Awful
I'm in DSS, and I found her class to be unnecessarily hard, even after sending her a letter explaining my situation. The class was very dry, she was a terrible lecturer with a monotonous voice. She also had no idea what she was teaching. Not recommended for people with and without special needs.
University of Saskatchewan - History
Adjunct Professor
Adjunct Professor, Department of History, University of Saskatchewan
Postdoctoral Researcher
Cross-appointed to Interdisciplinary Centre for Culture and Creativity. Project Title: Taking Root: Commodities, Environments, and Migration in the Nineteenth-Century British Crown Colonies of Ceylon and the Straits Settlements. Supervisor: Dr. Jim Clifford.
Lecturer
Courses Taught: HIST 229.6 (T1) Europe in the 20th Century; HIST 395.3 Re-imagining the London Slum: Narratives of Poverty, Crime and Culture in the 19th and 20th Century East End; HIST 122.3 Europe in the Modern Age, 1789 – Present; HIST 145.3 Shell-Shocked: The Aftermath of the Great War in Britain.
Postdoctoral Researcher
Project Title: From Port to Port: Medical Inspection, the Immigrant Body, and (Un)- Desirability in the British World, 1850-1950. Co- Supervisors Dr. Lisa Chilton and Dr. Marjory Harper (Aberdeen).
Citizenship and Immigration Officer PM-03
Elizabeth (Liz) worked at Government of Canada as a Citizenship and Immigration Officer PM-03
Citizenship Case Analyst PM-04
Elizabeth (Liz) worked at Government of Canada as a Citizenship Case Analyst PM-04
Curator
I am currently appointed as Curator of the Saskatchewan Western Development Museum. My research and exhibition work at the WDM focuses on Saskatchewan histories that explore the province’s diversity, promote Reconciliation and inclusivity and showcase innovation. I'm also interested in the teaching and scholarship of Public History. My broader research program sits at the intersections of citizenship, immigration and poverty in Saskatchewan and Canadian History, set in a transnational context. My publications advance arguments that deepen our understanding about the historical connections between Canadian and British immigration law and policy.
Bachelor of Arts - BA
History and Indigenous Studies (Hons.)
Master of Arts - MA
History
Thesis: Cockney Plots: Working Class Politics and Allotment Gardens in London’s East End, 1890-1918.
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD
History
Dissertation: ‘Building the Bridge of Hope:’ The Discourse and Practice of Assisted Emigration of the Labouring Poor from East London to Canada, 1857-1913. Comprehensive Fields: Modern British World (Major), Early Modern Britain (Minor), Comparative Aboriginal History, Canada/Latin America (Minor).
Adjunct Professor
Adjunct Professor, Department of History, University of Saskatchewan
Postdoctoral Researcher
Cross-appointed to Interdisciplinary Centre for Culture and Creativity. Project Title: Taking Root: Commodities, Environments, and Migration in the Nineteenth-Century British Crown Colonies of Ceylon and the Straits Settlements. Supervisor: Dr. Jim Clifford.
Lecturer
Courses Taught: HIST 229.6 (T1) Europe in the 20th Century; HIST 395.3 Re-imagining the London Slum: Narratives of Poverty, Crime and Culture in the 19th and 20th Century East End; HIST 122.3 Europe in the Modern Age, 1789 – Present; HIST 145.3 Shell-Shocked: The Aftermath of the Great War in Britain.