Monthly Archives: June 2016

Drill Hall car park entrance

Between Thursday 9 June and Tuesday 14 June 2016, access into the Drill Hall car park will be restricted to one lane while electric cable is laid for the new Student Hub.

Traffic flow will be managed by traffic lights under the control of a security guard who will check cars on entry, allowing only those with a valid parking permit to enter. Please allow extra time to get into the car park during this period.

Out of hours you do not need a parking permit and there will not be a security guard at the Drill Hall car park entrance, however there will be traffic lights.

Pre-graduation photobooth TODAY

Missed the opportunity to attend the first pre-graduation photobooth? Well if you’re still on campus and missed our last one, then don’t worry, because it’s back again on Wednesday 8 June from 11.00 to 14.30.

Graduating this summer? If you are, we want to give you a unique opportunity to thank, at your graduation, the people who have supported you through your time at Kent.

On Wednesday 8 June, the Congregations team and two University photographers will be on Jarman Plaza. They’ll be there from 11.00–14.30 to take a photo of you and one of our special #KentGrads message boards that you will be able to write a personal message on. The photos we take will then be displayed on plasma screens for your guests to see inside the Cathedral during your graduation ceremony. We will also share them across the University’s Facebook accounts during the week so you can tag yourself and your friends.

This is the first year we have tried this and we think it will be a lovely surprise for your guests. We hope you’ll come along and take part! Please note this event is only for students graduating this July.

Sent in by congregations@kent.ac.uk 

Pre-graduation photobooths

The pre-graduation photobooth is coming to Drill Hall Library in Medway today (Tuesday 7 June, 12.30–15.00) and Canterbury on Wednesday 8 June (Jarman Plaza, 11.00–14.30) and all staff are invited to come along and send a special message to their graduating students.

In the ‘photobooth’ we’ll take a professional photo of you holding one of our special #KentGrads message boards that you can personalise with a message to your graduating students. The photos we take will then be displayed on plasma screens in both Rochester and Canterbury for guests and students to see inside the Cathedral during their graduation ceremony. We will also share them across the University’s Facebook accounts during the week so everyone can tag themselves and their friends. It will only take a few minutes and, especially as this is its first year, we think it will be a lovely surprise for the graduands and their guests.

Sent in by congregations@kent.ac.uk

JSNCC – committee papers now on website

The Joint Staff Negotiating and Consultation Committee is the main forum for consideration and negotiation between the University and its staff. Its membership includes management and union and staff representatives who meet each term. The final meeting of the academic year is due to take place on 15 June 2016. There is a website for this committee where the papers for this and previous meetings can be viewed at https://www.kent.ac.uk/hr-staffinformation/jsncc/index.html

If you would like to comment on any of the Agenda items/papers then please contact your Staff Representative (either Union or non-union)

GMB – Lou Cogger L.Cogger@kent.ac.uk Robin Hornsey R.K.Hornsey@kent.ac.uk

UCU – Owen Lyne, O.L.Lyne@kent.ac.uk  Paul Hubert P.J.Hubert@kent.ac.uk Sian Lewis-Anthony S.Lewis-Anthony@kent.ac.uk

UNISON – Derek Baldwin unisonbranchsec@kent.ac.uk Phil Rogers p.rogers-89@kent.ac.uk Katie Norton K.S.Norton@kent.ac.uk

UNITE – Trevor Reece T.W.Reece@kent.ac.uk

Non Union Representatives:

Linda Lough L.M.Lough@kent.ac.uk Sarah Hyde S.J.Hyde@kent.ac.uk

 

Maddy Withers

Secretary to the JSNCC

How do you feel about the Street Marshal scheme?

Let us know how you feel about the Canterbury Street Marshal scheme, that has operated in the area around the bottom of the Eliot footpath since arrivals weekend in September 2015.

Take the survey

Your feedback will be used to develop the scheme to best meet students and residents’ needs.

Thank you in advance for your participation.

Sent in by Student Services, Contactus@kent.ac.uk, 01227 816156

USS 2016 presentations – 20 June 2016

Presentations will be held at Canterbury on 20 June 2016 by Mike Harrison from Mercer, on behalf of USS.

On 1 April 2016, there was a change to the way your future USS benefits are calculated. From 1 October 2016, there will be a new opportunity to save more through the new USS Investment Builder. All USS members will have the option to contribute.

If you pay at least 1% of your salary as an extra contribution into the USS Investment Builder, the University will match this. Additionally, if you earn over the salary threshold, initially £55,000 a year, you will automatically join the USS Investment Builder,and both you and the University will make contributions to that section in respect of salary above the threshold.

Find out more by attending a presentation on 20 June at either 10am or 2pm in Grimond Lecture Theatre 2. Please register at https://events-emea1.adobeconnect.com/content/connect/c1/1269064190/en/events/event/private/1269014617/2102785009/event_registration.html?sco-id=2102731354&_charset_=utf-8

You can also read more about what’s already changed by visiting https://for the future.uss.co.uk/

Academic perspectives on Europe in the TLS

Two academics from the School of European Culture and Languages (SECL), have contributed to a symposium in The Times Literary Supplement (TLS) on the UK’s membership of the European Union entitled ‘Please Don’t Leave Us Alone’, published on 1 June 2016.

The symposium includes contributions from leading figures in academia, literature and the humanities, asking ‘What in your view have been the main implications of the UK’s membership of the EU for its cultural life and/or your own work?’

In the symposium, Professor Ben Hutchinson, Professor of European Literature in the Department of Modern Languages, argues: ‘Beyond the specifics of cost-benefit analyses always open to selective quotation the main implication of the UK’s membership of the EU for its cultural life is quite simply the sense that the EU matters, that British culture is part of European culture.’

‘In the age of world literature, “European” is increasingly becoming a pejorative term, taken to suggest the elitism of Western, canonical power structures. Yet European world literature is surely possible  and so is British European culture.’

Dr Anna Katharina Schaffner, Reader in Comparative Literature, also states: ‘A Brexit would be detrimental to many sectors of British society, including academia, making it much harder to recruit and retain academic talent, and impairing cross-border collaborations a prerequisite of all significant research ventures.’

‘The most surprising aspect of the Brexit debate, however, is the resounding silence regarding the original post-war vision of a Europe that would finally transcend nationalist agendas in the interests of a shared set of political, cultural, and ethical values, and in which the European nations would learn from each other through the free exchange of ideas and expertise.’

To read the full symposium, please see the TLS webpage here:
www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/public/european-symposium/

Sustainability lunch event

The University’s Sustainability team are holding a lunchtime event to allow staff to find out more about environmental sustainability at the University.

As well as celebrating the successes of the staff who participated in this year’s Green15 programme, there will also be a chance to have your say on what you think the University should be doing to reduce its environmental impacts and ask questions to key staff on the steps being taken.

There will also be a delicious buffet featuring local, sustainable produce and the judging of the sustainable bake-off competition where you will be asked to choose your favourite from 3 different desserts containing Fairtrade, local and seasonal ingredients.

The event will take place at 12.30pm, Thursday 9th June in the Peter Brown Room. Spaces are limited so please email c.morris@kent.ac.uk if you would like to attend.

Information Services strategy workshops: help shape our future services

We’d like to invite you to a workshop to help us shape our strategy for 2016 – 2020.

We’re developing an Information Services strategy to guide the next five years of technology and library services at Kent.

We’re running a series of lively and thought-provoking workshops to help develop it. The next ones coming up are open to:

All students

  • Tuesday 14 June 11:00 – 13:00
    Canterbury Campus: Templeman Library West, Floor 1, room A |1 |08
  • Book a place

About the workshop

The workshop will be a lively interactive session. We’ll look at how we work with and for students, academics, professional services and partners.

There will be a graphic facilitator on hand to make a visual narrative of the workshop and ‘draw’ out themes from the activities.

You’ll have the chance to:

  • say what matters most to you about the future of Information Services
  • understand Information Services better

What happens next?

We’ll be engaging with Information Services staff through a departmental meeting where we feed back and discuss workshop findings. We’ll use the results to create a draft strategy document, which we’ll circulate from June.

Find out more about postgraduate study

If you are interested in postgraduate study, come to one of Kent’s next Open Days.

For opportunities at Medway, you can find out more on 18 June or come to Canterbury on 2 July where subjects at all Kent’s locations will be represented.  We will have the latest information about the new £10,000 loans for Master’s and you may be eligible for a staff discount on your fees.

www.kent.ac.uk/opendays