Yearly Archives: 2015

Campus Shuttle summer vacation timetable

The Campus Shuttle is back with a special Monday-Friday summer vacation service.

From Wednesday 12 August – Friday 18 September, shuttles will depart every 1½ hours between 08.00 and 18.30. Please note that there will be no pick-up or drop-off at Liberty Quays.

View the timetable.

The booking system will be available from 18 August. Until then, the service will be first-come, first-served and you will need your KentOne card.

This vacation service is a trial to see if there is demand for the Campus Shuttle out of term time. We will be collecting feedback on the service and the driver may ask you to complete a short survey. You can also send your feedback to CampusShuttle@kent.ac.uk.

Athena SWAN Awareness Event

Professor Averil Macdonald OBE will share her ‘10 Top Tips for Success’ at the Athena SWAN Awareness Event on Friday 18 September.

Since our last Canterbury event, six of the Science Schools at Kent have been awarded Athena SWAN Bronze Awards, and the initiative itself has expanded to include all disciplines, professional service staff in Schools, and wider gender issues including trans students and staff. This year’s annual Athena SWAN Awareness Day is a celebration of our achievements to date and an invitation to wider staff to think about becoming involved. The theme is: Sharing and Building Success. The Athena SWAN initiative facilitates organisational and personal success, and participants can gain insight into how these can be achieved.

The Athena SWAN initiative is also about recognising advancement of gender equality: representation, progression and success for all. This is something we are committed to, and by pursuing this agenda, we create the best working environment for all staff. This year’s event will cover themes relevant to staff across the Faculties and Professional Service departments.

Professor Averil Macdonald OBE (leading influencer on engaging under-represented groups with science) will speak, Professor Diane Houston (Dean of the Graduate School) will open the event, a panel discussion will spark debate, and the workshops are designed to inform or provide practical help.

A draft programme is already available and we invite you to join us in the Keynes Foyer at 12:00. The event will run until 15:30 and includes lunch.

We welcome all staff – men and women; Academic Schools and Professional Services; Medway and Canterbury based – to attend the event.

To find out more, and register for the event, go to the Awareness Day webpages.

Staff prepare to ride from Paris to Canterbury

Current and retired members of staff are busy preparing for the grueling 230-mile Goldstein cycle ride from our Paris campus to our Canterbury campus.

The riders will starts on 1 September in Paris and finish on 4 September 2015 in Canterbury, in order to coincide with our 50th anniversary celebration finale.

Twice a week, these intrepid riders are doing 20 to 30-mile exercise rides in order to build up their stamina and leg muscles.

The University has purchased a set of cycling vests sporting its 50th anniversary logo, so that publicity for our celebrations will be gathered all the way from Paris to Dieppe and Newhaven to Canterbury.

We wish them well!

If you use Firefox, update it today

If you use Firefox, whether on a Windows device, Mac or Linux, you need to upgrade it to version 39.0.3 because of a security vulnerability in all previous versions.

If you use Firefox with FTP clients, Subversion, or any other software that uses saved passwords, you should change the stored passwords.

If you have SSH keys saved, which allow SSH login to servers without entering passwords, delete them and replace them immediately (both on your local machine and the server they are connecting to).

Full story:
http://blogs.kent.ac.uk/isnews/if-you-use-firefox-update-it-today/

William Rowlandson talk reported in ‘El Comercio’

A recent talk by Dr William Rowlandson from the Department of Modern Languages at the annual summer conference at the La Fundación – Archivo de Indianos in Colombres has been reported by El Comercio, the major newspaper for Asturias.

The article discusses his presentation entitled ‘La Guerra civil española y la revolución cubana según Ernest Hemingway’ [‘The Spanish Civil War and Cuban Revolution by Ernest Hemingway’] which ended the conference season at the Archivo de Indianos.

El Comercio is a Spanish daily newspaper first published in 1878 in the city of Gijon. With a daily circulation of 24,000 it is the second-largest newspaper by circulation in Autrias.

The article is available in Spanish at: www.elcomercio.es/asturias/oriente/201507/25/finalizan-conferencias-archivo-indianos-20150725001916-v.html

Medway L&T Festival – 25 September

You are invited to attend this year’s Medway L&T Festival – jointly presented by the Universities of Greenwich and Kent.

  • Unsure of the difference between group-work and team-based learning? Come along to listen to Rebecca McCarter discuss how TBL has transformed teaching delivery in the Pharmacy programme at Bradford. Rebecca has worked in several programmes using TBL in varying contexts and levels: find out how you can use TBL to support students in your modules.
  • Concerned about retention and progression of your students? Find out how peer mentoring supports students through stages of study. Listen to the different types of activities used to engage students in their learning.
  • Speakers include staff from the Kent, Greenwich and Bradford and there will be plenty of time for discussion.

9.00 Welcome

The student voice

  • Session A: Academic Peer Mentoring Louise Frith, Student Learning Adviser, Kent
  • Session B: Students as Monika Pazio, Lecturer Educational Development and Simon Walker, Principal Lecturer and Head of EDU, Greenwich

10.35-10.50 Break

Developing the dialogue

  • Session A: Lecture flipping, Zoe Swan, Senior Lecturer in Law, Greenwich; Gosia Iwaniec, Learning Technologist, Greenwich
  • Session B: TBL in Context Rebecca McCarter, L&T Developer, Bradford
  • Session C: Useful tools for feedback and dialogue John Matthews, Learning Technologist, Kent

12.30 Close

Information  on events and notes from previous events are available at www.kent.ac.uk/teaching/networks/ltn/.

Learn about Japanese culture and crafts

The Centre for English and World Languages (CEWL) invites you to “A Taste of Japan” in Darwin Conference Suites 2 and 3 on the Canterbury Campus on Weds 19 August from 17.00 – 18.30.

This free Japanese cultural event is linked to Kent Extra and is open to staff and students. Students who attend will be eligible for 10 Employability Points.

“A Taste of Japan” is hosted and performed by students from a number of Japanese universities who are doing English short summer courses at CEWL.

You will be able to take part in a Japanese tea ceremony, have a go at making a fan, origami and calligraphy, and watch song and dance performances by the students. There will also be a demonstration of the Japanese sword art of batto-do by martial arts experts Chris Barron from Engineering and Digital Arts and Carl Swaffer from Information Services.

If you would like to come, please sign up in advance via:
https://kent.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/tasteofjapan2015

If you have any questions, please email: kentextra@kent.ac.uk

£26K award to research implementation of social and economic inclusion policies in Brazil & EU

An award of more than £26K has been made to Kent Law Professor Toni Williams for a three-year research project to investigate how legal and regulatory techniques are used to implement social and economic inclusion policies in Latin America and the EU.

The award of £26,350 has been made by the British Academy’s International Partnership and Mobility Scheme and will help support development of a long-term collaborative research relationship with the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG) in Brazil. Professor Williams is Principal Investigator for the project with Professor Fabricio Polido from UFMG as co-investigator.

Head of Kent Law School Professor Williams said: ‘This research programme will strengthen the developing research partnerships between the law schools at UFMG and Kent, allowing us to hold joint research events, publish collaboratively and co-deliver modules. We will also be able to develop our research networks, enabling two-way academic mobility for staff and postgraduate research students.

‘The project will also contribute to our joint and more general global objective of strengthening each School’s capacity to contribute to national and regional policy debates in Brazil and the EU, increasing the international exposure of the research conducted in both Schools and deepening understanding between EU and Latin American scholarly circles.’

The project, scheduled to begin in October, will explore the kinds of law and regulation used to implement inclusionary policies along with the differing implications for social justice, equalities and diversities and development.

Professor Williams said: ‘Brazil and the UK are excellent sites to study implementation of inclusion because each country has done innovative work in this field; the UK through institutions such as the Social Exclusion Unit and the Financial Inclusion Taskforce, Brazil though social justice rights, education, empowerment, digital and technological inclusion programmes and wealth transfers.’

Natalia Sobrevilla Perea organises workshop in Peru

Dr Natalia Sobrevilla Perea from the Department of Modern Languages is organising a workshop in Peru entitled ‘Live to tell the tale: testimony as a document of the time of violence in Peru (1980-2000)’, at the Lugar de la Memoria (LUM), Peru’s Museum of Memory on Monday 10 August 2015.

The LUM is a project of the Peruvian State that aims to create a dynamic and interactive space that addresses the history of the violence that occurred in Peru between 1980 and 2000. It aims to recognise and dignify the victims of that period through reflection, sharing and celebration. Natalia’s workshop, aimed at young people, will discuss to what degree the audio visual testimonies presented by the Truth and Reconciliation Committee serve as evidence to understand Peru’s recent past, and is a central part of her research for the next Research Excellence Framework (REF) Case study.

While in Peru, Natalia will also present her recently translated book The Caudillo of the Andes: Andrés de Santa Cruz (Cambridge University Press, 2011). The presentation, geared towards the academic community in Peru, will take place in the largest think tank in Peru, the Instituto de Estudios Peruanos which edited the book in collaboration with Universidad Católica, and two local historians will discuss the book.

For full details, please see the publisher’s webpage.

Summer membership offer at Kent Sport

There is still time to benefit from Kent Sports summer membership offer and enjoy all sorts of activities at 50% of the usual price, including fitness and dance classes, racket sports and the gym. The University of Kent Canterbury campus provides an attractive setting to workout or enjoy a class or a game with friends.

The summer membership is fantastic value and provides access for a month to modern facilities with helpful staff and an exciting range of sports and activities. A one-month pass for adults is £33.50 and £26 for those aged 16 to 18.

The University sports facilities have been very popular so far with summer students, University of Kent staff and residents of the local area taking advantage of the summer membership offer; and this is the ideal time to enjoy some activities here before the next academic year commences.

The summer membership is available for purchase up until 1 September. So if you fancy a game of badminton or tennis, want to try a Spinning class or lift some weights or many other activities, you can find out more on our website at www.kent.ac.uk/sports/membership, call 01227 823623 or enquire at the reception at the Sports Centre or the Pavilion.