Monthly Archives: December 2018

Take part in brain training research at the University of Kent

We are recruiting participants aged 25-40 years old and 65-80 years old to take part in our Brain Training project!

We use questionnaires and computer tasks, plus eye-tracking and EEG (non-invasive brain recording), to find out whether cognitive and social abilities can be enhanced through training, and how these training effects might change at different ages.

As a thank-you for your time, you will receive £50 cash and reimbursement for reasonable travel expenses.

To find out more or sign up please email us at braintraining@kent.ac.uk or visit our website.

 

 

New Medway College logo

Last month, the College Master’s office at Medway asked students and staff to vote for a Medway College logo and colours.

We are pleased to announce that a logo and colour have now been chosen. Based on the Medway Building, the logo incorporates the facade of the building with gold being the colour preference.

Thank you to all of you who voted. We look forward to sharing the logo on merchandise and branding material in the new year.

All students currently registered at the University, many staff and alumni belong to a college; students and staff based at Medway are members of Medway College.

Until now, Medway was the only one of the seven University of Kent colleges not to have its own college logo, colours and flag.

 

Kent Union student leadership elections – recommend a leader

You know Kent students better than anyone, if you think you know someone who’d make a great leader then we’d love to know. Many Officers are first recommended to us by staff and we’re asking for your help to identify potential candidates. At this stage we would contact the student for an informal chat, so no pressure or commitment.

Each year five students are elected by their peers to shape the shape their students’ union and represent the student voice to the University. If you think you know a student who has what it takes, recommend a leader using the form below and we’ll do the rest.

Follow this link to RECOMMEND A LEADER BOX.

For information on the five new Officer roles and how they work  for Kent Students, check out the Leadership Elections webpages.

Wagon Stop canteen open during December and January

The Historic Dockyard Chatham might have closed to general visitors, but you’ll be pleased to hear the Wagon Stop is staying open for your lunch time necessities!

Open Mon – Fri: 10.00 – 14.00. What’s “the Wag” has launched a delivery service…. place your orders before 11.30 and they’ll deliver to your door or desk!

Full details can be found here.

Please carry on enjoying hearty, warming lunches from the Wagon Stop and Happy Christmas from everyone on the team

Playing A/Part on BBC South East

Nicola Shaughnessy, Professor of Performance in the School of Arts, featured on the BBC South East news last night, 6 December 2018, as part of her Arts and Humanities Research Council project ‘Playing A/Part’. Dr Melissa Trimingham, also from the School of Arts, was featured as a co-investigator, working a puppet with the autistic girls participating in the research.

The project investigates the relationship between autism and gender through the use of interactive media and participatory arts.

The news item discussed how autism has often been undetected in girls because it may present differently. It reports from Limpsfield Grange School in Surrey, a specialist school for girls ages 11-16 with a range of autistic spectrum conditions, and where the Playing A/Part project is being undertaken.

‘Autism in girls is under-diagnosed and under-represented because really we don’t know what it looks like,’ explains Nicola in the news item. The team are hoping that through these creative approaches they will get a much better sense of the experience of autistic girls.’ The team also includes Dr Hannah Newman who completed her interdisciplinary PhD in the School of Arts and is now the Post Doc for the project, working with psychologists at the University of Surrey. Local author Katherine May is also featured as a member of the project steering group.

The item is currently available on iPlayer, although expires 7pm tonight (Friday 7 December 2018), occurring at 18 minutes into the programme.

A shorter (none expiring) version of the item appears on the BBC South East twitter feed.

Student stand-up comedy at the Gulbenkian

Final-year undergraduate students on the module Introduction to Stand-Up will be delivering Monkeyshine, two nights of stand-up comedy, next week on Wednesday 12 and Thursday 13 December 2018 in the Gulbenkian cafe.

Each night will feature a different line-up, stuffed to the brim with young comics each presenting five-minute sets. Come along and enjoy a dazzling array of raw, young comedy, introduced by your host and compère Olly Double.

Monkeyshine is suitable for those aged 18+. It is free to attend, and each night will begin at 7.30pm.

For more details, please see the Gulbenkian’s webpage.

Playwrights and translations

Dr Margherita Laera, Senior Lecturer in Drama and Theatre in the School of Arts, will be in Milan to lead a translation workshop to translate the award-winning play Tu es Libre by Francesca Garolla from Italian into English, from Thursday 6 to Sunday 9 December 2018.

The play investigates the themes of freedom and war through the story of the sudden disappearance of French girl Haner Rouger from her Paris home. The workshop was commissioned by EU-funded Creative Europe project Fabulamundi – Playwriting Europe Beyond Borders to promote the play overseas.

Dr Laera will collaborate with the author and several young playwrights from Milan on the English-language version of the script. The play is currently being performed in Milan until tomorrow night at Teatro i.

The translated text will subsequently be available from Fabulamundi. To see all the texts translated so far, please see the page here.

Research student Ann-Christine Kinzer publishes article for “Wanderland” exhibition

Ann-Christine Kinzer, research student in the Department of Modern Languages, has recently contributed an article for a museum catalogue which will complement an exhibition taking place at the Germanische National Museum in Nuremberg from 28th November 2018 – 28th April 2019.

The exhibition is titled “Wanderland.” A journey through the history of rambling. Rambling is walking on a large scale and with a closeness to nature and – although also a common form of travel in the past – a leisure activity. The rambler appropriates the natural space by covering its distances, and has a view of the region or into the distance – perhaps from on high. Rambling is an exceedingly popular leisure activity in Germany and the exhibition provides an overview of around 200 years of the cultural history of rambling and illustrates the transformation this popular leisure activity has undergone over the years.

 

Poet Lemn Sissay coming to Kent in January to share inspriational journey to success

Acclaimed international poet and writer Lemn Sissay MBE will share his inspirational journey to success, from early experiences in the social care system to becoming Chancellor of Manchester University, when he comes to Kent’s Canterbury campus in January.

Lemn has been invited to share his story with all students and staff at Kent as part of the Law School’s Student Success Project Inspirational Speaker Series. Topics Lemn will cover include diversity in the Arts, the social policies that support the care system and how he is using the Law to challenge the local authority in Wigan for its part in surrendering him to an unwanted long term foster placement.

The talk, from 5pm – 6pm on Thursday 24 January will be held in Grimond Lecture Theatre 1 and is free and open to all, but attendees are asked to register onIine in advance. It is hosted jointly by Kent Law School, the School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research, and the School of Arts.

Kent Law School’s series of inspirational talks seeks to engage students (and staff), particularly those from BME backgrounds, by inviting speakers who model success in their spheres. Speakers share their tips for success and talk about how to overcome adversity to achieve one’s full potential.

Graeme Forbes becomes philosophical consultant for theatre project

Dr Graeme Forbes, Lecturer in Philosophy for the Department of Philosophy, has recently become the philosophical consultant for the critically acclaimed theatre company Theatre Re and their latest project Birth.

Established in 2009, Theatre Re is a London-based international ensemble creating thought-provoking and moving work. Its shows examine fragile human conditions in a compelling, physical style; embracing mime, theatre and live music; and are often described as magical, poetic and tender, as well as disturbing and haunting.

As a consultant for this project, Graeme discussed concepts such as the passage of time; universality and the particular; the difference between the past, the present and future; hope, absurdity, memory, and our experiences of time flying by, or creeping painfully and uncertainly through a traumatic experience.

Guillaume Pigé, Artistic Director of Theatre Re, said, “It was absolutely wonderful to have Graeme with us in rehearsal. He was able to put things in perspective and help us make connections with wider philosophical concepts. He also allowed us to get a better understanding of what we are doing. Having him on board was incredibly inspirational!”

Will Wollen, Faculty Director of Public Engagement for Humanities, said, “We all want research at Kent to be seen by a wide public audience. Matching researchers with artists is great way of making that happen. Graeme’s expertise and research made him a great match for the area that Guillaume was wanting to explore. Birth will be seen by hundreds of people at the London International Mime Festival in January and there’s the possibility of further touring both in the UK and abroad. It’s not every day that you see ‘Philosopher’ as a credit on a theatre programme!”

Birth premieres as part of the 2019 LONDON INTERNATIONAL MIME FESTIVAL at Shoerditch Town Hall from 10th-13th January. There will be a post-show discussion on 12th Jan. Tickets can be purchased here.

Regarding the project, Graeme says, “When I first spoke to the director back in August, I was surprised about how interested they were in my thoughts as a philosopher. Having seen how the show has developed, it’s incredible to see the depth of engagement with ideas below the surface of everything they do.”