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It shouldn't be
surprising a pair teachers who won awards with the word
community in the title aren't really sure why they were
chosen.
Jane
Fritz, a professor and dean of computer science at the University of New
Brunswick in Fredericton, suggests asking
whoever nominated her. Stephen Ibaraki, head of research,
advanced professional programs at Capilano
College, North Vancouver, BC, answers
simply, "I'm not sure."
Their
respective bodies of work, however, aren't prone to acts of
humility.
The
Information Technology Association of Canada honoured dozens
of individuals and businesses with the Community IT Hero Award
for their dedication during IT Week
celebrations.
When
pressed for an answer, Fritz surmises it was her work pushing
for the recently-passed information system professional (ISP)
legislation in New Brunswick, the fourth province to have done
so.
"It's
establishing that anybody who has the ISP designation has a
certain education background, certain experience, that they
adhere to a certain code of ethics, and that they are liable
for professional discipline if there's a complaint against
that can be proved," says Fritz.
The
ISP designation is awarded through the Canadian Information
Processing Society.
Fritz
says she hopes the legislation will provide benefits to the
public and employers by holding members to a standard in the
same way engineers and doctors are.
"They
should be able to count on a standard for people working in
the computer industry and to make sure people working in the
industry understand that they have a responsibility to the
public good and public safety," says
Fritz.
"There
are a lot of shysters out there and it's time for us to mature
and take ownership and responsibility for these kinds of
things."
For
Ibaraki, this one of three awards he has received this year.
"I've been pretty lucky this year," he says. Luck, perhaps,
and a lot of hard work.
On
top of his work at the college, Ibaraki is the chairman and
chief architect of iGEN Knowledge Solutions Inc. The New
Westminster, BC-based company was founded with other teachers
and focuses on Web-enabling businesses and market research.
The research is then given to their respective students so
they can a better understanding of the high-tech
industry.
When
not teaching or building the business, Ibaraki does streaming
videos for SmartForce, an e-learning company in Redwood City,
Calif.
"I
do videos in the States one to three times a month and they're
broadcast worldwide and I don't take payment for that. I do
that so maybe the company can set up scholarships for women or
people in disadvantaged groups. That was the agreement anyway.
Don't pay me, you as a company try and give back," says
Ibaraki. |