This directory provides links to the three faculties, schools, academic and administrative departments.
Quick access to employee contact information.
Nipissing is a progressive and exciting place to work. Check out our job opportunities website for positions that may be of interest.
Find all the links to student services, and many other resources, that you'll use throughout your studies at Nipissing.
Everything you need to know about costs and how to fund your education can be found here.
Customize your learning experience in our Applied and Professional Studies, Arts and Science, and Education degree programs.
Located within driving distance of Orillia and Barrie, programs include Child and Family Studies, Culture and the Arts, Liberal Arts and teaching options.
Earn a BA (Honours) in Contemporary Studies from Laurier and a BEd from Nipissing as well as practice teach in the Public or Catholic schools near Brantford.
Nipissing University’s history department welcomes one of Canada’s preeminent historians, Dr. Ian McKay, to North Bay for two engaging discussions.On Wednesday, January 25, Mckay will participate in a panel discussion with Nipissing University professor Dr. Larry Patriquin, titled Unite the Left North Bay? A Community Conversation. The discussion takes place at 8 p.m. at the WKP Kennedy Gallery (150 Main Street East). The North Bay community is invited to share their knowledge and ideas.McKay will also deliver the History Department’s annual keynote lecture on Thursday, January 26, at 7:30 p.m. in room H106. Titled, Warrior Nation: the Use and Abuse of History in Harper’s Canada, the lecture will critique the attempt by Stephen Harper’s Conservative government to position war as central to the Canadian experience. Doing so, he argues, requires a reworking of Canadian history and a fundamental reconceptualization of Canada itself. McKay is a professor of History at Queen’s University. His recent book, Reasoning Otherwise: Leftists and the People's Enlightenment in Canada won the 2008 John A. Macdonald prize from the Canadian Historical Association for best book of the year. His article The Liberal Order Framework: A Prospectus for a Reconnaissance of Canadian History is remaking how historians understand the Canadian past. McKay specializes in Canadian cultural history, working-class history, the history of Canadian socialism and the history of Nova Scotia. These events are free of charge and all are welcome.For more information e-mail Jamie Murton at jmurton@nipissingu.ca or Catherine Murton Stoehr atmstoehr@nipissingu.ca.
© Nipissing University 2012 • Disclaimer • Privacy • Accessibility