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Job Category Student Employee Job Title PhD position: Spatial patterns and resilience in tundra community composition Department Research | Myers-Smith Lab | Department of Forest and Conservation
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University of Toronto | Downtown Toronto University of Toronto Harbord, Ontario | Canada | 5 days ago
Qualifications: PhD in English with specialization in and/or experience teaching composition/writing at the university level; strong academic record, demonstrated teaching ability, evidence of currency in subject
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University of Toronto | Downtown Toronto University of Toronto Harbord, Ontario | Canada | 5 days ago
regular office hours; supervising any TAs assigned to course, if applicable. Minimum Qualifications: PhD in English with specialization in rhetoric or a related subject and/or experience teaching rhetoric
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Course Number, Section, and Name: ENG 113.3 (W03) Literature and Composition Reading Narrative Term and Course Dates: Spring (May 6 to June 21) CRN: 41495 Delivery Mode: This course will be offered fully
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Business Education: •Graduate Degree (PhD preferred) in Rhetoric, Composition, Business and Professional Communication, or a closely related field. •Evidence of having received training in the teaching of
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– Communication in Engineering : Education: Graduate Degree (PhD preferred) in Rhetoric, Composition, Business and Professional Communication, or a closely related field. Evidence of having received training in
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composition, wildlife movement and species ranges. This research will also examine the collective impact of these changes on the livelihoods of Indigenous communities in the Yukon Territory, Canada
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plants grow resulting in changes to wildlife habitats including altered plant composition such as an increase in shrub species and a change in the timing of plant resources for wildlife. The Canada
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tundra ecosystems. Climate change could alter the timing of spring green up and how long plants grow resulting in changes to wildlife habitats including altered plant composition such as an increase in
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plants grow resulting in changes to wildlife habitats including altered plant composition such as an increase in shrub species and a change in the timing of plant resources for wildlife. The Canada