As a child, Simon Gadbois could spend hours in the woods, peeking into rabbit holes, poking around beaver dams, stalking squirrels. He’d return home with salamanders and frogs spilling out of his pockets and looking forward to the next day’s adventure.
“Like any kid, I was interested in animals—I was a sponge—and that enthusiasm never went away,” says Dr. Gadbois, an expert on wild “canids,” wolves, coyotes and red foxes. “How lucky is that?”
His passion for wild animals is matched only by his passion to teach about them. A senior instructor of psychology and neuroscience, he has been awarded ±«Óătv’s top prize for teaching, the 2011 ±«Óătv Alumni Association Award of Excellence for Teaching.
While he’s pleased with the award, he admits to being a bit baffled, too. Because, along with teaching the second-year class, Animal Behavior, he also teaches a research methods course, a required class for psychology and neuroscience majors.
“You don’t win a popularity contest with this one,” he says, describing himself as a straight-ahead lecturer, not a showman. “It’s one of those classes no one wants to take.”
And that makes it all the more challenging to teach. “Everything is in the examples and anecdotes,” he explains, “including telling them about the mistakes I’ve made. When you’re designing a research study, there’s always that one variable you haven’t thought of. Because, in psychology and neuroscience, we’re not studying something that’s static, that’s just sitting there; we’re studying something dynamic.”
A little later in the conversation, he comes up with an illustration of the “missing variable.” When doing his PhD in the mid-1990s on why the insubordinate wolves in a pack don’t breed, Dr. Gadbois was required to collect wolves’ urine—which contains metabolites of a common stress hormone—for study. What he didn’t count on was that the winters would be so mild and, without snow, finding the urine was next to impossible. Becoming known as “yellow snow guy,” he even considered renting snowmaking equipment from a ski hill and blanketing the woods as a way of solving his problem.
“The mistakes are really where we learn,” he says, with a laugh. “Plus, you’ll always get a good story.”
Faculty of Management
- A. Gordon Archibald Teaching Excellence Award - School of Business Administration - Lei HuangĚý
- 1st Year MBA Professor of the Year (2011) - Jim Power
- 2nd Year MBA Professor of the Year (2011) - Shamsud Chowdhury

- Commerce Professor of the Year - Joan Conrod
- Outstanding Graduate Advisor -Ěý Jenny Baechler
- Outstanding Undergraduate Staff Advisor - Carrie Hunter
Faculty of Medicine
- ±«Óătv Medical Alumni Association Residency Teaching Award: Colin van Zoost
- Lea C. Steeves Award for Excellence in Teaching of Continuing Medical Education: Douglas E. Sinclair (2010) ĚýĚýĚý
Faculty of Dentistry
- ±«Óătv Dental Students Society Dr Wayne Garland Award 2011: Bruce Friis
- ±«Óătv Dental Students Society Honour Award 2011: Mark Vallee
- ±«Óătv Dental Students Society Honour Award 2011: Gorman Doyle
- W.W. Wood Award Fall 2010 for Excellence in Dental Education: Rick RaftusĚýĚýĚý
Faculty of Law
- Hanna & Harold Barnett Award for Excellence in Teaching First Year Law: Graham Reynolds
- The ±«Óătv Law Students' Society and Alumni Association Award for Excellence in Teaching: Constance MacIntosh ĚýĚýĚý
Faculty of Engineering
- Faculty of Engineering Professor Appreciation Award (First Year): Edward YaoĚýĚý
- Faculty of Engineering Professor Appreciation Award (Second Year): Sergi IakovlevĚý
- Chemical Engineering Annual Professor Appreciation: Stephen Kuzak
- Industrial Engineering Annual Professor Appreciation: Claver Diallo
Faculty of Science
- ±«Óătv Association of Psychology Students Excellence in Teaching: Heather Schellink
- Earth Sciences Award: Martin Gibling ĚýĚýĚý
- The Faculty of Science Award for Excellence in Teaching: Andrea FraserĚý
- Dr. Forbes Langstroth Memorial Award, Physics & Atmospheric Science: Jordan Kyriakidis ĚýĚýĚý
- ±«Óătv University Excellence in Teaching – Neuroscience: Benjamin Rusak
- ±«Óătv University Undergraduate Neuroscience Society Professor of the Year: Jennifer Stamp Ěý
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
- The Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Award for Excellence in Teaching: Roberta Barker
Faculty of Computer Science
- Srini Award for Teaching Excellence in Computer Science: Alex Brodsky
Faculty of Health Professions
- Faculty of Health Professions Teaching Excellence Award – Anne Marie Whelan (College of Pharmacy)
- College of Pharmacy Jessie I. MacKnight Teaching Award – David Gardner
- Nurse Educator Appreciation Award – Colleen Kiberd
Others
- ±«Óătv Alumni Association Award of Excellence for Teaching: Simon Gadbois

- ±«Óătv Sessional and Part-Time Instructor Awards of Excellence for Teaching: Erin Wunker (English & Canadian Studies)ĚýĚýĚý
- Outstanding Graduate Advisor:Ěý Jenny Baechler
- Outstanding Undergraduate Staff Advisor: Carrie Hunter
- Outstanding Undergraduate Faculty Advisor:Ěý Peter Wentzell
- Outstanding Peer Advisor: Sarah Bouchard
- The President's Graduate Teaching Assistant Award: Cheryl Watts (Sociology and Social Anthropology)
 Rachel Dingle (Department of Psychology) 
Victoria Walker (Department of Chemistry)
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DISCUSSION: Do you have a favorite prof at Dal whom you believe is deserving of a teaching award? Give him or her a shout out by telling us why us why you thought he or she was such a good teacher.