Wild Spaces is an interdisciplinary team of students, staff and faculty.  

Lee Beavington photo

Lee Beavington, PhD

A learning strategist and interdisciplinary instructor at KPU, Lee also serves on the Climate+ Challenge instructor team. With nature as a co-teacher, his place-based learning practice benefits not only our physical, mental and emotional selves, but invites the voices of the more-than-human community.

Lee’s LinkTree

Seanna Takacs headshot

Seanna Takacs, PhD

In Accessibility Services we are always wrestling with concepts of disability, access, and design. Outdoor, place-based learning gives us the chance to rethink those concepts and witness a marvelous reframing and reshaping. Seanna was drawn to KPU Wild Spaces because teaching and learning in natural spaces offers us a way of thinking about ourselves, our worlds, and of course, notions of access differently.

Parthiphan Krishnan, PhD

As an instructor in Geography and the Environment, the opportunity and ability to engage in experiential research that is set in the everyday “Wild Spaces” that surrounds us adds the ‘extra’ into what most of us consider the ordinary. It reconnects us with the natural environment, creating a sense of wonder and awe that inspires curiosity. It becomes the ‘first school.’

Farhad Dastur, PhD

Farhad is a psychology instructor and enjoys working with creative people who value natural places as teaching and learning spaces. Outdoor, place-based learning is most effective in my teaching practice when students see class concepts clearly manifested in nature. It is also important to go beyond the artificial and safe environment of the classroom and into the complex, messy, and dynamic world of nature.

Nicole Tunbridge, M.Sc.

As faculty and the co-chair of biology, Nicole’s interest in place-based learning began when she took her first ecology course early in her undergraduate program. This course was the first time she went outside the classroom to learn. These experiences had a transformative effect on her own learning and sparked a lifelong curiosity about the natural world that has been a driving force in her career as an ecologist and educator.

Yhanu Sivapalan

A student in Geography and the Environment and also Policy Studies, Yhanu has found taking learning outdoors to be increasingly relevant for her academic career. The benefits are transformative in nature—both mentally and physically. Understanding that KPU Wild Spaces’ mission is to work towards diversifying outdoor learning drew her in immediately.

Yhanu’s Instagram

Jaden Lewis

Currently a student in biology, Jaden was drawn to KPU Wild Spaces due to wanting to have a better understanding of the natural spaces at KPU Surrey and nearby. As a biology student, we spend a lot of time indoors in labs and classrooms. The ability to produce more outdoor learning opportunities for biology courses would bring important experiences to this degree.

(Rick) Shi Feng

Alumni of KPU geography. Rick believes in using sociocultural communication skills to bring out the nature within people. To inspire people to do good and be good. On-site outdoor education is very applicable in education that subconsciously affect people to act in ways less harmful to our environment.

Liz Toohey-Wiese

Instructor of Fine Arts at KPU. As a landscape artist, Liz is always trying to consider her own relationship to place. Learning more about outdoor education through KPU Wild Spaces is helping her figure out more ways to get students outside. Her hope is that they gain a deeper connection to the non-human world around them.

Liz’s Website

David Sadoway headshot

David Sadoway, PhD

Faculty-Instructor in Geography and the Environment and Policy Studies. He served as a Research Fellow at Nanyang Technological University (Singapore) where he studied neighbourhood soundscapes and noise pollution. A current research interest involves how planners can advance (or undermine) socio-economic and environmental justice and human rights. He is interested in how we can learn from and with nature and this includes wild spaces and place in our pedagogical praxis.

Faculty Profile

Victoria headshot

Victoria Tubrett

As the Lab Instructor with Geography and the Environment Victoria helps students connect course concepts to the physical environment around us. Learning while surrounded by the beauty of our complex natural environments allows for deeper learning and evokes empowerment and excitement in students. Wild Spaces is an opportunity to contribute to place-based learning options for students and to add more place-based learning activities for Geog+Envr lab students.

Amy Huestis headshot

Amy Huestis

Instructor of Fine Arts, and lives on the stɑl̓əw̓ (Fraser) river estuary at Hwlhits’um (Canoe Pass), in the sacred and unceded water world of the Coast Salish Peoples, including the Hul’qumi’num Mustimuhw (Hul’qumi’num Treaty Group of seven Coast Salish Nations), scəw̓aθən, and xʷməθkʷəy̓əm. In her experiential art practice, she addresses ecological destruction and the importance of biodiversity.

Amy’s Website

Iuliia headshot

Iuliia Astashova

Iuliia is a current geography student with a background in political science. She is an Arts 4800 practicum student assigned to KPU Wild Spaces, a role she views as an excellent opportunity to apply her classroom knowledge to real-world settings. Iuliia is passionate about studying and protecting the environment to address ecological issues and aspires to see society develop symbiotic relationships with nature in the future. 

Seloame Alorvi

Selly is a plucky life long learner, trying to apply every sliver of knowledge every chance he gets. Currently pursuing a degree in Physics for Modern Technology at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, with hopes of branching into the field of Environmental Remediation.

Arts 4800 Practicum Students hosted by KPU Wild Spaces:

Lisa Hedmark

Student in Journalism and Fine Arts. Something that drew Lisa to KPU Wild Spaces is the chance to take her learning and work experience outdoors. We are so fortunate to live in this part of the world and it’s important for her to bring attention to the climate disasters. As a journalist, when people are comfortable in their natural environment, they are more willing to open and share what can sometimes be a challenging story.

Ahanya Tonse

Ahanya is majoring in Journalism and is also an Arts Practicum student at KPU Wild Spaces. As someone who believes in learning and working in nature, she was fascinated by KPU Wild Spaces. As a Journalism student, she spends most of her time outside in nature, interviewing people, which is also where she gets interesting story ideas from.