Monthly Archives: January 2019

Christmas Jumper Day

Christmas Jumper Day success

Colleagues from across Kent Hospitality showed up in force on 14 December in their Christmas jumpers to raise money for charity.

This is the fourth year Kent Hospitality has taken part in Christmas Jumper day, and this year the teams involved helped to raise £131.47 for Save the Children.

Well done to everyone who took part.

Helen Brooks

Helen Brooks interviewed on BBC Radio Kent

Dr Helen Brooks, Reader in Theatre and Cultural History in the School of Arts, was interviewed for BBC Radio Kent this week, on the Dominic King Show broadcast on Monday 7 January.

Helen was interviewed about a guided research workshop ‘A Night in the West End’, which will take place on Friday 11 January, to explore the role that London’s West End theatre district played during the First World War.

‘The idea is to bring academics and members of the public who have an interest in the subject together, to see what they can find out using newspapers and old periodicals to discover nuggets of history that have been long forgotten,’ explains Helen in the interview.

Helen is co-investigator on Gateways to the First World War: an AHRC-funded consortium for public engagement with the centenary of the conflict.

The broadcast is available on the BBC site and can be heard approximate 1 hour 22 minutes into the programme.

The workshop is free and open to all: to book a place, please see the Eventbrite link.

 

Study Plus courses

Start 2019 with a FREE Study Plus course at Kent

Courses on offer this term include:

KE113 Business Start-up workshops and KE192 #DigitalReboot Business Start-up workshops (Canterbury and Medway)

KE122 Digital Photography

KE142 Introduction to Medieval and Tudor Canterbury

KE156 Discover Dutch and KE123 Introduction to Modern Greek Language and Culture

KE180 Film and Media Analysis (New for 2019)

We also have four one-hour Excel skills courses – KE125, KE126, KE127 and KE166.

Book your place via the Workshops page in SDS.

For more information and to see all of the courses on offer, please visit the Study Plus website.

Try out a new language course with CEWL

Find out how you can improve your English, learn to teach English or learn a new language at the Centre for English and World Languages (CEWL) in 2019.

English Language and Academic Skills workshops (ELAS)
You can improve your academic English for FREE this term. ELAS provides training in English for Academic Purposes to all international students at Kent. There are eight modules available, as well as individual speaking and writing tutorials. Classes start in Week 14.  Find out more and book your place on the CEWL webpages.

Learn a new language with Language Express
Learn French, Mandarin or Spanish with Language Express ten-week beginners’ courses starting 21 or 24 January. Reduced fees for Kent students. Find out more and book your place here.

Prepare for Cambridge English tests with our Cambridge Preparation courses
The courses start on 15 January – the first class is a FREE taster session, where you can meet the teacher and ask any questions. Cambridge English exams are lifelong qualifications with a worldwide reputation. They help you to improve your English Language skills for work, study and life. Find out more and book your place here.

Demonstrate your English skills with IELTS
The IELTS test is widely recognised as proof of English Language skills. You can prepare for an IELTS test with an experienced teacher at the Centre for English and World Languages. The course begins on 16 January and the first class is a FREE taster session, where you can meet the teacher and ask any questions. Find out more and book your place here.

Learn to teach English as a foreign language
The Centre for English and World Languages runs an intensive CELTA training course starting on 17 June.  CELTA (Cambridge Certificate in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) is an internationally recognised qualification. Find out more and apply here.

Professor Erika Rackley

Celebrating centenary of women’s formal entry into legal profession

The centenary of women’s formal entry into the legal profession in the UK and Ireland is celebrated in a unique new scholarly anthology co-edited by Kent Law School Professor Erika Rackley and Professor Rosemary Auchmuty (University of Reading).

Women’s Legal Landmarks: Celebrating the history of women and law in the UK and Ireland (Hart Publishing) is an anthology of 92 key legal landmarks written by over 80 feminist legal and history scholars, all of whom are participants in the Women’s Legal Landmarks Project led by Professor Rackley and Professor Auchmuty. Between them, the book’s contributors address almost 2000 years of history of women and feminists’ engagement with law and law reform. Topics covered include the right to vote, sex discrimination, surrogacy and assisted reproduction, rape, domestic violence, FGM, equal pay, abortion, and the life stories of a number of women who were the first to undertake key legal roles and positions.

Professor Rackley said: ‘Women’s formal entry into the legal profession was – of course – a key legal landmark for women. But it was not the first. Nor was it the last. Women’s legal history in the UK and Ireland is full of landmarks, turning points in law’s response to women’s lives and experiences.

‘Feminists have long had recourse to law as a key means of achieving equality. From “Votes for Women” to #repealthe8th, from the East End of London to Greenham Common, women, feminists and women-led organisations have been there campaigning and making the arguments for change.’

The book will be launched at Matrix Chambers in London at the end of January. This will be followed by a series of ‘Conversations’ hosted by the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies throughout 2019.

Lewis Ryder

Condolences for Lewis Ryder

It is with the greatest regret that we learnt of the death of Dr Lewis Ryder, former member of staff in the School of Physical Science, on 17 December.

Lewis joined the University of Kent at Canterbury in 1967 as one of the first cohort of Physics staff and, despite retiring in 1997, he continued to play a key role in the School and the University until very recently, including frequently playing the organ for University degree ceremonies in Canterbury Cathedral. He will be remembered with great affection by his colleagues and many former students.

The funeral service for Lewis will be in the Crypt of Canterbury Cathedral at 11.00 on  Monday 14 January, with a reception in the Cathedral Lodge to follow at 12.00. His family have kindly said that all are welcome to attend.

Lewis pursued his entire career at the University, designed much of the Modern Physics aspects was the author of three books on ‘Elementary Particles and Symmetries’; ‘Quantum Field Theory’ and an ‘Introduction to General Relativity’. These texts became classics in the field and were used by literally thousands of students over many decades (all are available on Amazon!).

He was also a very gifted musician, becoming an Associate of the Royal College of Organists and a Deputy Organist at Canterbury Cathedral.

students

Engage school pupils with your research for a chance to win £500

‘I’m a Scientist’ and ‘I’m an Engineer’ events are running 4-15 March 2019 alongside British Science Week. Anyone from Postgraduate Research to Professor level at Kent is eligible to apply to take part.

These online events allow researchers to answer questions from school pupils all over the country with the chance to win £500 to fund more STEM engagement. It’s a great opportunity to be challenged over research and its meaning.

It’s a simple application process based around a one sentence description of the research, with a deadline for applications of 28 January 2019.

The events take place 4–15 March for British Science Week 2019:

Apply for I’m a Scientist

Apply for I’m an Engineer

(and apply for both if your role fits!)

The events are split into ‘zones’ including: drug development, psychology, nuclear physics, water science, organs, space engineering, energy engineering and some general science zones.

If you are successful in applying, please contact Maddy Bell, Research Impact & Public Engagement Manager at m.r.bell@kent.ac.uk. Please email peresearch@kent.ac.uk to join a mailing list for Kent Public Engagement with Research news.

Nostalgia podcast with Olly Double

In the latest episode of the Nostalgia podcast series, Dr Chris Deacy, Reader in Theology and Religious Studies in the Department of Religious Studies, speaks to Olly Double from the School of Arts.

In this week’s episode, Olly and Chris talk about ghosts and Scooby Doo; having a Dr. Who book signed by Tom Baker; the difference between public and private profiles and personae; being an anti-hierarchical person in a hierarchical profession; watching The Boomtown Rats on ‘Top of the Pops’; queuing up in the rain to see Planet of the Apes; how The Omen made Olly rethink what he’d grown up believing in the Church of England; and we share our experiences of going to see Jim Davidson on stage.

Future guests will include the Vice-Chancellor and President, Karen Cox, and the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Education) April McMahon. For all the other interviews in this series, please see here.

Free coffee tasting at Gulbenkian on 18 January

2019 is Gulbenkian’s 50th birthday and all University staff are invited to a very special open day on Friday 18 January, from 11.00-14.00.

  • Meet our team and see behind the scenes in our backstage tour (and be one of the first to sit in our brand new theatre seats)
  • Find out what is coming up this year in theatre & cinema and the bOing! International Family Festival
  • Learn about staff discounts
  • Help us chose our new coffee supplier. Meet local suppliers and taste coffees – we want to know what you think!
  • Unleash your own creativity and join a creative workshop
  • Discover the brilliant Arts Council funded work we do with children and young people across Kent
  • Find out how you can hire our spaces, volunteer, or become more involved with your arts centre here on campus

It’s very informal and you can drop in anytime between 11.00 and 14.00.

Please RSVP to boxoffice@kent.ac.uk so we have an idea of numbers.

Give your body a New Year break

Many people resolve to reduce their alcohol intake after the excesses of Christmas and New Year. Many also take part in Dry January and give up booze for 31 days. So, here are some tips to help keep your units down…

  • Talk to someone – If you talk about your goal of drinking less with a trusted friend, or even through social media, you’ll increase your chances of becoming successful at cutting down.
  • Don’t drink on an empty stomach – If you drink on an empty stomach, the alcohol will be absorbed faster, and cold drinks will accelerate this. Alcohol can affect the parts of the brain associated with impulse control and decision-making – too much alcohol and we make bad decisions and that can include drinking a lot more than we planned to.
  • Alternate a non-alcoholic drink with an alcoholic one – Having non-alcoholic drinks in-between could reduce your alcohol consumption by half and help to hydrate you in the process.
  • Beware of rounds – Drinking in rounds can be expensive, dangerous (if it means keeping pace with the fastest drinker in your group), and a nightmare (if you’re trying to cut down on alcohol). Stay in control, and save cash, by opting for smaller rounds with only a couple of friends within your group or giving rounds a miss.
  • Eat up – A healthy meal before you go out, and snacks between drinks, can help to slow down the absorption of alcohol and help you stay in control. With less alcohol inside you, you’re also less likely to be tempted by late-night fast food!
  • Small or lower strength is better – Make your units go further by having bottles of beer or halves instead of pints, and choosing a smaller glass for your wine. Buying spritzers will also help keep the unit count down and try switching to lower strength drinks.

The University of Kent Wellbeing Zone is a free tool to help you learn more about all aspects of wellbeing and you can use it to better manage your own health and wellbeing.

Logon today at www.kent.wellbeingzone.co.uk
Or create an account by clicking ‘Register’ and using the following organisation Code : KENT1