Author Archives: Allie Burnett

Students on campus, Canterbury

Updated Regulations and Complaints Procedure

The Regulations on Student Discipline in relation to non-academic matters and the Complaints Procedure for Students have been revised for the 2015-16 academic year.

The Regulations on Student Discipline in relation to non-academic matters provide guidance on the actions that may be taken should a student’s conduct not support the University’s commitment to create a community that advances knowledge and stimulates intellectual activity, good order and the good name and reputation of the University. In registering with the University, students agree to be bound by all relevant provisions and Regulations of the University, so please ensure you are aware of the provisions available within this document.

The Complaints Procedure for Students provides guidance to students who may feel dissatisfied with some aspect of their dealings with the University, and details the procedure the University and student will both follow through all stages of the complaint.

If you would like further guidance please refer to the Student Conduct and Complaints website.

Alcohol Awareness Week

This Alcohol Awareness Week (16-20 Nov), we are encouraging students to think about their drinking habits and the impact it has on their wellbeing.

Throughout the week, we will be posting daily blog posts on the Student Guide offering helpful advice, including how to keep track of your alcohol-consumption, where to go for support if you feel you need it and ideas for alcohol free events.

Here’s how you can get involved…

Check out the ‘Tapas and Mock-tail’ night – at Woodys in Canterbury on Monday 16 November.

Turning Point will be on the Canterbury campus – providing advice on the raised plinth area next to Blackwell’s on central campus. This will be between 10.00-14.00 on Tuesday 17 November.

Turning Point advisers are also on the Canterbury campus every Thursday during term-time between 13.30 and 17.00 in Keynes College. Find out more by emailing wellbeing@kent.ac.uk or calling 01227 823206. 

Download the Drinkaware appto track your alcohol-consumption from the app store or Google Play.

This is a joint campaign with Kent Union, GK Unions, Canterbury Christ Church University and Christ Church Student Union.

Exhibition in ROOM this week

From 11-12 November ROOM, a shipping container turned gallery, will host an exhibition by School of Music and Fine Art student Sariya Suwannakarn.

Sariya’s exhibition titled ‘Declaring Individuality’ explores the increasingly blurred line between the virtual and physical world. Presenting the audience with the alien language of code that represents an individual’s online identity.

ROOM is the bright blue shipping container outside the Pilkington Building on the Medway campus. Read more about ROOM.

If you’d like to exhibit in ROOM please email E.V.Murton@kent.ac.uk.

ThinkNation – tackle the big issues impacting your life and future

Discuss how technology is impacting everyday life and shaping our future at ThinkNation on Saturday 5 December, 10.00 – 16.30, at the Gulbenkian Theatre.

ThinkNation brings students, young people, world thinkers, performers and tech futurists together to tackle big questions around the impact of technology and digital on everyday life and beyond.

Hosted by broadcaster and writer Rick Edwards (Channel 4, ITV2 and face of BBC3’s debate programme Free Speech) topics include artificial intelligence, immortality, space exploration and how tech is changing society.

Participants include:

  • Dr John Troyer from Centre for Death and Society at Bath University who’ll explore the social and moral impact of tech-assisted ‘immortality’
  • Spoken word poet, Dean Atta will perform a specially commissioned piece on ‘living in the moment’
  • And 17 year old Twitter #milifandom phenomenon, Abby Tomlinson, will argue the case on whether social media has created a selfish generation. Plus many more!

Get involved

If you’re aged 14-18 and want to share your ideas on stage with rockstar speakers and thought leaders, tweet @thinknat.

Get tickets

Grab your ticket now for what promises to be an amazing day of mind-blowing ideas, talks and debates! Tickets are £15 and include lunch and a t-shirt.

Kent student promotes racial equality

A University of Kent student’s passion to educate her peers in the UK and Hong Kong on cultural diversity has earnt her recognition at the Kent Student Awards.

April-Louise Pennant (22) a final year Sociology student spent her time at the University of Kent and a year studying at the Chinese University of Hong Kong encouraging and educating others about the diversity within the Black community.

While in Hong Kong, April-Louise envisioned and co-founded a new cultural student organisation called the Black International Community (B.I.C), which aimed to celebrate, educate and provide a forum for students from an African/Caribbean/Black heritage inclusive of the local students.

In order to fulfil its purpose to promote and share the cultures from within the Black community, the society ran regular events, including presentations about what it means to be Black and cultural trips to taste and understand African and Caribbean food. The society is still running in Hong Kong today.

As a result of setting up the B.I.C, April-Louise was also given a lead role in organising a week-long, University-wide event in Hong Kong to celebrate African culture. The ‘It’s Time for Africa’ event, which engaged the entire student community at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, celebrated the cultural identities in Africa and helped to raise awareness of the issues Black people living in Hong Kong face. The event included an opening ceremony with a fashion show showcasing traditional African clothes, African food tasting as well as sharing sessions throughout the week. It was also attended by generals from the African consulate and local African community groups in Hong Kong.

April-Louise’s passion for educating her peers on cultural diversity can be evidenced throughout her studies at the University of Kent. In her second year, as the secretary of the African and Caribbean Society (ACS), she led and organised the introduction of a Caribbean food stall on campus, negotiating special student prices, which traded weekly.

In her final year, after returning from her study year abroad in Hong Kong, she led the planning and participated in a silent protest, ‘Kent Can’t Breathe’, which was a demonstration of solidarity as part of an international show of anger at police brutality against black people both in the UK and US. The protest, sparked by the death of Eric Garner in the United States was attended by over 40 people. While doing this, in her final year, she was able to balance a part-time job within the Representation and Democracy section of the Kent Union offices, complete over 200 hours of volunteering and maintain good grades.

April-Louise’s commitment towards educating other students on cultural diversity meant she was nominated in two categories at the Student Awards in recognition of her work at her university in Hong Kong and for ‘Kent Can’t Breathe’. She was honoured by the University in the Outstanding International/Multicultural Initiative of the Year category, came in second place in the Outstanding Contribution to Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity category and was named ‘Student of the Year’ at the Kent Student Awards 2015. The annual awards recognise the achievements of Kent students outside of their academic studies.

April-Louise graduated from the University of Kent in July 2015 with first class honours.

Since graduating, April-Louise has been awarded a prestigious postgraduate Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) scholarship at the University of Birmingham. April-Louise’s research looks at the educational experience of specific groups and she hopes to become a lecturer.

If you know an amazing Kent student like April-Louise, nominate them for a Kent Student Award. Nominations will open in January 2016.

 

Take 5 mins and be in with a chance to win £500

Going to university changes your life.

That’s a fairly obvious statement – but the changes your university experience make, go beyond your degree and what types of job you’re qualified for.

Whether its career guidance, a lecture or the social scene, what you experience while at university can leave a long-lasting impression.

So, we want to hear from you. What do you want to achieve? What’s holding you back? What role does gender really play in determining future career success?

If that’s not enough to entice you, fill out the survey and you’ll be in with a chance of winning £500.

So, whoever you are, undergrad or postgrad, take 5 mins and tell us about your experiences at university and what you want from life after graduation. Get your voice heard and help us to improve your transition from student life to the workplace. Let’s get some answers… and be in with a chance to win £500.

Take the survey.

#30pcthinkfuture

Would you like to add a Year in Computing to your degree?

The School of Computing is proposing to introduce a new programme from September 2016.

This will be a free-standing, self-contained year, offered to all students in the University and can be taken after stage two or three (that is, between your second and final year, or after your final year).

Come to our kickstart lunch to find out more, enjoy free pizza and talk with others about your interests in tech on:

Wednesday 4 November 2015, 13.00-15.00, in Brian Spratt Room, SW101, Cornwallis

Sign up here (let us know you are coming so that we order enough pizza!)

The kickstart lunch is open to any current Kent undergraduates from any schoool, other than the School of Computing.

Come along if:

  • you are interested in studying computing AND your degree
  • you would like to get prepared for a career in tech
  • you are interested in exploring the frontiers of your subject and computing
  • you want to learn how to be creative with computing.

New Kent Extra courses

More Kent Extra courses are starting this term:

  • KE004: Dirty History – Exploring Film and TV Medievalisms
  • KE045: Stone Carving
  • KE065: A Tweet is Forever – Where our data goes and what we can do with it
  • KE066: A History of Anthropological Theory:1890-1980
  • KE068: Excelling in the Graduate Recruitment Cycle
  • KE064: Mentoring at University: Reflective Practice (Medway and Canterbury campus)

Courses are free to all Kent students. You can sign up for a Kent Extra course via Workshops in the Student Data System.

Cambridge exam preparation courses

Is English your second language? Cambridge English exams are lifelong qualifications with a worldwide reputation.

The Centre for English and World Languages offers CAE and CPE exam preparation courses. A carefully designed study programme will help you to develop all the language and examination skills required.

The course starts on 26 January 2016 and ends on 5 April 2016.

On Tuesday 19 January 2016 from 18:00-19:30 there is a free taster session. This gives you a chance to meet the teacher and ask questions about the course.

Find out more at: http://www.kent.ac.uk/cewl/courses/cambridge/cambridge-english.html

 

Equality Week, 16-20 Nov

Equality Week (16-20 November) is an exciting programme of free events, activities and talks at Canterbury and Medway that celebrate equality, diversity and inclusivity at Kent.

The week is also a reminder of the University’s commitment to providing a learning and working environment that is free from discrimination and harassment.

Events range from Chinese Arts and Crafts Workshops and Circus Skills to talks about being Trans*, presentations from on the ground workers in The Jungle in Calais and opportunities to learn the basics of British Sign Language. 

There is a packed programme of events and activities, so come and along and see what Equality Week has to offer.