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MSW Two-Year Orientation 2024

Note this page is relevant to incoming student to the MSW Two-Year program only. Advanced Standing students should refer to the information sent to them by email.

Updated 08/26/24

Venues

Tartu

3 Madison Avenue

Tartu College is a student residence located at the northeast corner of Bloor Street and Madison Avenue in Toronto in Toronto. The building is a short walk from the University of Toronto’s St. George campus. Public transportation is convenient, with Spadina and St. George Subway Stations nearby, offering easy access to the residence from various parts of the city.

For accessible access to the Tartu orientation space please call 416-925-9405.

Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work (FIFSW)

246 Bloor Street West

The EDI workshop takes place at the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work (FIFSW) at the University of Toronto, located at 246 Bloor Street West in Toronto. The faculty is situated between St. George Street and Bedford Road, near the intersection of Bloor Street West. For convenience, there’s a Tim Hortons right next to the faculty on Bloor Street West. The building is a short walk from St. George Subway Station, with the the Bedford entrance just around the corner from us. Limited campus parking is available, so using public transportation or arriving early is recommended.

Important: Road Closures

Currently, Bloor Street West is undergoing a closure between Avenue Road and Spadina Avenue, which impacts access to Tartu College. This closure affects the stretch directly in front of Tartu, making vehicular access and parking more challenging. Pedestrian access to Tartu College remains open, but it may involve navigating around construction barriers or detours.

For those using public transportation, it’s advisable to check for any updates or changes to bus or subway routes that might affect travel plans. The nearest subway stations, Spadina and St. George, are still operational and accessible, though it may be helpful to allow extra time for potential delays or adjustments to your route.


Photo & Video Notice

Photos and video taken at this event may be included in online or print media for educational and/or promotional purposes by the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and the University of Toronto. If you would prefer not to have your photo shared, please contact Dale Duncan, FIFSW’s Senior Communications Strategist.

There will be stickers available at Tartu for those who wish not be photographed.


  • Agenda

    Groups 1-3

    TimeDetailLocation
    9:00 amEDI Workshop – please ensure you are marked present on the attendance sheet
     Group 1FISW – Room 346
     Group 2FISW – Room 348
     Group 3FISW – Room 702
    10:30 amMorning BreakFIFSW – 3rd floor Student Lounge
    12:00 pmLunchTartu
    1:30 pmGroups 1-3: OrientationTartu
    2:30 pmAfternoon BreakTartu
    4:00 pmOrientation Done! 

    Groups 4-6

    TimeDetailLocation
    9:00 amGroups 4-6: OrientationTartu
    10:30 amMorning BreakTartu
    12:00 pmLunchTartu
    1:20 pmDepart for FIFSW
    1:30 pmEDI Workshop – please ensure you are marked present on the attendance sheet
     Group 4FISW – Room 346
     Group 5FISW – Room 348
     Group 6FISW – Room 702
    2:30 pmAfternoon BreakFIFSW – Student Lounge
    4:00 pmOrientation Done! 


    Menus

    BreaksLunch
    • Freshly Brewed Coffee and Selection of Teas
    • Fruit
    • Assorted snacks
    From Za’atar Mediterranean, the lunch buffet is Halal
    • Spinach Salad with: Lemon Honey Vinaigrette, Vine Ripened Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Olives, Bermuda Onions and Feta Cheese
    • Vegetable Crudité served with Roasted Garlic Dip
    • Chicken Souvlaki served with Homemade Tzatziki
    • Vegetable Kebabs
    • Greek Potatoes
    • Lemon Rice Pilaf
    • Assorted Dessert Squares
    • Fresh Sliced Fruit
    • Soft drinks

  • Thursday, September 5, 2024
    9:00 am – 3:30 pm at Tartu College; 3 Madison Avenue

    Host: Micheal Shier, MSW Program Director

    TimePresentation/Event
    9:00 am – 9:10 amWelcome from Dean Charmaine Williams: This is Where it All Begins
    9:10 am – 9:55 amKeynote Address: Building Relationships with First Nations People within Social Work Practice
    Speaker: Verne Ross
    9:55 am – 10:10 amWellness break
    10:10 am – 10:55 amWhy Choose a Northern Practice?
    Speakers: Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux and Steve Koptie
    10:55 am – 11:10 amWellness break
    11:10 am – 11:55 amUnlocking Our Superpower: The Hidden Power of Social Work
    Speaker: Uppala Chandrasekera
    11:55 am – 1:00 pmLunch
    Student Services Fair
    1:00 pm – 1:45 pmLeading Social Work in Health Care Settings for End-of-Life Care and Older Adults
    Speaker: Susan Blacker
    1:45 pm – 2:15 pm “Talk it Out”:  Creating Social Change in Mental Health Service Access
    Speakers: Shawnette Thompson and Lin Fang
    2:15 pm – 2:30 pmWellness break
    2:30 pm – 3:15 pmSocial Work Leadership: Transforming Service User Experiences into Systems Change​
    Speaker: Clara Ho

    Speaker Biographies

    Dean and Professor Charmaine C. Williams joined the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work in 2002 and is currently serving as Dean of the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work. Her research bridges practice and access and equity issues that affect various populations including racial minority women, LGBTQ individuals in a local and international context, and individuals and families affected by serious and persistent mental illnesses. The majority of her practice experience has been as a clinician in the mental health care system.

    She has also been involved in organizational change initiatives in the health care sector and has extensive experience developing and delivering professional education in the areas of anti-racism, cultural competence, mental health and addictions. Recent activities include serving on the expert panel for the Mental Health of Black Canadians Initiative at the Public Health Agency of Canada and serving on the Anti-Racism Advisory Panel that developed the Toronto Police Service’s race-based data collection policy.

    Dr. Verne Ross is Assistant Professor at the Centre for Indigenous Studies at the University of Toronto. He is from Cote First Nation, which is a Sealteaux Nation belonging to Treaty 4 out in Saskatchewan. Verne started his career back in the mid 1980’s working in hospitals in Regina, Saskatchewan advocating for all Indigenous families. Verne is the founder of an Indigenous Health Program situated in the Pasqua Hospital. He has always worked with traditional healers and language interpreters and continues to do this important work within communities. Verne is not an Elder, but he does work with the guidance of the Elders. Verne is known as one of the Traditional Knowledge keepers. Verne graduated here at the U of T, completing his undergrad in Indigenous Studies in 2008, also successfully completing the Master of Social Work in 2012. He recently completed the PHD Program in Language, Literacies and Education from OISE within CTL Department. His research and thesis is in the area of Two-spirited people. Verne has taught an undergrad class called INS201Y1 – Introduction to Indigenous Studies offered through the Centre for Indigenous Studies Department (U of T). He has also taught INS200H1 – Introduction to Indigenous Truth and Resilience, and INS205H1 – Indigenous Worldviews, Spiritual & Healing Traditions. Verne continues to be not only be a social worker and a teacher, but he mentors all students from all walks of life here at the U of T.

    Dr. Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux was appointed as the 1st Indigenous Chair for Truth and Reconciliation for Lakehead University in 2016.

    Cynthia was inducted as a “Honourary Witness” by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada in 2014 and is Chair of the Governing Circle for the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation at the University of Manitoba. She is a member and resident of the Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation and has dedicated her life to building bridges of understanding. She sees endless merit in bringing people from diverse cultures, ages, and backgrounds together to engage in practical dialogue and applied research initiatives.

    Steve Koptie has a MSW from Wilfred Laurier and a MEd in Adult Education and Counselling Psychology and almost 40 years of experience in hospital, clinical, and justice settings. He continues to work in remote and regional Indigenous communities, supporting individuals and families in their wellness and healing.

    Uppala Chandrasekera, MSW, RSW (she/her) is a Social Worker with over 20 years of work experience in the health sector, ranging from frontline work assisting individuals and families with mental health and addictions issues, to supporting mental health and addictions programming province-wide, and implementing the national strategy to address mental health across Canada.

    Presently, Uppala is the Director of Public Health, responsible for public health strategy and clinical services at Toronto Public Health. From 2013-2022, Uppala was the Director of Public Policy at the Canadian Mental Health Association Ontario.

    Uppala currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Daymark Foundation, a national foundation committed to supporting the mental health of Canadians. From 2017-2020, she served on the Toronto Police Services Board, the first mental health professional to be appointed to this role. From 2012-2018, she served on the Board of Directors of the Mental Health Commission of Canada, the national organization mandated to improve the mental health system through sound public policy. From 2008-2014, she also served on the Board of Directors of Parkdale Community Health Centre, a primary care health centre focused on engaging with traditionally underserved communities in Toronto.

    Uppala is an Assistant Professor (Status Only) at the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work at the University of Toronto. Through her research, published writings and work in the community, Uppala examines the impact of the lived experience of discrimination and racism on the health, mental health, and wellbeing of marginalized populations.

    Susan Blacker, MSW, RSW is the Senior Director, Community Partnership and Cancer & Palliative Program Performance.  She brings to this role more than 25 years of experience as a social worker, educator and program leader in the field of cancer and palliative care.  Susan is also a Provincial Clinical Co-Lead for the Ontario Palliative Care Network.

    Susan holds an academic appointment at the University of Toronto: 
    Adjunct Professor in the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work.  She teaches a course on social work practice in palliative care each fall.
    She is also appointed as a Lecturer (status only) is a Quality Co-Lead for the Division of Palliative Care, Department of Family and Community Medicine in the Faculty of Medicine.

    Shawnette Thompson is the Supervisor of Clinical Affairs at FIFSW’s Talk it Out Counselling Clinic. She has many years of clinical practice experience. She is a dedicated Individual and Family Therapist, utilizing a harm reduction based approach, that is trauma and attachment informed and approaches therapy from an integrative clinical model of practice.

    Associate Professor Lin Fang is currently an Associate Professor and the Factor-Inwentash Chair in Children’s Mental Health. She is also the Founding Director of FIFSW’s Talk It Out Online Counseling Clinic. With over 10 years of postgraduate clinical experience, Lin’s program of research has focused on advancing the theoretical and empirical knowledge of positive child and youth development through etiology and intervention research as well as community-based research and services. Versed with a range of research methodologies and advanced statistics, Lin has published and presented widely in the areas of adolescent substance use, information and communication technologies (ICTs), and mental health and cross-cultural experiences among immigrant communities.

    Coming from a community organizing background, Lin takes pride in advancing social work while doing social work in the community. During the pandemic, Lin conceived and launched the Talk It Out Online Counseling Clinic, where supervised MSW students at FIFSW provide free short-term counseling services and wellbeing workshops to lower-income and Black communities in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). In its first year, the Clinic provided services to over 150 residents living in the GTA.

    Clara Ho (she/her) is a social worker and health care leader with hospital-based experience in patient and family engagement, co-design, and partnerships, inclusive program design, family-centred service delivery, and health care education. She is passionate about advancing health equity through partnering with service users at all levels of decision-making within a health care organization.

    Currently, Clara is the Manager of Client and Family-Centred Care and Partnerships at Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, leading their award-winning Family Leadership Program and corporate family engagement initiatives. Previously, Clara advanced the Patient and Family-Centred Care strategy and education program at North York General Hospital.

    Clara is a registered Social Worker and a Lecturer at the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work at the University of Toronto, teaching in the Human Services Leadership and Management stream. She is committed to creating an inclusive and generative learning environment where critical thinking and appreciative inquiry can flourish among students.

    While completing her Master of Social Work at the University of Toronto, Clara was a recipient of the Gordon Cressy Leadership Award for her contributions to improving the social work student experience at the University of Toronto as co-president of her Graduate Students’ Association, and was also the recipient of the Hilary M. Weston Medal for academic excellence at the Faculty of Social Work.

    Clara lives in Toronto with her family and Ripley, her English Springer Spaniel puppy. She is an avid vegetable gardener and dedicated reader of cookbooks.

    Menus

    BreaksLunch
    • Freshly Brewed Coffee and Selection of Teas
    • Assorted snacks
    From St. George Catering, the lunch buffet is Halal
    • Tossed Farm House Greens with Chef’s Selection Dressing
    • Rustic Potato Salad with Fresh Dill
    • Artisanal Sandwiches
      • Roasted Cauliflower Salad Sandwich: Cauliflower tossed in vegan mayo, spices and flat leaf parsley served on a focaccia bread
      • Caprese: Vine ripened tomato, marinated bocconcini, fresh basil and pesto aioli on a panini bun
      • Picnic Chickpea Salad Sandwich: chickpeas, pickles, red onions, Dijon mustard, vegan mayo, and arugula on a whole grain bread.
      • Steak, Caramelized Onion and Chèvre: Slow roasted, thinly sliced beef, caramelized local onions, goat cheese and Dijon horseradish served on a focaccia bread
      • Tuscan Grilled Chicken and Jalapeño Havarti: Herb marinated grilled chicken, jalapeño Havarti and ancho chipotle sauce on a fresh baked panini bun
    • Assorted dessert squares
    • Assorted soft drinks

    Student Services Fair Participants

    The following U of T student services will be available during the lunch break on September 5th. Drop by the fair to learn more about all U of T has to offer.