Author Archives: Angie Valinoti

reflexology

Reflexology now available at Kent Sport Physiotherapy Clinic

Great news! We now offer Reflexology at Kent Sport Physiotherapy Clinic!

We are currently offering taster sessions at £20 for 30 minutes from Monday 14 October to Friday 1 November.

What is Reflexology?

Reflexology is non-invasive, complementary therapy and is a thousand-year-old practice that focuses on massaging the acupressure points in the feet or hands to relieve stress, illness, pain and stimulate mental, emotional, physical healing and well-being in all the body systems.  It builds stress resistance and rejuvenates by stimulating meridians, circulation and the nerve systems by flushing and detoxing.

How does Reflexology work?

Each area of the foot, hand, eye, face and ear connects via nerves and electromagnetic energy (chi) channels (“meridians”) to a particular body organ and system. By massaging that area, it stimulates and flushes that area.

The benefits of Reflexology:

  •  Stress relief
  • Relaxation
  • Hormone balance
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Insomnia
  • Balance immune system
  • Lower blood pressure
  • Support digestive system
  • Respiratory disorders (asthma)
  • Sinusitis
  • Menopause

For more information or to book in, please call us on 01227 824375 or contact physio@kent.ac.uk.

 

KLS

Kent Law Fair offers excellent networking opportunity for aspiring lawyers!

Kent’s annual Law Fair on Wednesday 30 October offers an excellent opportunity for law students and non-law students to network with leading local, national and international law firms.

The Fair, organised by members of Kent Student Law Society (KSLS), will be held from 1pm – 4pm in Eliot Hall on Kent’s Canterbury campus. 

Law firms attending this year include two Magic Circle firms – Clifford Chance and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer – together with:

  • Boys & Maughan Solicitors
  • Cripps Pemberton Greenish
  • Dentons
  • DGB Solicitors
  • F:LEX
  • Furley Page Solicitors
  • Girlings Solicitors
  • Hatten Wyatt
  • Herbert Smith Freehills
  • Hogan Lovells
  • Institute of Chartered Secretaries and Administrators
  • Judge & Priestly
  • Martin Tolhurst Solicitors
  • Mayer Brown
  • Outset
  • RPC
  • Thomson Snell & Passmore
  • Trowers and Hamlins

The Fair is open to all Kent students with an interest in pursuing a legal career. Anyone thinking of attending is encouraged to attend a preparatory talk in the preceding week from 6pm to 8pm on Monday 28 October in Eliot Lecture Theatre. At the preparatory talk, students will be given advice on how to maximise the opportunity to network and explore career options. 

Other organisations manning a stand at this year’s event include:

  • Aspiring Solicitors
  • BARBRI International
  • BPP Law School
  • Chambers Student
  • City Law School
  • Employability Points (Kent)
  • ICSA (The Chartered Governance Institute)
  • Kent Law Society
  • Kent Student Law Society
  • LawCareers.Net
  • Law Training Centre
  • TARGET Jobs
  • University of Law

Follow KSLS’s Facebook page for Law Fair news and updates.

ombea

E-Learning Forum: Ombea audience response / in-class polling system

As part of the 2019/20 e-learning forum series, the e-learning team is excited to invite colleagues to the upcoming session ‘Ombea – the story so far’ on Tuesday 29th October 12.00-13.30 in the UELT seminar room.

This session will not only introduce the Ombea audience response / in-class polling system (currently funded to the end of the 2020/21 academic year) but also look at engagement from academic and professional service colleagues to date, and feature guest speakers sharing their experience of how they have used the system as part of their own practice.

All staff are welcome.  The session will be recorded via KentPlayer for colleagues who cannot make it to the Canterbury campus.

To book a place, please complete the online booking form.

 

 

Sasha_Langeveldt

Student Union President Raising Money for local Homelessness Charity Porchlight

Student Union President Sasha Langeveldt will be sleeping out this winter to raise money for a local homelessness charity. Can you help her?

On Saturday 19 October 2019 the Rotary Club of Canterbury Sunrise and Porchlight are inviting a group of local people and community leaders to take part in a one-night Sleep Out. 

Sasha says: “By taking part in this event, I hope to raise awareness and funds for Porchlight; a charity that supports and helps those who are and have suffered from homelessness. Porchlight provides many services from street outreach and supported accommodation to education and employment assistance which enables people to leave homelessness behind.

“Homelessness can happen to anyone, it can be an unexpected life changing experience that anyone can face today. For this reason, it is extremely important to do what we can to help all those who need a little more support. I have personally seen what this can do to a person’s life and I want to actively work towards challenging the stigma around homelessness.” 

You can help Sasha raise money to tackle local homelessness by clicking here.

Common room opening

Hub for computing students officially opened

The University’s Vice Chancellor, Karen Cox, officially opened the new undergraduate common room in the School of Computing. The common room is the latest update to the Cornwallis building where facilities for computing students have been brought together, providing a central hub.

The hub area comprises the School’s:

– reception and student office

– placements office

– employability and marketing office

– Kent IT Consultancy offices

– The Shed (the School’s maker space)

– and the undergraduate student common room

Head of School, Professor Richard Jones, said: ‘Our aim is to bring all our student facing activities together in an area that is well decorated and which provides a pleasant working environment with a real buzz to it. In designing the common room, we have listened to the views of the Student Union and provided a pleasant space for collaborative working and socialising, adjacent to our other student services.’

Other recent moves have seen the student admin office moved downstairs to provide a better reception for the School, as well as a much improved working environment for the professional services staff. The KITC area provides communal working space for student consultants and the KITC staff, as well as private rooms for meeting with clients.

Professor Tracy Kivell

SAC declares Climate and Environmental Emergency

On Wednesday 25 September, the School of Anthropology and Conservation (SAC) held a Climate and Environmental Emergency event, to begin to examine and discuss the way forward to reduce the School’s emissions and broader environmental impact relating to operations, research and teaching.

Humanity and the environment that supports it face a historically unparalleled existential threat from human-induced climate change and environmental degradation following a global reliance on fossil fuels and the entrenchment of unsustainable forms and levels of production and consumption of consumer goods.

The climate and environmental crisis presents both a stark warning and a threat to life and civilisation. Global emissions must decline by 45% by 2030 (from 2010 levels) and reach net-zero by around 2050 to limit the most catastrophic consequences of climate change. To achieve this, there must be rapid and far-reaching transitions in energy, land-use, buildings and infrastructure.

Academic schools have a unique mandate and responsibility to generate the necessary knowledge and human capacities to transition to an ecologically, socially and economically regenerative economy at emergency speed.

The event featured a presentation by Dr Charlie Gardner, Lecturer in Conservation Biology, on the relationship between science, academia and activism, which he has recently discussed in op-eds written for The Guardian and The Globe Post, and Tom Bell, PhD student in Social Anthropology, who is conducting fieldwork in the US on climate change activism. Undergraduate students spoke about the work that climate change activist groups Extinction Rebellion and Youth Strike 4 Climate are doing locally and nationally, Kent Union described the ongoing work they are doing to address the environmental emergency, and there was a talk from the University’s own sustainability team and their Futureproof programme.

The event pivoted on Professor Tracy Kivell declaring a climate emergency on behalf of the School. This declaration publicly and fully acknowledges the findings and recommendations of the international scientific community, pledging, among other things, to:

  • Reduce emissions by at least 45% by 2025, reaching net zero by 2040 or, at the very latest, 2050.
  • Establish and mandate a staff-student working group to advise on and develop actions required to meet the above commitments.
  • Work across the University to declare a University-wide climate emergency and embed the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, as set out by the signing of the SDG accord by the University of Kent in 2018.

The initiative to declare a School climate emergency has been led and facilitated by a diverse group of volunteer staff and students in the School. The group itself emerged in part out of the University of Kent’s commitment to incorporate the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals into its operations and the teaching curriculum it delivers.

The process of calculating and reducing direct and indirect emissions provides a case study to demonstrate the principle and develop an approach that can be scaled up across the University.

The event was closed by Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Karen Cox: “I have been truly moved by what I’ve heard this evening. We know what the goal is, but we need to be brave and bold to get there. And we need collective ideas to move this forward.

“The University of Kent can be a thought leader and action leader in this agenda. The School of Anthropology and Conservation has my absolute commitment to do what it needs to do. I am offering an open door.”

The full text of the School’s Declaration of Climate Emergency can be viewed here.

 

1024px-Oilpalm_malaysia

Dice Talks – Palm Oil – friend or foe?

This month’s talk by DICE (Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology) focuses on their ground-breaking work on the impacts of palm oil on conservation and local people’s livelihoods in Indonesia and Malaysia. The talk will be given by Drs Matt Struebig and Jake Bicknell from DICE.

The event will take place on Thursday 26 September from 18.00 to 19.00 in Grimond Lecture Theatre 1. For more details please visit the Event’s Facebook page. Please also share this message with anyone you think might be interested and encourage them to sign up to our mailing list.

The DICE talks are a monthly set of free and public events that showcase the work of DICE members, students and alumni. They take place between 18:00 and 19:00 on a Thursday each month and everyone is welcome to attend.

To find out about future DICE talks then please sign up to our mailing list.

To watch previous DICE talks then subscribe to our YouTube channel.

cloister-411025_960_720

Nostalgia podcast with Victoria Mullen

In the latest episode of the Nostalgia podcast series, Chris Deacy, Head of the Department of Religious Studies, interviews Victoria Mullen, a University of Kent Religious Studies alumnus.

Victoria talks about her journey from managing a Canterbury restaurant to doing a degree in Religious Studies and now working as a school lay chaplain in Nottingham. We learn about her early years in Galway, perceptions of sexism and ageing, going swimming every day as a child, Robson & Jerome, seeing Bucks Fizz on stage, Catholic education, why teaching is a vocation, the relationship between forgiveness and sin, and what Victoria’s younger self would think about what she is doing now.

Ian Cooper

Religion in the German-Speaking World

Dr Ian Cooper, Lecturer in German for the Department of Modern Languages, has recently co-edited a publication titled Literature and Religion in the German-Speaking World (Cambridge University Press, 2019).

Ian says: “More than any other literature in Europe, and for deep-seated historical reasons, the German literary tradition has from its beginnings been in constant dialogue with religious ideas – whether expressing them or challenging them. This is the first book to address the meaning of that relationship across 800 years of literature in German, and shows how German-speaking culture from the medieval period to our own time has been profoundly concerned with the interconnections between the religious and the secular.”