There are specific guidelines and procedures that must be considered when undergraduate research opportunities are being developed, or when undergraduate students are engaging in research. Please find below a few considerations:
It is the University of Toronto’s goal to create a research community that is inclusive of all persons and treats all members of the community in an equitable manner. In creating such a community, the University aims to foster a climate of understanding and mutual respect for the dignity and worth of all persons.
In working toward this goal, the University will strive to provide support for, and facilitate the accommodation of individuals with disabilities so that all may share the same level of access to opportunities, participate in the full range of activities that the University offers, and achieve their full potential as members of the University community.
Inclusion in research experiences is achieved when an experience supports learning for all students. In keeping with the Ontario Human Rights Code, the University of Toronto has a commitment to an equitable learning environment for people with disabilities. It is important to engage in an interactive process to determine the optimal and most appropriate accommodations for individual students engaged in research.
At the University of Toronto, tri-campus accessibility service offices support students who experience difficulties accessing their education through classroom and experiential learning accommodations.
- Students can connect with the Accessibility Services Office associated with their campus:
Curricular: If a student requires an accommodation related to a course, they may wish to connect with one of the accessibility services offices at the University of Toronto. If a student is not already registered with Accessibility Services, they are able to do so at any point during their studies. Staff at these offices will advise students on the disclosure of accommodation requirements as well as support them through the process of determining and negotiating effective accommodations for the student’s individual circumstances.
Students should be informed that they may require accommodations for curricular research experiences that differ from the accommodations in place for a more traditional course environment. If a student requires further accommodations related to a curricular research experience, faculty members should connect them with one of the accessibility service offices. Staff at these offices can recommend further accommodations and support faculty through the process of implementing effective accommodations for the student’s individual circumstances.
Co-Curricular: Career Exploration & Education (CxEd) has created Disclosure & Accommodation Guide for the Workplace, a resource to help students navigate disclosures and accommodation conversations throughout the job search process.
Student support offices strive to create a safe and comfortable community where students have opportunities to discuss navigating barriers, find peer support and learn about various academic and social opportunities.
Environmental Health & Safety in the Research Context
At the University of Toronto, Environmental Health & Safety (EHS) has a broad mandate of ensuring and facilitating a safe environment for all employees, students, visitors and contractors who participate in our community and frequent our spaces. In the context of research, EHS offers programs and resources to support and facilitate research activities as well as to ensure compliance with applicable regulations and legislation.
EHS aims to provide environmental health and safety services to the University related to the following research-related topics:
- Chemical and laboratory safety
- Biosafety and biosecurity
- Radiation safety (radionuclides, lasers, x-ray, UV, EMF)
- Cannabis Research
- Field Research safety
- Occupational hygiene and safety
- Occupational health and medical surveillance
- Incident / accident reporting
- Environmental compliance
Training & Certification
If you are conducting research in a laboratory, an office environment, in the field or off-campus, a range of safety training is available in-class or online that covers how you can protect yourself by working safely. EHS offers training in the following areas:
- WHMIS and Lab safety
- Radiation safety (sealed and open sources)
- Laser safety
- X-ray safety
- Biosafety
- Respiratory Protection Training
- Cannabis Research
- Ergonomics
- First aid certification
- Joint Health and Safety Certification
- Basic health and safety awareness
- Working at heights
EHS staff can assist you with evaluating your research project to ensure all applicable permits are obtained and required training is completed. Visit the EHS website to learn more.
The University of Toronto’s comprehensive general liability coverage covers against legal liability arising from University operations which cause bodily injury, personal injury or damage to property of others (third parties). This can include liability arising out of the actions of students while engaged in University managed and supervised activities such as field or research trips.
Depending on specific circumstances, the University will extend its general liability insurance coverage to students. The University maintains commercial general liability insurance, which will defend and indemnify faculty, staff and students against claims arising out of bodily injury or property damage.
For questions about the extension of general liability insurance coverage, faculty or staff program coordinators should contact the University of Toronto’s Risk Management and Insurance department.
Intellectual Property (IP), simply defined, is any form of knowledge or expression created with one’s intellect. It includes such things as inventions; data; computer software; trademarks; literary, artistic, musical, or visual works; and even simple knowledge on how to do something.
It is important to clearly define how IP created during an research opportunity will be treated; namely, whether the inventor or author retains ownership or whether the IP rights are assigned to the partner organization. The circumstances and mechanisms of IP assignment will vary depending on key features of the experience, outlined generally below:
A Non-disclosure Agreement (NDA), also known as a confidentiality agreement (CA), is a legal contract between two parties regarding the use or disclosure of information (such as data, materials, financial information, etc.). In the context of a research experience, an NDA may be requested by the research partner in order to restrict the disclosure of information by students, staff or faculty at the University associated with the project to third parties.
The applicability and risks associated with students signing NDAs or CAs vary depending on key features of the experience, outlined generally below:
Ethics in Human Research
The University of Toronto’s Human Research Ethics Unit (HREU) oversees ethics in human research. HREU provides administrative support to the University Research Ethics Boards (REBs) and to researchers in the development, review, and oversight of human research to ensure compliance with applicable laws, regulations and policies. Review the HREU website, if you’re intending to conduct research involving human participants or personal information.
Ethics in Course-Based Research
In situations where students will be conducting activities that the course instructor believes may constitute a research activity or project, the instructor should contact the Division of the Vice-President, Research and Innovation to determine whether an ethics protocol is needed. For those interested in the ethics review of course-based research, a course template application is available through My Research Human Protocols (MRHP), which is the online ethics application system. Instructors requiring an ethics protocol would submit the protocol through MRHP and would be responsible for their students’ projects.
Courses require ethics review (and approval) when a course activity is deemed to be research involving human participants, with two notable exceptions:
- Program evaluation is not considered to be research, unless the plan to disseminate findings (e.g. publication) goes beyond the course or organization.
- Community-engaged research/Service-learning is generally not considered research, unless the position is as a member of a research team. In such cases, usually it is the Principal Investigator (PI) that needs to seek research ethics board review, not the student, and the instructor should confirm that all necessary approvals have been received.