News and Releases
Alumni in Their Own Words - Wyatt Anders (2010-12)
Posted in Alumni Profiles | Wednesday, September 4, 2024 @ 2:32 PM
Where has your life taken you since you left CMU?
After CMU, I was offered a full scholarship at the University of Manitoba. I completed two degrees and played professional basketball. I am now juggling the life of coaching, playing (traveling the world through basketball), refereeing, and teaching in the Winnipeg School Division. CMU was the start of my academic and playing career—I would not have had these opportunities without CMU.
Continue ReadingSo What? A Podcast – Breakup Songs
Posted in Audio | Sunday, September 1, 2024 @ 11:35 AM
Kicking off season five is a back-to-school poetry lesson about why pop music matters with Dr. Paul Dyck, Professor of English at CMU.
Credits
Theme Music: Urbana-Metronica (wooh-yeah mix) by spinningmerkaba © copyright 2011 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/jlbrock44/33345 Ft: Morusque, Jeris, CSoul, Alex Beroza
Sunday@CMU: September 2024
Posted in Audio | Sunday, September 1, 2024 @ 12:00 AM
A Theology of Communications
This month on Sunday@CMU, we are kicking off the academic year with a new series from David Balzer, Associate Professor of Communications and Media at CMU. In these meditations, he delves into some key points of a theology of communications, considering how we might develop a biblical response to our unique technological era.
Listen NowCMU announces 2024 Leadership Scholarship recipients
Posted in News Releases | Monday, August 19, 2024 @ 11:31 AM
Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) strives to make education accessible and affordable for students through scholarships and bursaries. In 2022/23, CMU distributed over $720,000 in financial assistance to students.
CMU is pleased to award the 2024 Leadership Scholarship to Adalynne Pahl (Westgate Mennonite Collegiate), Milo Klassen (Mennonite Collegiate Institute), and Ella Grijalva (Collège Béliveau).
Continue ReadingCMU professor receives federal funds to study cultural, religious differences in family caregiving (WFP)
Posted in Stories | Friday, August 16, 2024 @ 11:15 AM
In 2018, more than 375,000 Manitobans spent 230 million hours looking after ill or aging family members—care worth $3.9 billion.
That same year, about one in four Canadians, or 7.8 million people, provided care to a family member or friend with a long-term health condition, a physical or mental disability or problems related to aging.
Those figures, the most recently available, come from Statistics Canada General Social Survey on Caregiving and Care. And over the next five years, they will form the background to new research by Canadian Mennonite University Prof. Heather Campbell-Enns.
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