Category Archives: Student Guide

KGSA Christmas Kitchen Decoration Contest

Woolf College Reception is now very Christmassy with two trees and lots of tinsel!

You too can get involved by decorating the windows in your kitchen for the holiday period.

The Kent Graduate Student Association KGSA will choose the winners on December 13 -14 from across Tyler, Keynes Woolf and Darwin.

Make sure whatever you put in the windows (lights, tinsel, fake snow etc.), is safe and can be easily cleaned off after Christmas ends!

To register your kitchen contact Tom or Rowena through the University Postgraduate 2017 Facebook group.

Each kitchen will cost £1 to enter, with the winning kitchen getting £100 hamper full of Christmas treats!

Image credit: by KGSA

Kent students launch £10k fundraising campaign for international exchange visit

A £10k fundraising campaign has been launched by Kent Law Clinic students to help meet costs for an international exchange visit by a law clinic in Sierra Leone.

The visit is the first in a new exchange programme with the Law Clinic at the University of Makeni (UniMak). Six students and two staff from UniMak will stay at Kent’s Canterbury campus for 10 days in January/February 2018 and it is hoped that a smaller number of students from Kent will then visit Sierra Leone in April 2018.

The visit to Kent will include trips to courts in Canterbury and London, a trip to the Houses of Parliament and meetings with local lawyers. There will also be a moot in the Wigoder Law Building’s purpose-built Moot Room on the University’s Canterbury campus.

The Makeni-Kent Project Exchange’s fundraising campaign will help meet the costs of air, train and bus travel, accommodation and an amount in respect of subsistence. The cost per student is around £1,500. Fundraising activities planned for 2018 include a pub quiz, a fun run and a gaming night at Mungo’s Bar and Bistro on campus. Contributions from sponsors/donors are warmly welcomed on the GoFundMe page.

A partnership with UniMak began with the law clinic in Makeni in 2014. Sierra Leone has a Common Law jurisdiction, based on that of the UK, with the two countries sharing similar legal procedure and also some case-law and statute. Kent students work under the supervision of Law Clinic solicitors to help with legal research for criminal cases being defended by students and volunteer lawyers in Sierra Leone.

The Makeni-Kent Project aims to enrich the legal education of law students in both countries with a shared determination to also deepen knowledge and understanding of each other’s cultures and legal systems.

get-connected-wifi

Interested in information privacy?

SSPSSR PhD candidate, Hayley is conducting research about information privacy and invites anyone between the ages of 20-40, who uses social media and owns a smartphone to complete a short survey.

The survey will gather data on our attitudes and thoughts about sharing information  online through social media and transactions with organisations. All details will of course be anonymised and confidential.

For more information and to complete the survey.

All participants will be entered into a draw to win a £25 i-Tunes voucher – and will be helping Hayley towards her final thesis.

Where do you like to live and why? Take the Housing Survey

Students play a key role in the life of the district and we hope you will spend five minutes giving the council your views.

We are looking at our housing strategy and are keen to know what type of housing and where in the city you prefer to live and why. For example; living in a shared house away from the campus, in university accommodation, in privately run accommodation especially built for students or at home with your family.

We also want to know what factors help you decide where to live like cost or the quality of the facilities offered. The information you give us will be used by our planners to advise developers on how they can best meet your needs.

Take the survey now.

Once you’ve completed the survey, you will be added into a prize draw to win one of three £20 high-street vouchers. 

Image credits: University of Kent

CPP-image

CPP launches the Advanced Journal of Professional Practice

The Centre for Professional Practice is delighted to announce the launch of the Advanced Journal of Professional Practice (AJPP). The AJPP is an online open-access, work-related journal dedicated to sharing of experiences and gold standard practices from anyone working in a professional role, as well as academics and students.

You can access the journal here.

The AJPP has been established as a portal for new knowledge created for the advancement of professional practice. AJPP hosts new creative work and welcome submissions of traditional or untraditional nature, but which demonstrate translational work-related professional practice application “, said Dr Claire Parkin, the Editor-In-Chief of the AJPP.

John Wightman, Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, said: We welcome the appearance and creation of the Advanced Journal of Professional Practice (AJPP). The founding of the AJPP at the University of Kent will allow for the publication of new knowledge and innovations of a work-related professional practice nature or practical advancements. It will encourage its readers to apply new knowledge and skills or to unearth new found inspiration to develop innovative practices within their workplace.

If you are interested in publishing your work, please send email enquiries to AJPP@kent.ac.uk and submissions via the website.

Kent’s Centre for Professional Practice programmes and short courses give you the opportunity to gain academic recognitions for the skills, knowledge and experience you have developed in your workplace.

Lecture theatre

Centre for American Studies open lectures

The Centre for American Studies are hosting the following lectures:

  • Suffering, Struggle, Survival: The Activism, Artistry, and Authorship of Frederick Douglass and Family (1818-2018) Celeste-Marie Bernier
    By Professor of Black Studies, University Edinburgh
    Thursday 30 November 2017 at 18.00
    In Grimond Building Lecture Theatre 1, University of Kent

    As we commemorate the 200th anniversary of the birth of Frederick Douglass, Prof. Bernier traces his activism, artistry and authorship alongside the sufferings and struggles for survival of his daughters and sons. As activists, educators, campaigners, civil rights protesters, newspaper editors, orators, essayists, and historians in their own right, Rosetta, Lewis Henry, Frederick Jr., Charles Remond and Annie Douglass each played a vital role in the freedom struggles of their father. They were no less afraid to sacrifice everything they had as they each fought for Black civic, cultural, political, and social liberties by every means necessary. The fight for freedom was a family business to which all the Douglasses dedicated their lives as their rallying cry lives on to inspire today’s activism: “Agitate! Agitate! Agitate!”

  • Spit Truth to Power? Occupy Wall Street and New York Hip Hop Culture
    By Dr Eithne Quinn, University of Manchester
    Wednesday 6 December 2017 at 18.00
    In Grimond Building Lecture Theatre 1, University of Kent

    Examining responses from hip-hop culture to the Occupy Wall Street mobilization of 2011, Dr Quinn’s talk focuses in particular on three rap entrepreneurial creatives, Russell Simmons, Shawn Carter (Jay Z), and Curtis Jackson (50 Cent). Occupy protested against extreme levels of inequality, declaring that it represented the 99 percent in opposition to the 1 percent financial elite. While these hip-hop moguls were all within the 1 percent ranks—they had nonetheless built star brands that represented people, in race and class terms, at the other end of the economic spectrum. This tension was negotiated in markedly different ways by the three moguls.

  • Roosevelt, Rockwell, and the Four Freedoms: How a slip of the tongue inspired artists and changed the world
    By Dr James J.Kimble, Associate Professor of Communication and the Arts Seton Hall University, New Jersey
    Thursday 14 December 2017 at 18.00
    In Grimond Building Lecture Theatre 1, University of Kent

    Rockwell painted four homely images depicting the Four Freedoms, inspired by Franklin D. Roosevelt’s famous “Four Freedoms” speech delivered to Congress on the eve of World War II. The U.S. government subsequently issued posters of Rockwell’s paintings in a highly successful war bond campaign that raised more than $132 million for the war effort. Rockwell’s homely depictions of Roosevelt’s abstract concepts were widely popular across America. Dr Kimble explores how the paintings dramatised and personalised the president’s Four Freedoms and the implications of this transformation for conceptualising the rhetorical presidency.

Online Mental Health and Wellbeing Support

From November 2017, all Kent students wherever they are located can access free, 24/7 online support for issues around mental health and wellbeing.

The Big White Wall (BWW) is a Care Quality Commission registered service recognised nationally through awards by the NHS and is a safe environment overseen by qualified therapists called Wall Guides. It offers:

  • peer talk therapies where members initiate or join forums on topics ranging from depression and anxiety to relationship issues, work stress, abuse, self-harm and eating disorders
  • peer support and networks where students make friends to create a support network as a reference group, source of motivation and a means to improve self-awareness
  • creative therapies employing art and writing therapies where members express themselves on ‘bricks’ that are posted to the Big White Wall where they can choose to share and discuss the underlying ‘story’
  • brief counselling providing immediate 24/7 support from Big White Wall Guides who are trained counsellors
  • 24/7 guided groups that are based in therapeutic approaches such as interpersonal therapy and cognitive behaviour therapy You can find a link to the Big White Wall here.

How to register

In order to gain access to this service click on the BWW link using your Kent email address to gain access only.

As part of the registration process, do not use your KENT IT account password for this service.

Note, you may, upon completion of the registration process change your contact email address to a non-Kent email account.

Big White Wall takes privacy very seriously and you can find their privacy policy here.

Global Hangouts Christmas Special

International Partnerships is delighted to invite all Canterbury students to join us at the Global Hangouts Christmas Special, taking place in the Gulbenkian cafe between 17:00 and 19:00 on Wednesday 6 December.

Full of mince pies, mulled wine and Christmas cheer, this hangout will be a celebration of both Christmas and culture!

Global Hangouts is a series of free global networking events arranged throughout the academic year. With a fun and relaxed atmosphere, the hangouts include interactive activities, refreshments and live music and performances.

Students are invited to book their tickets now.

Looking forward to seeing everyone there!

Kent’s Special Collections and Archives receive Archive Service Accreditation from the National Archives

Our Special Collections & Archives are proud to have been awarded Archive Service Accreditation from the National Archive.

This accreditation, from the UK Archive Service Accreditation Partnership is the UK quality standard which recognises good performance in all areas of archive service delivery. The standard looks at an organisation’s ability to develop, care for, and provide access to its collections, bringing the total number archive services achieving this to 104 nationwide.

Emma Mires-Richards, Head of Academic Liaison states:

‘We are delighted to have received accredited status from The National Archives, this is a fantastic achievement and recognition nationally for our service and teams delivering it. Achieving accredited status demonstrates that the University of Kent’s Special Collections and Archives met clearly defined national standards relating to management and resourcing, in the care of our unique collections and what the service offers to our entire range of users.’

University of Kent’s Special Collections & Archives manage the University of Kent’s unique and distinctive collections so that they are preserved and accessible for the benefit of teaching, scholarship and society. Located in the Templeman Library on the Canterbury campus they collect, curate, and manage material which supports the University’s research and teaching.

The collections, numbering over 150, are open to everyone, whether for personal interest or academic research including these specialisms:

  • the British Stand-Up Comedy Archive and popular and comic performance from the Victorian era to the present, including pantomime, melodrama and variety works
  • the British Cartoon Archive and other cartoon artwork and publications, particularly satirical works
  • the history of the University of Kent and the local area
  • photographs, scrapbooks, engineer records, and published books relating to wind and watermills
  • collections of 20th century prose and poetry first editions.

Graduate Attributes focus group

At Kent Union we value your opinion and we’re always looking for ways to make you more employable.

The Graduate Attributes are a set of qualities or features regarded as characteristic of the Kent Graduate which has been developed and embedded during their time at Kent. We need your help to gain insight into what you’d like to see on the Graduate Attributes website. Your contributions will make a real impact.

The discussion group will last no longer than an hour and you’ll receive a voucher to be redeemed at the Library Café and some free pizza!

Come along and have your say!

All you have to do is fill out this form to let us know when you are available.