The Canadian Campus Wellbeing Survey is made possible through collaborative partnership between post-secondary stakeholders, research experts, and government.

Funding for research and administrative support is generously provided by The Rossy Foundation. The British Columbia deployment in 2019-20 was funded by the BC Ministry of Advanced Education, Skills and Training.

The University of British Columbia and the University of Toronto were collaborating partners on the development of the CCWS, guided by experts from post-secondary institutions across the country. For more information on survey development, visit the Survey Development page. 

Confidential, third-party survey administration is provided through UBC’s CCWS Team.

The Best Practices Network in Canadian Higher Education (BP-Net) is a national online post-secondary student mental health community of practice and knowledge exchange network that supports Canadian campuses through sharing practices, knowledge exchange events, research, and other resources. Through the Best Practices Guide, BP-Net also aims to promote and advance evidence-informed emerging, promising, and best practice mental health and wellness initiatives that improve Canadian post-secondary students’ mental health and well-being. The Best Practices Guide is inclusive of practices with varying stages of evidence (cutting-edge, emerging, promising, and best) and considerations of Indigenous-specific practices and health equity. BP-Net features a range of practices that might be useful to campuses when considering findings from the CCWS survey. To learn more, visit the BP-Net website and Best Practices Guide.


Partners

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