Articles by author: Brock University

  • Human experience critical for employees working from home, says Brock expert

    MEDIA RELEASE: 13 April 2020 – R0065

    In an unprecedented era where nearly all knowledge-based employees are working from home, the Dean of Brock University’s Goodman School of Business says the human experience remains important, perhaps now more than ever.

    Goodman Dean Andrew Gaudes has studied telework and crisis management for more than two decades, including writing a master’s thesis on virtual officing during periods of interruption, which examined frameworks for creating telework environments in periods of crisis.

    Gaudes says under normal circumstances, an important element of a distributed work model where employees are working in locations other than the central office is encouraging and supporting ways for workers to come together with others outside their regular work tasks.

    Whether it’s with office neighbours gathering at local coffee shops or at centrally located satellite work centres, the intent is to maintain social interaction and share ideas beyond the daily work routine.

    But when the current response to the COVID-19 pandemic is to advise people to stay apart, how do you encourage that human connection?

    “In our new reality, it’s a persistent challenge to maintain human interaction without human proximity,” says Gaudes. “Now more than ever, it’s important for managers to be creative and reach out to their employees with regular communication, to understand what they may need in terms of resources and support, as well as to create environments where using the technology we are applying towards our work is also applied in supporting social interaction too.”

    Like many others around the world, Gaudes and the roughly 200 faculty and staff of the Goodman School of Business have been operating in a distributed work model for the past four weeks. Across Brock, one of the largest employers in the Niagara region, all but a handful of operational staff are now working remotely.

    Frequent and regular communication, as well as virtual coffee breaks applying office technology, such as Microsoft Teams and Lifesize, has been encouraged.

    “It’s an opportunity to see each other’s faces, discuss daily life and tune out from regular work tasks, if only for a few minutes,” says Gaudes.

    Whether the world returns to ‘business as usual’ weeks or months from now, he expects there will be an increased number of knowledge-based employees working from distributed places, such as their homes.

    “No matter what we’re doing today, and what will change once we’re on the other side of this crisis, there will be a continued need for the human experience,” he says. “As organizations incorporate distributed models of work, they’ll also need to factor in opportunities for people to engage and interact, so they can satisfy the fundamental human need of social interaction.”

     

    Goodman School of Business Dean Andrew Gaudes is available for media interviews.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, or 905-347-1970 

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    Categories: Media releases

  • The show must go on: Brock prof encouraged by theatre’s resiliency in midst of cancellations

    MEDIA RELEASE: 8 April 2020 – R0064

    The COVID-19 pandemic has had a devastating blow on the performing arts, but a Brock University Dramatic Arts professor is encouraged by what she has seen from the industry.

    “A vibrant industry went to ground over a matter of days, with theatres at first announcing cancelled or postponed productions and then, in most cases, cancelling the remainder of their winter-spring seasons,” says Karen Fricker, Associate Professor of Dramatic Arts and theatre critic for the Toronto Star. “Most performing artists are precarious gig workers who are seeing current and future bookings evaporate.”

    In St. Catharines, arts organizations including the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre, the Meridian Centre, Essential Collective Theatre and Carousel Players are among those that have cancelled or postponed programming through May.

    The Stratford Festival has cancelled performances through to late May, and Niagara-on-the-Lake’s Shaw Festival through June. While Shaw has not laid off workers and is conducting rehearsals online, Stratford has temporary laid off 470 employees, including actors, technicians and box office workers.

    But Fricker sees hope among the gloomy news.

    “Theatre companies and artists have been demonstrating amazing resilience and ingenuity during this time of crisis,” she says. “A lot of activity has gone online.”

    Essential Collective Theatre is turning its annual vaudeville fundraiser into an online affair. “Quarantine Cabaret” will feature short video recordings of various acts, including singing, magic, clowning, drag and melodramatic readings, which will be livestreamed at the end of April.

    Several Toronto-based companies are putting on telephone plays: one-on-one shows in which an audience member gets a hand-made personal story delivered to them over the phone, says Fricker.

    “DLT (DopoLavoro Teatrale), known to local audiences for their immersive shows including That Ugly Mess that Happened in St. Catharines, is producing a series of phone and online performances,” says Fricker. Some of the performances are inspired by Boccacio’s Decameron, a 14thcentury collection of novellas about a group of youth sheltering outside Florence to escape the Black Death.

    “I have been uplifted by engaging with online theatre over the past few weeks,” Fricker says.

    “Watching theatre this way is not the same as sharing the same physical space and time with fellow audience members and the artists themselves, but that doesn’t mean it’s a lesser experience. It’s different, and theatres and audiences alike are adapting to what is, for now, the new normal.”

    Brock University Associate Professor of Dramatic Arts Karen Fricker is available for media interviews.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases