNexis Canada, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE9375 .H34 2025
J. Dawe et al, eds, Criminal Appeals, 2nd ed (Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KJE5461 .B75 2024
M. van den Brink, Legislative Authority and Interpretation in the European Union (Oxford University Press, 2024).

Collection Spotlight: Neurodiversity

We’re excited to present our new Collection Spotlight focused on Neurodiversity. Whether you’re an experienced educator or new to teaching, these books offer valuable insights, research, and strategies to support neurodivergent students in the classroom.

Many of the featured books are also included in our Neurodiversity booklist, which covers a range of topics, including ADHD, autism, dyslexia, and diverse ways of learning and thinking. In addition to professional resources, the collection includes picture books and young adult fiction that highlight neurodivergent experiences through storytelling. These resources aim to help educators foster inclusive, supportive, and strengths-based learning environments.

📍 Visit our Collection Spotlight in person! You’ll find it on the main level breezeway of the UBC Education Library in the Scarfe Building.

Stanley Munn and Patricia Cucman win the 2025 Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for their book on Group of Seven artist J.E.H. Macdonald.

Promotional graphic for Basil Stuart-Stubbs Book Prize 2025 winner with a book cover and logo.

Stanley Munn and Patricia Cucman have won the Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Book on British Columbia for their book To See What He Saw: J.E.H. Macdonald and the O’Hara Years, 1924-1932. The $3,500 prize, given by UBC Library and the Pacific BookWorld News Society, will be awarded at a reception to be held in April.

Published by Figure 1, the book draws on 20 years of meticulous, original research in archives and in the field, examining the works produced by English-Canadian artist and Group of Seven member James Edward Hervey (J.E.H.) MacDonald, R.C A. (1873–1932) during the last nine years of his life. By documenting MacDonald’s trips to Lake O’Hara in Yoho National Park, British Columbia, Munn and Cucman create a detailed catalogue of more than 200 plein air sketches and studio works by MacDonald, which they organize geographically and pair with present day photographs shot from the same rocky viewpoints where the artist sat and sketched. The book was produced in conjunction with a 2024 exhibition at the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies in Banff, Alberta.

“As exploration geologists, it seemed natural to go in search of MacDonald’s exact painting sites. We hiked O’Hara high and low, sat where he had sat, and saw and photographed what he had seen. We read his letters and poetry and scoured his diaries to unravel the riddles he had left behind. Over time, we grew to admire his spirit, his humour, and his artistry and we came to understand that, nearly 100 years prior, MacDonald’s passion for this landscape was as ardent as our own,” says Cucman. “It is said that there resides inside each person the perfect landscape in which they are at their best. For the three of us, our perfect landscape is the Canadian Rockies—Lake O’Hara, in particular. We attempt to share this love story in To See What He Saw.”

“The impressive scholarship, beautiful design and splendid photography on display in this book are a testament to the authors’ intensely lived research,” says Dr. Susan E. Parker, UBC’s University Librarian. “We are honoured to award Stanley Munn and Patricia Cucman with the Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize.” 

Stanley Munn, a retired exploration geologist, fell in love with photography at an early age.  Patricia Cucman is a retired petroleum geologist. After retirement, they spent twenty years re-exploring Lake O’Hara together.

This book is available to purchase through UBC Bookstore. 

Shortlisted titles for the prize are:

Signs of the Time: Nłeʔkepmx Resistance through Rock Art, Chris Arnett. (UBC Press).

Pentecostal Preacher Woman: The Faith and Feminism of Bernice Gerard, Linda Ambrose. (UBC Press).

About the Prize

The Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Book on British Columbia, sponsored by UBC Library and the Pacific BookWorld News Society, recognizes the best scholarly book published by a Canadian author on a B.C. subject. The book prize was established in memory of Basil Stuart-Stubbs, a bibliophile, scholar and librarian who passed away in 2012. Stuart-Stubbs’s many accomplishments included serving as the University Librarian at UBC Library and as the Director of UBC’s School of Library, Archival and Information Studies. Stuart-Stubbs had a leadership role in many national and regional library and publishing activities. During his exceptional career, he took particular interest in the production and distribution of Canadian books and was associated with several initiatives beneficial to authors and their readers, and to Canadian publishing.

Donations to support the Prize are gratefully accepted through The Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Book on British Columbia Endowment.

National Film Board – “Sorry this content is not available to view in your current location.”

When trying to access National Film Board (NFB) films users may see a “Sorry this content is not available to view in your current location.” error when trying to watch the film.

eResources is investigating and working on a long term solution

As a short-term workaround, you might be able to watch the film if you navigate to the main NFB website – https://go.openathens.net/redirector/ubc.ca?url=https://www.nfb.ca – and then search for the film, click on it, and select Watch Now. The key to this solution working is that you close your other NFB open tabs and that to pause and restart the film you re-navigate back through the main NFB website. There is an issue happening with our authentication software and this process ‘tricks’ it into working.

Statista – loss of access

UBC Library has lost access to subscribed materials (reports, insights surveys) on Statista.

We are investigating and working on restoring our access. We apologize for the inconvenience.

Trans* Journeys: Centering marginalized voices through open pedagogy and open publishing

While open educational resources (OER) are often created by faculty and instructors for use in the classroom, there is a growing interest in giving students the opportunity to engage with the open publishing process directly as part of their coursework.

Centering trans voices and translating knowledge

Dr. Isabel Machado is a Lecturer at the Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice (GRSJ). Machado teaches Introduction to Trans Studies (CSIS 301), as well as other introductory and critical studies courses at UBC that engage with topics like social justice, intersectionality and sexuality. Like all Machado’s courses, CSIS 301 is project-driven, where students work on a single project by completing scaffolding assignments throughout the term. The course also follows open pedagogy practices, where students create, share and openly license new work as part of the course.

In the fall 2024, CSIS 301 students were tasked with creating illustrated essays on a memoir or autobiography written by a trans person. Everyone was also given the choice to submit their work privately or as part of a published essay collection.

An important aspect that I’ve had in all of these courses is knowledge translation,” says Machado. “I think now more than ever, with the delicate topics that we’re dealing with, there’s so much misinformation out there. So I always challenge my students: why take this knowledge and you know, bury it in disposable assignments, in language that’s not accessible?”

Anne Olsen, Humanities & Social Sciences Liaison Librarian at Koerner Library, also regularly works with students in Machado’s classes to provide library research support: “Isabel’s approach to all of her classes is to incorporate some kind of open knowledge translation, and that’s a real highlight.”

Ten students opted to publish their essays in Trans* Journeys: Illustrated Essays of Trans Persons Autobiographies, which was published in PressBooks by UBC Library in December 2024.

“It was amazing collaborating with other queer and trans members of the community, sharing ideas and discussing concepts from class. Isabel really encouraged collaboration and open discussion,” says Cas, one of the student authors of Trans* Journeys. “It was incredibly gratifying to be able to share Black trans stories, make them more visible, and engage in the knowledge production of transness in the contemporary discourse. What would be amazing is if more work like this could make it into the mainstream, as I think trans stories and trans joy are more important than ever in the world right now.”

Opening up new ways to learn

There is another book in the works, Drag Around the World, expected to be published on PressBooks this spring by students in another of Machado’s courses.

Allen Baylosis, a Ph.D. candidate at GRSJ, is supporting students in this course and sees a unique opportunity to foster an early interest in Drag Studies: “In this course, we could have future academics who could provide significant contributions to the fields of Drag Studies, Performance, Theater Studies and others.”

“I think what is unique about [these projects] is the topic areas, because there is a level of bravery and activism needed,” says Erin Fields, Open Education and Scholarly Communications Librarian at UBC Library. Fields works with Machado and her students, through the UBC Library Open Publishing Program, to prepare and publish the books on PressBooks.

“For most of the students in these classes, this is their first time publishing,” says Fields. “So they’re learning a lot of skill sets along the way that you wouldn’t learn through traditional class assignments at the undergraduate level.”

Explore the open book


About Open Education Week at UBC

Check out all the Open Education events at UBC this month, including an online panel discussion on the Canadian National Open Education Landscape on March 25.

About the UBC Library Open Publishing Program

UBC Library’s Open Publishing Program is an open access journal and text service to help UBC faculty, researchers, instructors, students, and staff develop open access publications for scholarship and instruction. This free service aims to advance open scholarship by providing the supports needed to make UBC information resources openly available. Learn more about our eligibility criteria and how to submit a proposal.

 

 

Audio Ciné Films – Invalid Portal error message

Some users trying to access Audio Ciné Films may see the error message:

Invalid Portal

We couldn’t find your portal audiocinehttps:. Check the URL that you used to make sure it is correct and try again. If you see this page multiple times, please see the following resources.

Users’ level of access seems to vary, from no access at all to no access on weekends but with access on weekdays.

We apologize for the inconvenience and eResources is investigating.

New Books at the Law Library – 25/03/04

ONLINE: F1054.5.L8 A.Flynn, R. Albert & N. Des Rosiers, eds, The Past, Present, and Future of Canadian Cities: Where the Law Went Wrong and How We Can Fix It (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2024). LAW LIBRARY level 3: KF6334.ZA2 L5 2024 Jinyan Li &, Paul Lamarre, International Taxation in Canada, 5th ed (LexisNexis, 2024).