Category Archives: Student Guide

Sports Centre Road and Sports Centre car parks – 2 and 3 May

The closure of Sports Centre Road on Wednesday 1 May and Thursday 2 May 2019 has been delayed until Thursday 2 May and Friday 3 May 2019.

The work is to install the site accommodation for the new Kent and Medway Medical School building. Sports Centre Road and the car parks to the rear of the Sports Centre will be closed between 08.00 and 16.00 on each day.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause and we will endeavour to keep any disruption to a minimum. If there are any queries please contact the Estates Customer Services on ext 16666.

Mark Ashmore
Estates Project Manager​
Estates Department,

Medals

Get £5 off entry to Hythe Bay Triathlon

Fancy having a go at a Triathlon? Ashford Tri Club is offering Kent students and staff £5 off entry to the Hythe Bay Triathlon on Sunday 19 May.

This very friendly local event is suitable for beginners and experienced triathletes: it features a 250m pool swim, 15km bike leg from Hythe to Folkestone and back, and a scenic 5km run along Hythe promenade.

More information is on the Ashford Tri Club website.

Register online and use code KENT195 to get the £5 discount.

Garage Coffee at the Gulbenkian

Speciality coffee to launch at Gulbenkian

From 30 April, Gulbenkian will be working with Canterbury based Garage Coffee to bring their ethically-sourced, delicious coffee to their café.

The Cafe will be serving their delicious house blend Maypole and a selection of single origin filter coffees. Importantly for Gulbenkian and the team behind Garage Coffee, they ensure that any coffee they produce comes from farms where workers are paid a good rate for their beans. They only use importers who deal with these speciality farms, which means that they know that the farmers are getting paid, on average, around 25% more than the fair-trade rate.

The Cafe will also be serving a fabulous array of loose leaf teas, expertly blended by Debonair Tea, a family-run tea business in Kent.

James and Alice from Team Garage Coffee will be on site on 30 April, so please come up to the café and say hi, have a chat to them about coffee and take your first look at this fantastic new addition to the speciality coffee scene in Kent!

Dance performance

Call for contributions for ‘Inside Out’ symposium

Contributions are sought for a two day symposium as part of the Playing A/Part research project, led by Nicola Shaughnessy, Professor of Performance in the Department of Drama and Theatre, and funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, to be held at Kent on Thursday 4 and Friday 5 July 2019.

The symposium is titled ‘Inside Out: Autistic Identities, Participatory Research and Gender’. The first day will explore perspectives on participatory research practices, ethics and themes, and the second day will explore perspectives on gender and creativity.

Contributions are invited in the form of posters or creative artefacts from projects that engage with the symposium themes, issues and questions. These might include:

Creative practices with autistic participants

  • Participatory research, neurodiversity and inclusive practices
  • Ethical issues in participatory autism research
  • Creative research methodologies and neurodiversity
  • Gender, sexuality and neurodiversity
  • Monotropism and related concepts
  • Interdisciplinary and inclusive research outcomes.

If you wish to contribute provide a 150 word abstract outlining the rationale, content and form of the work to be featured (whether a poster or creative artefact). Please send to playingapartconference@kent.ac.uk with the subject line ‘Inside Out Proposal’. Please note the preferred language for this event is identity first (i.e. autistic person/s).

The cost of the conference will be £25 per day or £40 for both days, with fee waivers available on request.

The deadline for proposals in Friday 24 May 2019.

Spring 1972 Keynes Quadrant

Life in Keynes 50th Anniversary Photography Competition

Keynes College celebrates its 50th Anniversary this year.  As part of these celebrations, the Master of Keynes College, Chloé Gallien, is pleased to launch the ‘Life in Keynes’ photography competition.

This competition is open to all University students and staff past and present and participants are encouraged to submit photos that capture the essence of life in Keynes.

Keynes College today

You don’t have to be a member of the College to enter, as we know that many of you have enjoyed the facilities offered by the College and we are looking forward to seeing what the College means to as wide a range of people as possible.

A panel of judges will choose the best entries and these will be exhibited in Keynes College during June. There will also be a prize for the top three entries: vouchers to the value of £80 (1st prize), £50 (2nd), £35 (3rd prize).

Photos should be submitted by the end of the day on Sunday 19 May to the competition Flickr page.

Please see the following links for competition terms and conditions and instructions on how to enter.

Storm damage Keynes 1987

Research funding success for Philosophy and Comparative Literature

Research funding success for colleagues in the Department of Philosophy and the Department of Comparative Literature has resulted in grants of approximately £361,000 for academic research.

Professor Jon Williamson, Professor of Reasoning, Inference and Scientific Method, has been awarded a Leverhulme Research Project Grant for his project ‘Evidential pluralism in the social sciences’, which will receive £244,000 for work in the philosophy of the social sciences.

Dr Anna Katharina Schaffner, Reader in Comparative Literature and Medical Humanities, has been awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship for Self-Improvement: A History. Her award of £48,000 will support the writing of a book charting the long history of the idea of the improvable self from antiquity to the present. The book is contracted for publication with Yale University Press.

Dr Katja Haustein, Lecturer in Comparative Literature, has been awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship totalling £46,247 for her project, Alone With Others: A Literary History of Tact in the Twentieth Century.

Dr Graeme A Forbes, Lecturer in Philosophy, has been awarded a Mind Association Research Fellowship, securing £23,000 for work on his monograph, The times they are a-changin’.

This announcement follows news that Professor Amalia Arvaniti in the Department of English Language and Linguistics has been awarded a grant of almost €2.5m to investigate the role of the tone of voice in communication and ways it might influence conversations.

Microphone

Comedy and Mental Health: Future Directions conference

The Theatre and Performance Research Cluster and the Identities, Politics and the Arts Research Cluster in the School of Arts warmly invite you to conference entitled ‘Comedy and Mental Health: Future Directions’ to be held at the University of Kent’s Canterbury campus on Wednesday 1 May 2019.

The conference has been organised by Dr Dieter Declercq, Assistant Lecturer in Film and Media in the School of Arts.

At this event, eight speakers from a variety of academic and professional backgrounds will deliver short presentations on what they consider the most pressing questions and challenges for future research on mental health and comedy, especially stand-up comedy. The event is designed to stimulate further research into comedy and mental health by identify new research topics, exchanging methodological strategies and explore interdisciplinary and collaborative research.

Sessions will include ‘Comedy, Humour and Mental Health. An Attempted Overview and Some New Directions’; ‘Taking of the Mask and Laughing: Autistic Humour, Passing and Mental Health’; ‘Women Stand-Ups, Self-Denigrating Comedy and Mental Wellbeing’ and ‘Has the Growth of Stand-Up Comedy Contributed to Greater Awareness of Mental Health Issues?’

For the full programme, please see the page here.

The conference is free to attend and is open to all. Registration is open until Monday 29 April 2019; to register please email Dieter at dd324@kent.ac.uk.

Dr Margherita Laera

Margherita Laera wins funding for theatre translation education resource

Dr Margherita Laera, Senior Lecturer in Drama and Theatre in the School of Arts, has just won Follow-On Funding for Public Engagement and Impact from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) for a budget of £77k to fund a project on foreign-language plays in translation, targeting secondary school students and teachers.

This project will address the issue of under-representation of cultural difference in the British secondary school drama curriculum by creating an open-access educational website of video resources to engage secondary school children with foreign-language plays. By targeting young drama students and their teachers, the project will provide training for future theatre-makers and audiences to appreciate stories from diverse contexts and empathise with culturally distant others.

Increasing representation of non-English languages and cultures on English-speaking stages is of paramount importance to foster understanding among communities in multicultural societies, such as the UK, but also in the US, where translations of foreign-language texts tend to be rare and immigration high.

The website will include newly commissioned filmed extracts of five plays in the original language and two English translations, in order to highlight how translation strategies can have an impact on the production. The videos will be entirely new and curated for the project, featuring a professional cast. The site will also include film interviews with key practitioners working in the field; extensive contextualisations of the plays by academics and theatre- makers; and teaching resources clarifying how to integrate the resource into the GCSE, A-Level, BTEC and IB curricula.

To learn more about AHRC Follow-On Funding for Public Engagement and Impact, please see the page here.

Group photo of ICC Intervention in Kenya workshop

Kent Law School co-hosts workshop exploring aftermath of ICC intervention in Kenya

Kent Law School Senior Lecturer Dr Sara Kendall has been in Nairobi to co-host an interdisciplinary workshop critically exploring the aftermath of the International Criminal Court (ICC) intervention in Kenya.

The workshop, entitled ‘After the ICC Intervention in Kenya: Reflections and Alternatives’, was co-hosted with Dr Njoki Wamai from the Department of International Relations at United States International University Africa (USIU Africa). It was also supported by USIU Africa’s Departments of Sociology and Criminal Justice.

Dr Kendall said: ‘The ICC intervention in Kenya was meant to address crimes against humanity that occurred in the wake of the 2007 elections. The ICC’s accountability efforts generated high hopes, political tensions and grave disappointments before it withdrew from the country in 2016. Although many Kenyans have moved on, whether politically or professionally, many others have continued to deal with the aftermath of the ICC’s dramatic appearance in and rapid departure from the country. The court brought with it a particular vision of accountability and promises to conflict affected communities while also changing the Kenyan political landscape. The workshop brought together advocates, human rights activists, journalists, and academics from Nairobi, Eldoret and Nakuru to reflect upon the ICC’s work in Kenya and its legacy, moving beyond the court to consider other avenues for accountability and redress.’

The workshop, held on Monday 15 April, was funded through Kent’s Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) ‘Fortuity Fund’ which supports joint projects with institutions in the Global South.

A report of the workshop’s discussion and finding will be produced by Dr Kendall and Dr Wamai. Anyone wishing to use the report for future academic work and advocacy efforts in Kenya can request a copy from Dr Kendall.

exams

Exams 2019 – what you need to know

My timetable

7 May – 14 June 2019

You can view your timetable and module codes now by logging into your Student Data System.  (SDS) 

What time should I arrive

You should arrive 15 minutes before the start of your exam.

Morning exams begin promptly at 9.30; afternoon exams begin promptly at 14.00.

Where is my exam venue

Not sure where you need to go?  – See exam venues

Where do I sit

You will be allocated a seat for each exam, please find the seating plan at your venue before the start of each session.

What to bring

  • KentOne Card. If you have lost this please contact us
  • Pens, pencils and writing equipment (in a clear pencil case)
  • Still water in a clear plastic bottle

What NOT to bring

  • Mobile phones/smart watches/headphones
  • Bags
  • Food (unless permission given prior)
  • Any drink other than water

Bag room

If you have a bag to drop off, please arrive 30 minutes before the start of your exam at the following locations:

Canterbury Campus –             Keynes Seminar Room 7

Medway Campus –                   Pilkington Building Room 014

Gillingham Building Room 2 – 03

Dockyard Church – Foyer Entrance

My ILP

If you have an Inclusive Learning Plan (ILP) please take a moment to check your exam adjustments are correct. On SDS select ‘Details and Study’ and ‘My Details’. You’ll see a button marked ‘My Inclusive Learning Plan’ if you have been in contact with the Student Support and Wellbeing team (SSW).

We appreciate Exams season is a stressful time of year, we are here to support and help you throughout this period.

If you have, any questions please contact:

Visit the exams webpages

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