Monthly Archives: January 2025

Two student smiling outside Drill Hall Library

Medway Engagement Support Team

The Medway Engagement Support team would like to remind you that we are here to provide you with support and guidance if you need any assistance during your studies. Please do get in touch with us or book a support meeting (online or in-person) if you require any support.

If you are experiencing any extenuating circumstances that are preventing you from fully engaging with your studies, please do get in touch. Our team will be able to offer you information, guidance, and support. For your reference,  see helpful information and guidance about the University’s extenuating circumstances procedures.  You can also contact your Academic Advisor and the Skills for Academic Success Team (SAS) if you require any additional support during your studies.

As part of our role, we monitor your attendance in accordance with the University’s Student Attendance and Engagement Policy.  If you are unable to attend a timetabled teaching event, please ensure that you report your absence via Presto.  You should also contact your teaching staff directly regarding your missed lectures/seminars to catch-up on any work missed.

We would also like to highlight the University’s Student Support and Wellbeing (SSW) service that you may wish to access for additional support. The Medway SSW team are located on the First Floor of the Medway Building and are available Monday to Friday 9:00 – 17:00. You can contact the service via email or via telephone on 01634 888474.

We hope the above information is helpful. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Kent Star Heather holding flute with hockey stick resting by her side

Kent Stars: Stand-out Scholar

Music Performance Scholar Heather is a unique student, balancing her studies with performing and teaching folk music, as well as excelling in hockey and other sports. A perhaps unlikely pairing of passions, but she makes it work harmoniously! Hear from Stand-out Scholar Heather:

“I’m Heather Moss. I study Sport and Exercise Science at the University of Kent and have just started my second year. I am a sports fanatic, playing mainly hockey at Uni but also running, swimming, and going to the gym in my spare time. However, I am also a Folk Flute Musician. This has taken me all over the country, teaching workshops and tunes to many young people. A fun fact about myself is that I have been attending folk festivals since the year I was born!”

Heather holding flute and hockey stick

Tell us about the Folkshop group and your Folk-filled summer.

“I started Folkshop last year, about two months into Uni, not knowing what to expect from it. It started off with just a few people turning up but now has expanded into about 8 of us! The main difference between Folkshop and other music groups at the Uni is that I teach the music by ear rather than with sheet music which has been a new experience for the folk group members. We have just come back from playing our first professional gig at a Tenterden folk festival, which was an amazing experience! I hope to continue expanding Folkshop and have some new opportunities regarding folk music over the next couple of years.

“My folk-infused summer was a hectic, crazy but amazing opportunity! The summer started when I stewarded at Ely Folk Festival, helping at the box office and also playing in many different sessions throughout the weekend. Then Sidmouth Folk Festival followed this, which is a weeklong festival! I was a core tutor running youth music workshops, which happened daily and concluded in the participants performing all the tunes that we had taught them in a performance at the manor pavilion.

Then next stop was Folk East, where I helped steward on the youth tent which included helping in all the youth music workshops and other activities. I then attended Halsway Manor Advanced Youth Summer School for a week where I learnt so many different skills from new tunes to how to set up my own PA system and creating our own tunes. This week was led by some amazing and very talented musicians in the folk industry. I then attended Towersey Folk festival where I led a youth music workshop every day which involved teaching the participants tunes and arrangements and ended in a performance to the public.

My summer concluded with me running a two-day folk music residential alongside Finn Collinson. We taught youth participants, who had never played folk music before. Teaching them the basics of folk music and all the different styles of folk tunes.”

Heather playing flute with other student musicians

 What advice would you give to other students?

“My advice to other students is to go for any opportunity you have. I never imagined when I started at the University of Kent to set up and run my own folk group, but here I am running this amazing group. It has given me some great opportunities and I have made some wonderful friends. So even if it might seem scary, give it a go!”

What are your plans for the next year?

“Next year I will hope to have another crazy, folk-infused summer, attending all the same festivals as last year. I am also hoping to go abroad and attend an Ethno world music camp. This is where participants from many different countries meet and teach different tunes that originate from their own country (i.e., folk music). Then of course I will come back to Uni next year and hopefully finish my degree and live my crazy sport/music Uni life!

I will also continue to run Folkshop for another year. I am looking into maybe running my own folk music festival along with some other friends from around the area of Kent as unfortunately Tenterden folk festival is not happening again. I will also hopefully find someone to continue the tradition of folk music at Kent even once I’m gone!”

Do you know an inspirational student or student group? Let us know.

Learn more about the Kent Stars campaign.

Medway Building

Changes to Medway Building access from 1 Jan

From 1 January 2025, the Medway Building opening times will be 08:00 to 18:00 hours, Monday to Sunday.  

Outside of these times, the Medway Building will be card access only from 18:00 to 22:00 hours. After 22:00 until 08:00 is out of hours, and the Medway Building should be empty. 

The Medway Campus, shared with Greenwich and Christ Church, will still have 24/7 security patrols and CCTV on site. However, the Walking Taxi Service will not be available at Medway during out of hours times. 

You can still contact security on the same number but out of hours you will need to go to the Gate House on the Medway campus (on Central Avenue).  

If students, including KMTV students, need access to the Medway Building out of hours, this should be directly associated with your studies and agreed with your academic supervisor. Once you have staff approval, you will need to email security@kent.ac.uk in advance and activate the SafeZone app when in the Medway Building.