Author Archives: Alice Allwright

Man standing in the middle of a field at the University of Kent facing towards the landscape of Canterbury

Global Research Opportunities Workshop 2020

Looking to get a better understanding on the university’s many and varied international funding streams? Then this event is just for you!

Date: 21 January 2020

Time: 09.00 – 12.30

Location: Darwin Conference Suite

The session will include an overview of the opportunities which can support research, education and training. In this session, we will focus on GCRF, Research Councils, Erasmus+ and case studies from across the University.

Guest Speaker: Rachael Sara-Kennedy – Head of Strategic Partnerships, UUKi.

To register your attendance, please click here to fill out the following form:

For further information please contact:

T: 01227 82 3908

E:deaninternational@kent.ac.uk

or visit the website

A robotic hand touches fingers with a human hand

School of Computing hosts Discover STEM@Kent lectures

As part of the Discover STEM@Kent lecture series the School of Computing will be hosting two lectures, open to students, staff and the wider community, looking at technology and the modern world.

In the first lecture Dr Tomas Petricek will discuss ‘Making Data Relevant in an Age of Fake News’

When: Monday 20 January at 15.00-16.00

Where: Cornwallis Central Lecture Theatre 1

Governments and journalists have access to increasing amounts of raw data about the world, making it possible to produce factual reports based on solid evidence. At the same time post-truth politics means that data and facts are becoming less relevant in public debate. Can more transparent, open and engaging ways of working with data reverse this dangerous trend? In this talk, Tomas will discuss how novel research on tools for data exploration and data visualization can help. Along the way, he will show a number of fun examples, looking at data about the UK government spending, Olympic medals and financial markets. Open to all, just come along.

In the second lecture Dr Colin Johnson will deliver a lecture entitled ‘Will a Robot take my Job? Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Work’.

When: Wednesday 5 February at 17.00-19.00

Where: Grimond Lecture Theatre 3.

A new industrial revolution is upon us, as intelligent machines take the place of humans across the economy. The impact of this could be vast – from increasingly sophisticated robots carrying out manual work, to artificial intelligence doing work in the law and accounting, through to robots working in the most human of jobs such as health and social care. This talk will examine whether the hype around AI is justified, which areas of work this will revolutionise, and which jobs will be untouched.

Please book for this event via the Eventbrite website

The foyer of the Sibson Lecture Building at the University of Kent

Public Lecture: Excitable Waves

A Mexican wave in a football stadium, a heartbeat, the motion of slime mould, and oxidation wave in certain chemical reactions are all examples of excitable waves.

We’re very pleased to welcome Professor Paul Sutcliffe from Durham University as our guest speaker at the SMSAS Public Lecture on 15 January 2020. His talk will describe the mathematical modelling of excitable waves and how this can be used to understand some unusual wave patterns created recently in chemical experiments that produce a happy reaction.

When: Wednesday 15 January 2020, 18.00 -19.00

Where: Sibson Lecture Theatre 3

To book your free place please do so via Eventbrite 

 

Man in checked shirt looking at a computer screen in a library setting

Tracking student progress and activity in Moodle

You are warmly invited to attend the next E-Learning Forum titled ‘Tracking student progress and activity in Moodle’.

When: Tuesday 28 January from 12.00 – 13.30

Where: UELT Seminar Room

In this session we will:

  • Provide an overview of the Moodle Completion Tracking facility
  • Demonstrate how student activity and progress can be tracked within a module and how academic staff can use this facility to control the flow and cadence of course materials automatically.
  • Demonstrate the impact that Completion Tracking has had in several modules already trialling the facility.

To book a place, please complete the online booking form 

Multicoloured pencils joined to make a circle

Free Study Plus courses

This term you can choose from a wide range of courses, including: KE024 Talking Cultures, KE122 Digital Photography or KE197 Advanced Photography, KE155 Introduction to Sustainability, KE178 IELTS English Exam Preparation and KE198 Career Toolkit.

We are  introducing a new course on Vampires (KE201) and two new Art courses: Art and Politics (KE202), and Art and Society (KE202) – these will be available to sign up to soon.

King Arthur at the Movies (KE195) will return for the spring term, as will Screen Writing (KE087) and Dirty History (KE004).

You can still sign up for KE194 Business Start-Up Journey, which is  series of standalone workshops continuing in the spring term and which allows you to choose the sessions that interest you the most.

You will earn Employability Points for any courses that you do (subject to satisfactory attendance).

To see the full range of courses running this term , see the Study Plus website. If you want to be the first to know about new courses as they are released, join our mailing list.

 

Notices of the Alice in Wonderland exhibition on the wall and along a corridor

Exhibition of ‘Alice in Wonderland’ original illustrations

The new exhibition in Colyer-Fergusson Gallery celebrates the bicentenary of the birth of Sir John Tenniel, cartoonist and illustrator of the first publication of Lewis Carroll’s ‘Alice in Wonderland.’

The display, which is open until Friday 28 February, presents a series of images which brought so vividly to life many of the characters in Carroll’s classic tale – Alice, the Hatter, the White Rabbit, the Mock Turtle – as the Music department prepares to perform a nineteenth-century ‘Musical Dream Play’ adaptation of the novel, first performed in 1886 and overseen by the author himself.

The exhibition is free to attend and open during normal working hours, with disabled access. Come and take a walk through pages of the novel and step into Alice’s world…

Four people rowing on rowing machines

University of Kent: unite and row for mental health

Burn off all those mince pies and get ready to take on the Row Britannia Challenge this term.

The challenge

To row 2020 miles by 13 March 2020. It’s a big goal (around 3.25 million metres) and we need your help to get there. Additionally, we’ve been challenged to raise £3,000 for Sport Relief, to help mental health charities across the country.

We officially launch the challenge on Wednesday 15 January 2020, with a special appearance from Row Britannia to help us along. More information about the launch event to follow on our Facebook event page.

How you can help

Support the challenge by donating and rowing as much as possible, all donations and distances are welcome. With your help, Row Britannia could raise a total of £1.5 million for Sport Relief if every university and college in the UK raises £3,000 each. In addition to raising vital funds, the positive awareness of mental health, fitness and well-being that they would raise within their communities could be extraordinary. The University of Kent has taken on this challenge and we need you to get rowing!

You can still clock your distance and donate after the 15 January, just visit the Sports Centre to take part. We will set up a rowing area with a moderator that will be recording all the miles rowed.

If you want to donate to Row Britannia, visit our Just Giving page. If you have any questions you can email sportsenquiries@kent.ac.uk

Wivenhoe House on the University of Essex Campus

Eastern Arc Conference 2020

‘The changing environment for research: the civic, regional and global university’

We are delighted to announce that registration has opened for the fifth Eastern Arc Conference.

Featuring speakers from Research England, the ESRC, the Wellcome Trust, the  Global Academy and the UPP Foundation, as well as colleagues involved in the first phase of EARC, the conference will explore the changing environment for research in the UK, including:

  • the revival of the civic university ethos,
  • the regionalism of research funding, and
  • the need to engage globally to meet the challenges for sustainable development.

We will also look at the fundamental nature of research collaboration: should we rethink how we work together?

The programme is available on the registration page or as this pdf .

When: Friday 21 February 2020

Where: Wivenhoe House on the University of Essex campus.

The event is free and open to all, however, places are limited, so do register your interest as soon as you can.

Background to the Eastern Arc

Eastern Arc is a research consortium comprising the universities of  East Anglia (UEA), Essex and Kent, With radical founding principles and an open outlook shaped by the travel, trade and migration that defines the southern North Sea region, the three established the consortium in 2013. In its first phase, the focus was on Digital Humanities, Quantitative Social Sciences and Synthetic Biology, supported by leads, fellows and PhD students in each area. It led to significant external funding, and a number of strong links and networks between the three universities.

As we enter our second phase, we are developing a Strategy that seeks to put sustainable development at the heart of our research collaboration, for the benefit of our regional, national and global communities. This will be launched at the conference.

 

Dr Susy Paisley painting on a wall

DICE talk on endangered species – 16th January

‘Curtains for Endangered Species?’ is the theme of the first DICE talk of 2020.

The talk will be given by Dr Susy Paisley, a DICE alumna and a member of the DICE Advisory Board. Susy will talk about her work as a designer and her focus on a range of endangered species.

The talk takes place on Thursday 16th January, from 18.00-19.00, in Grimond Lecture Theatre 2, Canterbury campus. It  is free to attend and everyone is welcome.

Professor David Wilkinson & A World of Discovery

Total raised from charity Season Greetings cards

The Development Office sold Season’s Greetings cards on behalf of Professor David Wilkinson’s Brain Injury research at the end of last term. We are delighted to announce that we raised £144 through this!

Thank you to everyone who purchased the cards, and a special thanks to our sponsor – Carbasse Dental Practice, whose support is incredibly appreciated.

If you would like to prepare yourself for next Christmas, we still have a limited stock of the cards left. These will be sold for a special price of £9 for 3 packs of 10, and you can email K.A.Barnsdale-65@kent.ac.uk or come to G22 in the Development Office to purchase.

Fundraising is still on-going, and we need to raise £165,000 to establish a free service for those with neurodisabilities to receive the ground-breaking experimental treatment we are working on. This is a non-surgical, non-invasive treatment that has shown amazing potential.

If you would like to look to get more information on this, and look at ways in which you can support the research, please go onto the website 

For more information on Carbasse Dental, please visit the Carbasse Dental website