Monthly Archives: March 2021

Kent Sport Centre building

Kent Sport phased reopening

Article from Kent Sport: 

We’re excited to share with you the proposed phased reopening of Kent Sport facilities over the next few months, starting on 29 March.

While Kent Sport facilities remain closed until this date (with the exception of the Kent Sport Physiotherapy Clinic), the proposed reopening dates are as follows:

29 March – Outdoor sports under current guidelines (individual bookings and organised training) at The Pavilion will resume and we are excited to introduce a new timetable of outdoor fitness classes. Booking for these sessions will open on 22 March. A full timetable for outdoor classes will be available on our classes webpage shortly. We will also be open on the bank holidays Good Friday, 2 April and Easter Monday, 4 April.

*12 April – The gym will reopen for cardio and weights sessions only, and the Kent Sport Physiotherapy Clinic will continue to offer face-to-face and online physio consultations and once again be able to offer massages and exercise referrals.

*17 May – Our indoor tennis courts at The Pavilion, indoor sports at the Sports Centre and indoor classes will return.

Please note that all sessions will need to be booked in advance. All Kent Sport facilities follow strict social distancing and a mask or face covering is required on arrival, before and after your activity. A mask or face covering is not required during your activity.

*All dates are subject to change and are reliant on Government guidance. Further updates on the reopening of our services will be shared through @UnikentSports on social media as soon as we are able to.

While we wait for the reopening of our services, make sure you check out our Stay Well @ Home webpage for at-home workouts, virtual classes and wellbeing advice.

See our Coronavirus webpage for specific information and FAQs.

4 £20 notes

Covid-19 Hardship Fund: phase 2 applications open

The Government has launched a new scheme to support current students who have experienced hardship during the coronavirus pandemic. £70m in additional funding is being provided to English universities of which Kent has been allocated £588,000.  The University has also made additional funds available.

The Covid-19 Hardship Fund can be used to support any current students who have incurred unexpected costs due to Covid-19. This could be due to a loss of income, childcare costs, travel or rent.

Phase 2 of the Covid-19 Hardship Fund is now open and current students can apply for a £300 individual award to help their finances. There is a simple application process outlined on the Covid-19 Hardship funding webpage. When applying you’ll be asked a series of questions to make sure you are eligible and asked to include your bank details. If your application is successful, your award will be transferred directly to your bank account.

Applications for the second phase of the fund will close 31 March 2021 or sooner if all the funds are awarded before this date. We encourage you to apply as soon as you can.

Please remember that if you have suffered financial hardship this academic year due to coronavirus, there is lots of support available through our range of Emergency Hardship Funds.

Please contact our Financial Aid team or Kent Union’s Advice Service (Canterbury) or GKSU’s Advice Centre (Medway) for more information on what fund may be suitable for you.

Woman holding her back while working at a computer

Aches and Pains Caused by Working From Home? We Can Help!

Article from Kent Sport:

We are now rapidly approaching the anniversary of the start of the first national lockdown back in March 2020. A whole year has passed since many people started working from home, and as restrictions stay in place, many will still be working from home for some time yet.

Many of us aren’t equipped with ergonomic chairs, adjustable desks or even a permanent workspace at home, so we’re having to make do with temporary work stations such as the dining room table or the kitchen counter. All of this is a minefield for body aches and pains due to bad posture and a less-than-ideal work setup.

We’ve put together the following links to help support you as you continue working remotely.

Holistic online classes

When working from home, it’s important to inject movement into your day, especially with varied workstation setups. Our range of holistic classes are great for unwinding, relaxing or simply getting you up and moving. Join our instructors in a range of sessions including mindfulness, desk workouts, yoga and stretching. We’ve even filmed a Bedroom Bootcamp which is centered around exercising in a small space.

Our Vimeo library also contains loads of at-home workout videos – conditioningdance, and cardio sessions will help keep you active at home.

Kent Sport Physiotherapy Clinic

The Kent Sport Physiotherapy Clinic remains open throughout the current restrictions, and offers online or face-to-face physiotherapy appointments. Our experienced physiotherapist, Victoria Annis, has helped multiple clients with back pain and other issues throughout the pandemic and is available to staff, students, and the public.

To book an appointment, email physio@kent.ac.uk, or visit our website for further information.

Please read our FAQs to find out how we’re keeping our staff and customers safe during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Stay Well @ Home

Our Stay Well @ Home webpage is our primary space for all things health and wellbeing during the pandemic. Here you’ll find our virtual class library, at-home workout videos, wellbeing blogs, and much more.

Occupational Health at the University of Kent

Occupational Health is a specialist branch of medicine and healthcare that deals with the relationship between a person’s health and the work they do. If you have a health concern related to work, please contact the Occupational Health team for advice.

Macbook pro on white table next to a plant and yellow table lamp

Care first webinars w/c 22 March 2021

Our official Employee Assistance Programme provider, Care first offers a numbers of services and provide useful advice and support, including weekly webinars.

This week’s (Monday 22 March – Friday 26 March) webinars are as follows:

Monday 22 March 2021 – ‘World Happiness Day’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Tuesday 23 March 2021 – ‘Stress and Finding Ways Through It’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Wednesday 24 March 2021 – ‘Separation Anxiety’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Thursday 25 March 2021 – How Care first can support you’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Friday 26 March 2021 – ‘Things to consider when planning to go on holiday this year’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Laptop on top of table beside a vase of flowers

Care first webinars w/c 15 March 2021

Our official Employee Assistance Programme provider, Care first offers a numbers of services and provide useful advice and support, including weekly webinars.

This week’s (Monday 15 March – Friday 19 March) webinars are as follows:

Monday 15 March 2021 – ‘How Care first can support you’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link.

Tuesday 16 March 2021 – ‘Tips for Nutrition & Hydration’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Wednesday 17 March 2021 – ‘How Care first has supported through a year of COVID-19’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Thursday 18 March 2021 – ‘Lifting of Lockdown Anxiety’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Friday 19 March 2021 – ‘Sleep Anxiety for World Sleep Day’
Time: 12.00-12.30 – to register please click on this Go to webinar link

Wooden map of the world with pins

Turing global mobility scheme launched

The Turing Scheme is the UK government’s scheme to provide funding for international opportunities in education and training across the world. It supports Global Britain by providing an opportunity for UK organisations from the higher education, further education, vocational education and training and schools sectors to offer their students, learners and pupils life-changing experiences to study or work abroad.

Launched earlier this year, following the UK’s departure from the EU, the Turing scheme is a replacement for the UK’s participation in the EU Erasmus Programme, which will cease as current Erasmus projects reach an end, by May 2023.

The Turing Scheme will provide grants for students from UK institutions to study or work abroad for periods of four weeks to 12 months, starting in September 2021. There is a focus on widening access with additional funding for less advantaged students.

Applications from UK institutions to the Turing Scheme are now open and International Partnerships is leading Kent’s submission, in consultation with Divisions and other relevant parties across the University.

Subject to the outcome of our application and the levels of funding available, Kent students due to carry out an international study or work placement in 2021-22, who are not already covered by the Erasmus funding we have secured until 31 May 2023, will be supported by the Turing Scheme.

In addition, we hope to provide funding to encourage other Kent students to participate in shorter-term international placements (eg summer schools).

We will be working closely with colleagues in academic schools to provide more information about the opportunities available to students and further details of how the scheme will be implemented.

For more details, please contact internationalpartnerships@kent.ac.uk

Or visit the Turing website

New web resource for academic and research staff

Article by Dr Alison Charles, Researcher Developer (Academic) in the Graduate and Researcher College.

Kent’s commitment to supporting colleagues who research is further demonstrated with the launch of a new section of the Graduate and Researcher College (GRC) website. The Academic and Research Staff webpages provide a wealth of information for academic researchers and are designed to showcase the wide range of information, resources and support available to them.

Divided into four sections comprising 27 pages, this online portal includes information about the University’s strategy to support staff who research and emphasises our efforts to build a supportive and inclusive research culture. Highlights include details of forthcoming central and Divisional training and development sessions, as well as recordings of and material from previous sessions which can be viewed on demand via the relevant GRC SharePoint pages.

Professor Paul Allain, Dean of the Graduate and Researcher College, commented: “The recent expansion of the GRC to enable us to support staff as well as postgraduates marks the start of an exciting journey for researcher development at Kent. Our new webpages are one of a series of steps on the road to increasing awareness about the services and support which are provided by the University for our academic and research colleagues.”

A further phase of web development is planned for Summer 2021, which will focus on the three areas covered in the  Researcher Development Concordat: environment and culture, employment and professional and career development. In the meantime, we trust that our new digital resource will become your first port of call for information relating to academic and research staff development.

For any further information please email acresdev@kent.ac.uk

Students sat chatting with laptops

Choose your modules for next year- Online Module Registration

**Deadline for module registration extended to Tuesday 6 April at midnight**

Online Module Registration (OMR) will take place between Monday 22 March – Tuesday 6 April 2021. It is compulsory that you select your module preferences for 2021/22 on your Student Data System (SDS) during this time.

We appreciate these are uncertain times and you may feel unsure about the choices you make for your next year of study. Please be assured there is lots of support available to you. Please see our Student Coronavirus webpages for information and speak with your Student Support Team or Academic Advisor for advice.

Please see Prepare for your Online Module Registration  for all the information you need to register your module preferences. Please ensure you review the information carefully.

Important Information

  • Online Module Registration is not first come first served; however, you must ensure that you submit your selections by Tuesday 6 April to give you the best opportunity to register for your preferred choice of module.
  • Modules with limited spaces will be allocated fairly and transparently by a random selection process, after the Online Module Registration period closes.
  • If you are studying abroad or on industrial placement in 2021/22, please ignore this message, as you do not need to choose your module preferences until this time next year.
  • If you are studying compulsory modules next year, you do not need to take part in OMR.
  • We will try our best to accommodate your module choices, however, please be aware that because of the ongoing restrictions relating to the Covid pandemic, we cannot guarantee whether all module options will be available, or how they will be delivered.

If you have any questions please contact us:

Canterbury: csao@kent.ac.uk

Medway: msao@kent.ac.uk

laptop

E-Learning webinar: What can we learn from distance learning?

The E-Learning Team are pleased to announce that the next event in our series of ‘Digitally Enhanced Education webinars’ will take place on Thursday 1 April, from 10.00-12.10, with the theme ‘What can we learn from distance learning?  Supporting teaching in the post-COVID world’.

Please find the agenda for the event below:

10.00 – 10.05 – Dr Phil Anthony (University of Kent): Introduction

10.05 – 10.20 – Associate Professor Chie Adachi (Deakin University, Australia): Going beyond ‘blended learning’ – re-imagining digital learning for higher education

10.20 – 10.35 – Sally Jordan (Open University): Lessons for assessment in a post-Covid world

10.35 – 10.50 – Dr Mark O’Connor (University of Kent): What can we learn from distance learning?

10.50 – 11.05 – Professor Diana Laurillard (UCL): Teachers collaborating to improve blended learning

11.05 – 11.20 – Sarah Knight (Jisc): How are students experiencing learning online? What the data from our digital experience insights 2020-1 student surveys is telling us

11.20 – 11.35 – Dr Chris Headleand (University of Lincoln): Cutting The Rubber Band of Practice: Developing Post-COVID Pedagogies

11.35 – 11.50 – Andrew Clegg (University of Portsmouth): Help! I have not left yet. Engaging staff in transition journeys to online delivery – reflections from an emergent motorway analogy.

11.50 – 12.05 – Associate Martin Compton (UCL): Dealing with dissonance: digital education in crisis and beyond as a challenge to mindset.

12.05 – 12.25 – Dr David Baume (University of London): Keeping it good and simple

If you would like to join the webinar series, please express your interest by enrolling on the Digitally Enhanced Education Webinars Moodle module, or by requesting access to the Team ‘Digitally Enhanced Education webinars‘ linked to the webinar series.

Colleagues from outside the University of Kent are very welcome to join and so feel free to circulate. Please register your interest via the link here if you haven’t already. We add you the Microsoft Team linked to the series.

We hope to see you there.

The E-Learning team

Professor Karen Cox

Vice-Chancellor’s update – 11 March 2021

Dear Colleagues,

This week we welcome a number of students back to campus under the first phase of the Government’s roadmap for easing lockdown restrictions. It’s fantastic to have them back, and I know there has been a great deal of work across the University to make sure both they and staff on campus are safe. We will continue to make sure they have the right support available in the weeks ahead, and will be reiterating safety messages to students to make sure they understand the steps we all need to take to keep each other safe. This includes regular testing, which will be a key part of helping us all get things back to normal as quickly as possible.

This week is British Science Week, and so I wanted to take a moment to celebrate the STEM research and expertise we have across our University. This is an area of strength and one where we want to further raise our profile in the years ahead. We have a number of events taking place this week shining a light on the fantastic work taking place across our Divisions. Do sign-up for the remaining events in the next couple of days if you can.

Monday also marked International Women’s Day, and, while we need to continue to challenge ourselves, I am proud to be part of a university that is determined to celebrate and promote women as part of our wider commitment to equality, diversity and inclusivity. It was fantastic to see research and comment on the day from inspirational women across Kent, from ‘Ten tips on how to succeed as a woman taken from the past’ to the impact of Covid on gender inequality and new research on barriers for women in some STEM areas. Also on Monday Dr Louise Naylor chaired our Women’s Staff Network and our BAME Staff Network hosted the Right Reverend Dr Rose Hudson-Wilkin, Bishop of Dover, as keynote speaker at an evening event that explored race and gender. Thank you to all who were able to be present at these events.

With all best wishes to you and your families,

Karen Cox

Professor Karen Cox | Vice-Chancellor and President