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Jennifer Poole

Jennifer Poole

Associate Professor
EducationMSW, PhD
Phone416-979-5000, ext. 556226

Jennifer (Jen) Poole (she/her) is a white settler. She is also an associate professor at TMU’s School of Social Work where her work sits in the confluence of madness and grief. She grounds herself in approaches that challenge colonialism, white supremacy and carcerality and those that center connection, co-creation, access and justice. Her research is always collaborative, with current projects focusing on disenfranchised loss and grief, sanism(s) and the interruption of colonialism in education. Past projects have focussed on precarious work and health, transplantation, how mental health is disciplined in the helping professions and critical analyses of mental health recovery. A published poet, she loves to teach/learn, supports graduate students at multiple universities and has long been involved in community mutual aid initiatives.

  • SWP 331: Social Work Practice Theories (Undergraduate)
  • SWP 50A/B and SWP 51A/B: Advanced Practice (Undergraduate)
  • SK 8212: Critical Perspectives on Mental Health (Graduate)
  • SK 8104: MSW Research Seminar (Graduate)
  • SK 8105: MSW Field Seminar (Graduate)
  • Project: Stories of unpacking colonialism: A decolonizing journeys documentary
    Year: 2023
    Role: Co-applicant
    Funding received: $49,290.00
    Funded by: SSHRC, Connections Grant
  • Project: When grief comes to class: Gathering story, knowledge and experience on learning and teaching with grief
    Year: 2022
    Role: Principle Investigator/Fellow
    Funding received: $14,000.00
    Funded by: Teaching Fellows Program, CELT, Toronto Metropolitan University
  • Project: Decolonizing journeys: Learning about decolonizing through Indigenous research and digital story work
    Year: 2020
    Role: Co-applicant
    Funding received: $213,800.00
    Funded by: SSHRC, Insight Grant
  • Project: Advancing equity through health professions education: Collaborative development of a research program based on the 'Coin Model of Privilege and Allyship’
    Year: 2020
    Role: Co-investigator
    Funding received: $20,000.00
    Funded by: CIHR, Planning and Dissemination Grant
  • Project: Duty to report or accommodate? Mental health and the regulation of helping professionals
    Year: 2016
    Role: Principle Investigator
    Funding received: $12,000.00
    Funded by: Toronto Metropolitan University Health Research Fund and FCS Seed Fund
  • Project: Hybrid bodies III: Gifting life, embodiment, affect, anonymity and kinship.
    Year: 2015.
    Role: Collaborator.
    Funding received: $425,000.
    Funded by: SSHRC Insight Grant
  • Project: Gifting life: Exploring donor family members’ embodied responses to organ donation in Canada
    Year: 2013.
    Role: Co-principal investigator.
    Funding received: $153,942.
    Funded by: CIHR Operating Grant