Author Archives: Wendy Raeside

CEWL Individual Writing Tutorials

The Centre for English and World Languages (CEWL) is offering Individual Writing Tutorials to give you the opportunity to discuss your academic writing with a member of staff from CEWL.

Advice will be given on your language and the structure, coherence and cohesion of your work. Individual sessions last 20-30 minutes each and are free of charge.

Tutorials are available all year. To make an appointment, please email us at cewl@kent.ac.uk

Please note that this is not a proof-reading service.

Dr Bike

Medway Dr Bike free bicycle check-up

Does your bike need a check over? Visit Dr Bike on  Thursday 21 March outside the Student Hub , from 11.30-14.30.

Dr Bike are trained bicycle mechanics who regularly come onto campus to check and adjust your bike for free. The service is available to University of Kent and University of Greenwich students and staff.

Additional work will be quoted individually but will always be at a special reduced rate.

For more information visit our Dr Bike webpage.

If you do not own a bike, check out the Rent & Ride cycle hire scheme.

 

Heath Bunting events

Artist Heath Bunting at Kent

The School of Arts, in partnership with Studio 3 GalleryKent Law School, and the Centre for Critical Thought, has organised two collaborative events with artist Heath Bunting, to be held on Friday 15 March 2019.

The events consist of a seminar for students and staff at 11.00 in Cornwallis North West Seminar Room 6, and a talk which is open to the public at 16.00 in the Studio 3 Gallery.

This joint venture was initiated by Mihaela Varzari, an independent curator currently undertaking a PhD in History and Philosophy of Art, and Dr Connal Parsley, Senior Lecturer in Law and Deputy Director of Kent’s Centre for Critical Thought. Each presentation will be followed by discussion with the organisers, chaired by Dr Michael Newall, Senior Lecturer in History and Philosophy of Art.

Heath Bunting’s international artistic career, spanning over 30 years, has roots in local political and social activism in Bristol with a strong focus on anarchism. The emergence of the internet in the mid 90’s in UK, perceived by Bunting as a social revolution, allowed him to immediately embrace it as an artistic medium, as well as a tool for social change. Street art, sports, permaculture, information sharing via networks, or forest trips, to mention only a few, become artistic ways of representation. Considered a pioneer of net.art, Bunting’s work is also associated with the second wave of institutional critique, known for challenging via networks and exhibitions available only on-line, the hyper commodification of art markets in the West. As politics and the nature of the internet have changed, so does Bunting’s questions and interests. His strong interest in recent legislation, commerce and systems of control, as seen in Status Project (2008), renders his work difficult to categorise, but nevertheless richly informative for students of history of art and law.

If you wish to attend the seminar on Friday, please RSVP to Connal Parsley at C.Parsley@kent.ac.uk

Please book your free ticket for the talk at 16.00 on Facebook or Eventbrite.

Dr Terence Nice

Understanding and Working with Self-harm and Attempted Suicide – 25 March

A presentation on ‘Understanding and Working with Self-harm and Attempted Suicide’ is to be given by Dr Terence Nice, Programme Director (Psychotherapy), from the Centre for Professional Practice.

The presentation will take place on Monday 25 March, from 9.30-11.30, in Grimond Lecture Theatre 2, Canterbury campus.

The presentation focuses upon the assessment and treatment of people who self-harm and attempt suicide. The presentation looks at the prevalence of self-harm, national guidelines, causative factors and ways of ameliorating suicidal ideations and diminishing acts of self-harm. The territory of self-harm and attempted suicide is often paradoxical and labyrinthine, leaving clinicians, practitioners and workers uncertain about how to react positively and respond appropriately. The presentation is aimed at all those people who come into contact with young or older people who self-harm or attempt suicide.

The presenter is a Lecturer in Psychological Therapies, Highly Specialist Psychotherapist and an active researcher in this field. Dr Nice has also developed a self-harm tool-kit to assist in the assessment and treatment of this group.

The presentation will be followed by Q&A time. Refreshments will be provided and certificates of attendance will be issued.

Entrance fee to the event is £20 per person. All spaces must be pre-booked – book your place now via the University’s  online store.

For Kent staff, internal journal transfers areavailable. Please use the cost code 1830-385-44385 and email professionalpractice@kent.ac.uk with your name and contact details.

For any queries, please email professionalpractice@kent.ac.uk or call 01634 888929.

Ride for Peace

Sports Centre staff take on Peace Ride to Ypres

Two cyclists from Kent Sport at the University of Kent are getting on their bikes to tackle the National Children’s Football Alliance (NCFA) Peace Ride to the Belgian town of Ypres on Saturday 23 March in order to twin the University’ sports pitches with the peace field in Belgium.

Oli Prior, Head of Physical Activities and Lee Thompson, Outdoor Facilities Manager are proud to be riding from the first University Peace pitches in the UK and twin them close to the World War Memorial to the Missing in Ypres.  Taking part in the ride will further cement the legacy of the pitches at the Canterbury campus. On arrival at Ypres, the pair will lay a ceremonial Poppy Football at the Menin Gate Memorial at the daily 8pm ‘Last Post’ service.

The NCFA’s Peace Fields project aims is to raise enough money to send a team of team of children from India to the 2019 Global Peace Games in Messines, Belgium.  To support this cause and back Oli and Lee, please make a pledge on the charity’s Crowd Funding page and be sure to include a word of support for Oli/Lee or the University of Kent so the charity know who you are backing. Alternatively, Oli and Lee have their own Just Giving page so you can pledge your support there.

Kent’s Vice-Chancellor and President, Professor Karen Cox said: ‘I am delighted that the University is supporting this great cause and event. I send my very best wishes to all those taking part in the ride and look forward to hearing about the outcomes of the project later this year.’

Postgraduate research photography competition

Postgraduate research photography competition 

Unleash your creativity with an eye-catching snapshot and be in for a chance to win £250!

Are you a Master’s or a PhD student? Have you been thinking about innovative ways of presenting your research to colleagues or to the general public?

Tell a story about your research by sharing a photograph and win up to £250!

Submit:

  • a photograph (min 300ppi), which promotes a key finding of your research or summarises the potential impact of your work
  • your name, department/school, photo title and
  • a short photo descriptions (max 250 words)

Email your submission to graduateschool@kent.ac.uk by midnight on 7 April 2019.

For more information visit the ReCapture Blog.

Launch of Canterbury KM Big Charity Quiz

Book now for the Canterbury KM Big Charity Quiz

Join in the KM Big Charity Quiz at the University of Kent on Friday 26 April.

The quiz, being held in our Sports Centre on Canterbury campus, starts at 17.00 (doors open at 18.20).

University of Kent students and staff  can save £15 by using code the code UKC19 when booking. The regular price is £65 for a team of eight.

Each table will receive a ploughman’s supper and a bottle of wine. A bar is available.

Great prizes including Eurostar tickets plus a fun raffle and other games.

Book your table now by clicking here

Dr Julian Baggini

Julian Baggini appointed academic director of Royal Institute of Philosophy

Dr Julian Baggini, honorary research fellow in the Department of Philosophy and Kent honorary graduate, has recently been appointed academic director of the Royal Institute of Philosophy.

Julian Baggini is a writer and the founding editor of The Philosophers’ Magazine. He has a PhD on the philosophy of personal identity and is the author of over 20 books including The Pig That Wants to be Eaten (Granta, 2010), The Virtues of the Table (Granta, 2014) and The Ego Trip (Granta, 2012). Julian’s most recent book How the World Thinks: A Global History of Philosophy (Granta Books, 2018).

The Royal Institute of Philosophy is a charity dedicated to the advancement of philosophy through the organisation and promotion of teaching, discussion and research of all things philosophical. The Institute is not committed to any particular philosophical school or method or, of course, any ideology.

Julian is also appearing at an event with Richard King, Professor of Buddhist and Asian Studies, called ‘Globalising Philosophy’ taking place on Friday 14 June 2019.

The Max Tyler Collection

The Max Tyler Collection

Max Tyler was for many years the historian and archivist of the British Music Hall Society.

After his passing in January 2018, his collection was transferred to the Special Collections and Archives at the University from the British Music Hall Society. He had liaised with the University over a decade earlier to arrange to transfer ownership of the collection after his death.

The collection contains material spanning from the late 19th century to the early 21st century.

It includes: original and copies of Music Hall song sheets, song sheets and scripts for musical comedies, music hall programmes, playbills, 20th century music hall and vaudeville magazines and periodicals, music hall audio recordings on cassette, CD, shellac discs, and reel-to-reel tapes, published books on music hall, and music hall performers, research notes.

We are looking for ways to raise further funding to support cataloguing the collection so that it will readily available to a wide range of audiences, including researchers.

Leaving a legacy can also impact and support scholarships, alleviating hardship and future research.

If you would like to find out more about legacies, please sign up to the Estate Planning Seminar in the Widoger Law Building on Friday 22 March from 15.00 to 16.30.

Blackbaud logo

Blackbaud Scholarships to support fundraisers

The University’s Centre for Philanthropy is pleased to announce three new scholarships generously supported by Blackbaud.

The Blackbaud Scholarships have been launched with the aim of supporting fundraising practitioners to gain substantive professional and personal development. Available to students on the MA Philanthropic Studies starting September 2019, the scholarships will enable individuals to undertake a postgraduate Master’s level programme. Taught by distance-learning, the MA Philanthropic Studies is designed to fit around the personal and professional commitment of practitioners.

Blackbaud is offering three scholarships to MA Philanthropic Studies students who meet the selection criteria. The scholarships will be paid towards tuition fees for the degree programme which is part-time over two years. The scholarships available consist of:

  • 1 x full scholarship (tuition fees paid for two years)
  • 2 x partial scholarships of £2,000 (£1,000 towards tuition fees each year of the degree programme)

David Benjamin, President of Blackbaud’s International Markets Group, said: ‘Enabling fundraisers to make an even bigger impact on the world of social good is at the heart of our values, and we are delighted to help support the next generation of fundraisers in their professional development.’

The Centre for Philanthropy at the University of Kent was founded in 2008 and is delighted that Blackbaud are supporting fundraising professionals through the Blackbaud Scholarships at Kent.

For more information about the MA Philanthropic Studies and the Blackbaud Scholarships please visit our Scholarships webpages or email philanthropy@kent.ac.uk