Category Archives: Student Guide

You Wont remember me

Kent students win Best Student Film award at LA Film Awards

The film You Won’t Remember Me (2019), made by students from the School of Arts and KTV Film, has won ‘Best Student Film (Feature)’ at the Los Angeles Film Awards. It has also won Best Indie Feature and Best Thriller at the New York Film Awards and Best Student Feature at Festigious International Film Festival.

KTV Film is part of the award-winning student media group Kent Television, producing a selection of films each academic year.

You Won’t Remember Me was directed by Victor Blaho, who is currently studying BA (Hons) Film with a Year Abroad. The film follows the story of Lethe, 40, who wakes up one morning believing she is 19. This sudden amnesia brings her back to a time where she experienced a life changing trauma, that she now has to face in order to overcome her condition. In addition to having to deal with her 19 year old son Lee, she needs to face her innermost past fears and adapt to her present environment strangely unfamiliar to her.

School of Arts students involved in making the film include: Victor Blaho, Rumen Russev and Niall Murphy, all currently studying BA (Hons) Film with a Year Abroad; Adam Simcox, Francesca Coman, Lia Stefanescu, Nikita Kornel, Chidi Ekwe, and Trisha-Evans-Lutterodt who are all studying BA (Hons) in Film; Amelia Mundy, who is studying the BA (Hons) in Drama and Film; Rebecca Mars Jr. and Rhys Clydesdale, who study the  BA (Hons) in  Drama and Theatre; and Olivia Kluba,who studies the BA (Hons) in Media Studies.

Students from School of English, School of Physical Sciences, School of Politics, Engineering and Digital Arts and School of Law also participated in the making of the Film.

‘The project took 13 months to complete’, Victor explains. ‘I made a film about trauma while being traumatised by the making of it. However, similarly to our main character, I now see the unfortunate series of events that we went through, not as a curse, but as a blessing filled with creative opportunities and personal growth possibilities’.

The IMDB page for the film can be found here.

The 72 minute film (rated 15) is available to watch on the KTV Youtube channel here

 

Bed in dark room with small side lamp on

Struggling with your attendance?

There are lots of reasons why you might be struggling with your attendance at university.

Check of this handy online resource to help figure out what the issue is, and the best way to move forward so you can improve your attendance and your overall experience at university.

The resource has been compiled by the Student Support team who are there to ensure your time at university is the most positive experience it can be.

 

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.

student networks images of each network chair

Kent Union student Networks- what are they?

Have you heard about Kent Union’s new Networks yet? Networks are spaces where students who share an interest or identity can discuss issues relating to their group and collectively work on events/campaigns.

There are 12 Networks in total, and each Network has an elected chair. The Network chairs have three key aims for the year, and will be leading and coordinating the activities and work of their Network. You can find out more about the Networks, the chairs, and their aims on the Networks portal.

Over the next couple of weeks the networks will be hosting Network Nights, which are a great opportunity to get involved and meet new people!

Visit the Kent Union Facebook events for more information:

Film alumnus Marcus Brooker on BBC1’s Inside Out

Alumnus Marcus Brooker, who completed his BA (Hons) in Film this summer, has contributed to a news item about his father’s cancer diagnosis for the BBC programme Inside Out, broadcast on BBC1 last night, Monday 7 October 2019.

The item uses footage from a documentary that Marcus is currently producing. Marcus conceived of making the documentary while at university, when he spoke to his father about his cancer diagnosis. After the story was featured in a local paper, the BBC contacted Marcus to ask him to make a segment for Inside Out. Marcus has also received interest from Channel 4 regarding a new programme about terminal illness.

Marcus says: ‘I understand that having cancer is a tough time, and my dad has suffered with cancer since I was around 11/12 so I am aware of what it is like to live with someone who has cancer. The documentary I have set out to make focuses on my father as his terminal diagnosis gets worse, up to the point of his death. I wanted to show people how an ordinary person like my dad can live with cancer and still have a life. I told my brother about the documentary and we are now both making the documentary. Although the overall story of the documentary will follow my father, we both want to bring other people in to tell their stories and how they live with cancer, be that of a terminal diagnosis or people who have battled cancer and won. My father has had cancer three times and has some really interesting stories to tell’.

Although the segment on Inside Out will focus on Marcus’ father and his story, Marcus aims to feature other people and their stories in his full-length documentary. Marcus says: ‘We are looking for ordinary people with unique stories to tell, and the long term plan is to help people who may be scared or unsure about how to live with a terminal diagnosis, and overall just relate to my father’s story’.

If you are interested in getting involved with the project, please get in touch with Marcus here: MarcusBrooker@hotmail.com

The segment on Inside Out can be found on BBC iPlayer, available at 10 minutes and 25 seconds here.

Man on an altitude training machine

Healthy Ageing and the Industrial Strategy: Kent and Medway

Kent Innovation and Enterprise will be hosting an event focusing on the research, products and services being developed to promote healthy ageing in an ageing society at the University of Kent Canterbury campus on Thursday 17th October, from 9.30am – 3pm. Join us for an insight into the research, products and services that are being developed to promote healthy ageing.

The number of people over 75 in the UK today is one in 12. By 2040, it will rise to one in 7. We’re also living for longer and a third of children born now are expected to live to 100. This presents a challenge to health services, but it is also an opportunity for businesses and researchers who can help people to stay active and productive as they age.

If you are a business or academic working in this field, this event will give you the chance to learn more about the various funding streams available and the opportunity to network with like-minded people, opening up the possibilities of future discussion and collaboration.

With speakers from across Kent and Medway this event will discuss innovations, case studies and opportunities for businesses to engage in this key issue. Particular focus will be on the following 7 themes of Healthy Ageing:

  1. Sustaining physical activity
  2. Designing for age-friendly homes
  3. Maintaining health at work
  4. Managing common complaints of ageing
  5. Creating healthy and active places
  6. Care support for people with cognitive impairment
  7. Reducing social isolation

For more information and to register your place, please click here.

Books

Intellectual speed dating at Wimbledon Book Festival

Ben Hutchinson, Professor of European Literature in the Department of Modern Languages, is helping run an Intellectual Speed Dating event as part of this year’s Wimbledon Bookfest (3-13 October 2019).

The event celebrates the publication of the 600th in the ‘Very Short Introduction’ series, published by Oxford University Press.

The Very Short Introductions are a fabulous way to discover a new subject: high-level but digestible overviews written by experts in their field. The audience will be split into small groups who will move around the event, enjoying ten minutes with each author for a snappy introduction to their topic, plus time for questions. When the bell rings, you must move on! It’s speed dating – for ideas.

Ben, author of A Very Short Introduction to Comparative Literature, said: ‘Literary festivals represent an important opportunity for discussing questions of literature with the general public. ‘Intellectual speed dating’ is an ideal format for the Very Short Introduction series, emphasising as it does the virtues of brevity, concision, and wit. Less is more on first dates!’

 

Access tour

Accessibility Tours are back

An Accessibility Tour of Canterbury campus will take place on Monday 14 October starting at 13.00 from the Student Entrance of the Registry Building.

The aim of the tour is to identify areas which could be improved to provide greater accessibility for our staff and students.

This will be an external tour taking in the Gulbenkian, Library and Grimond building, before crossing over the road by the bank and following the path to the Sibson building and then onto the Sports Pavilion.

Our route back will take us past the Student hub, via Park Wood, coming out by the Sports Centre.

There’s no need to book or to let us know you are coming –  just turn up.