Prof pas prof, j’y vais: conference anxiety
Shining a humorous light on some of the tasks that academics deal with on a regular basis.

Most popular
- 01
- 02
- 03
- 04
- 05
Featured Jobs
- Education - (2) Assistant or Associate Professors, Teaching Scholars (Educational Leadership)Western University
- Psychology - Assistant Professor (Speech-Language Pathology)University of Victoria
- Canada Excellence Research Chair in Computational Social Science, AI, and Democracy (Associate or Full Professor)McGill University
- Business – Lecturer or Assistant Professor, 2-year term (Strategic Management) McMaster University
- Veterinary Medicine - Faculty Position (Large Animal Internal Medicine) University of Saskatchewan
More from Opinion
-
Cancelling in-person Congress wounds humanities research
Budget squeeze and logistical complexities leave the century-old conference without a host.
-
No student is an island
Improving the collective environment benefits students’ mental health.
-
Status hunt drives U.S. recruitment
Prestigious American universities have long exerted a gravitational pull on Canadian academia.
-
The Strengths Model
Quebec adopts a promising approach to promoting mental health in higher education.
More from Communication
-
Improving universities’ public standing
How universities can help make their case.
-
Researchers investigate the effectiveness of public health messaging during the pandemic
Public health communicators, they say, need to show humility, admit what they don’t know, and most importantly foster a two-way dialogue.
-
Why this professor launched an Instagram Live show about COVID-19 and vulnerable communities
A Q&A with Tanya Sharpe, founder of U of T’s Centre for Research and Innovation for Black Survivors of Homicide Victims, about her timely new discussion series 30@8:30.
-
The sudden urgency of online academic conferences
Traditional in-person conferences have been criticized for a variety of reasons, but the current COVID-19 pandemic puts them in a whole new light.
Post a comment
University Affairs moderates all comments according to the following guidelines. If approved, comments generally appear within one business day. We may republish particularly insightful remarks in our print edition or elsewhere.