Email: gabriella.maestrini@alumni.ubc.ca
Website: http://ubc.academia.edu/GabriellaMaestrini
Gabriella Maestrini is a PhD student in the Department of Educational Studies at UBC. In her PhD work, she focuses on humour in stand-up comedy as comic consciousness where knowing the world through humour emanates from being in the world differently. This presupposes stand-up comedians as tricksters, social commentators, transgressors and storytellers who in this role invite us to consider the world otherwise and who use this way of being to speak the unspoken, specifically the unspeakable of coloniality. Humour, used by stand-up comedians who identify as racialized, can be used to return the gaze, to interrupt, disrupt and to transform.
Supervisor: Shauna Butterwick (Educational Studies)
Committee Members: Sunera Thobani (Institute for Gender,Race, Sexuality and Social Justice); Elaine Decker (Educational Studies); Dónal O’Donoghue (EDCP)
Email: sarah.mccabe@alumni.ubc.ca
Website: https://ubc.academia.edu/SarahMcCabe
Sarah is in her final year of her MA in EDST. Her research focuses are in health education, sexual health education, adolescent health, health care provider education, patient education, prenatal education, and women’s health education. Areas of philosophy of education, history of education, pubic health, midwifery, as well as decolonizing, community-based, and feminist methodologies greatly inform her work both locally and internationally. Her thesis is on Ugandan women’s experiences and perceptions of menstruation.Sarah has completed an internship in the Independent Evaluation and Research Cell at BRAC Uganda and is embarking upon an International Adult and Lifelong Learning intensive at Julius-Maximillian University in Wurzburg, Germany. She has experience as a graduate academic and research assistant, and as a graduate student representative at UBC. She has academic interests in philosophy, culture and media studies, the fine arts, medical sciences and epidemiology, and the history and philosophy of the natural sciences.
Supervisor: Shauna Butterwick (Educational Studies)
Email: suke.padam@ubc.ca
Website: https://ubc.academia.edu/SukePadam/
Suke Padam is a Liu Scholar 2018/2019 at the Institute for Public Policy and Global Affairs UBC, PhD Program under the mentorship of Dr. Sam Rocha. Suke is a PhD Candidate and was selected as a recipient of a 4-year departmental academic scholarship in EDST. His doctoral research interest involves the critical examination of contemporary and historical colonial influences of power and control that have emanated through western-based educational policies, consequently disrupting and clashing with pre-existing Aboriginal/Indigenous philosophies and worldviews. His focus is on the impact of digital technologies and their associated benefits and ramifications affecting First Nation communities – more specifically the effects upon culture, language, traditions, ceremonies, customs and values. Rather than doing traditional ethnographic research with a single community, his theoretical framework and methodology involves an evocative analytical auto-ethnographic self-reflexive research approach which reveals his experiences and relationships with numerous First Nation communities – a pan-provincial perspective across British Columbia.
Prior Education:
- M.Ed. (UBC – Indigenous Knowledges and Pedagogies)
- MBA (Wash. – Management Information Systems)
- B.Ed. (UBC – Business Education/Computer Science)
- BA (UBC – Sociology/Anthropology)
As a doctoral graduate teaching assistant and sessional lecturer for teacher candidates, Suke has taught EPSE 311 – Cultivating Supportive School and Classroom Environments and EPSE 310 – Assessment and Learning in the Classroom in the Teacher Education Program at UBC (secondary, middle and K-3 levels), coordinated by Dr. Shawna Faber, Director of Undergraduate Programs. He has taught EDUC 440 – First Nations in Canada under the guidance of Dr. Jan Hare, Associate Dean of Indigenous Education. Also he has worked as a graduate academic assistant in the Native Indian Teacher Education Program (NITEP) EDUC 140 course. Suke co-chaired the IGSS (Indigenous Graduate Student Symposium) UBC/SFU partnership conference in 2017 and also presented a paper on liberalism, neoliberal empowerment and reconciliation (unpublished). In a subsequent research paper, he also explored commonalities between local Aboriginal and global Indigenous connections by weaving a philosophical relationship of resiliency in a presentation at IGSS 2018 (unpublished). He has been on the SAGE (Supporting Aboriginal Graduate Enhancement) and IGSS planning committee since 2014.
Suke has been a faculty member at Douglas College, North Island College, Coquitlam College and is also an experienced high school teacher (SD43 Coquitlam). His very successful relationships with First Nation organizations led him into consulting and working with and alongside Indigenous teachers, administrators and band council members throughout approximately half of the 203 First Nation reserves throughout BC. Over a seven-year period, his venture in sharing technical hardware and software knowledge was sanctioned by The First Nations Technology Council and The First Nations Education Steering Committee. He quickly discovered serious concerns affecting remote Aboriginal communities such as lack of high-tech infrastructure, limited access to educational resources, restricted opportunities to communicate via the Internet and sporadic access through web-based computer technologies. After experiencing the other side of the ‘last mile’ or the ‘digital divide’, it was essential to share and support the mutual concerns affecting many rural First Nation communities. From the lens of an ally settler perspective, attending Aboriginal communities also became a learning experience for him since it evoked early colonial influences in how his upbringing was flavoured by Eurocentric ideologies primarily through western educational policies in curricula. His mandate is to do research that will be in cohesion with First Nation communities, as all members are viewed as ‘co-researchers’, not participants or subjects. At a national and global scope his examination of neoliberal policies and subsequent recent contemporary political movements, analyzes equity issues that challenge governmental attempts at the dissemination of fairness and equality. His ontological view is that all Indigenous people share ‘relationality’ through a common epistemological ideology that culture is inherently connected to land, place and a spiritual third space.
Co-Supervisors: Dr. Margaret Kovach (Educational Studies) and Dr. Cash Ahenakew (Educational Studies)
Committee Member: Dr. Alison Taylor (Educational Studies)
Email: kate.paterson@alumni.ubc.ca
Website: www.kepaterson.com
Kate Paterson is a 2nd year PhD student in EDST. Her research has focused on children’s literature (specifically traditional fairytales and “anti-oppressive” children’s picture books) in the elementary school classroom as a forum to open up meaningful discussions of gender and sexuality with young children. Her current doctoral work examines curriculum, pedagogy, and policy to support LGBTQ diversity and inclusivity in elementary education. Kate received her Hons.BA in Sociology at Mount Allison University and her MA in Social Justice & Equity Studies at Brock University.
Supervisors: Deirdre Kelly (Educational Studies) and Mona Gleason (Educational Studies)
Committee members: Ann Travers (Sociology, SFU)

Email: rampersaudp@gmail.com
Trish is a PhD candidate in EDST. Her research interests include critical policy, educational policy, and higher education. Her doctoral research explores policy in a nursing education context.
Trish received her MSN from the University of British Columbia in 2005. For her MSN research she conducted a qualitative study exploring new emergency nurses descriptions of making the transition to a more experienced emergency nurse in the British Columbia context. Her work was presented at conferences in British Columbia, the United States, and Europe.
Trish holds a Faculty position in a nursing program in the lower mainland of British Columbia and is a practicing emergency registered nurse.
Supervisor: Dr. Taylor Webb (Educational Studies)
Committee members: Dr. Claudia Ruitenberg (Educational Studies) and Dr. Paddy Rodney (Nursing)
Congratulations to Dr. Lesley Andres, who has been awarded the 2016 BCCAT Leadership Award from the BC Council on Admissions & Transfer. This is in recognition of Dr. Andres’ research on advancing theory and practice of transfer and articulation within the BC transfer system.
Fore more information about this award, click here.

Handel Kashope Wright, Professor in the Department of Educational Studies has been awarded a two year Hampton Fund Research Grant in the Social Sciences and Humanities Established Scholar Award in the amount of ten thousand dollars ($10,000). Professor Wright’s project is entitled as follows:
Postmulticulturalism: Identity, Difference and Belonging After Multiculturalism.
“Because multiculturalism is still dominant in Canada, the notion of postmulticulturalism seems to be somewhat nascent and tentative here and to have much more purchase in other parts of the world. Depending on (or perhaps irrespective of) one’s conception, it appears postmulticulturalism is either inevitable or (acknowledged or not) already upon us. Wright asserts that it bears examining, therefore, what does or will constitute postmulticulturalism in the Canadian context and how identity and belonging operate under it. His research team (himself and a graduate research assistant) will explore the concept of postmulticulturalism and youths notions of identity and belonging in a major Canadian city.”
Congratulations, Dr. Wright!