canterbury campus

Changes to Giles Lane car park

Giles Lane has now become one car park designated pink zone. This means that blue zone permit holders can no longer park in this car park.

Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) barriers are due to be installed in Giles Lane car park to improve parking enforcement and traffic management.

Blue zone car parks

Blue zone parking is still available in the Sports Centre blue zone, Park Wood Courts, Pavilion and Oaks car parks. Please see our interactive car park map which shows the number of parking spaces within each parking area.

Accessible parking

Accessible parking on campus remains the same and is marked on our interactive car park map. See if you’re eligible for an accessible parking permit.

Find out more

For more information, view our Giles Lane changes webpage. If you have any questions please email TransportTeam@kent.ac.uk.

Do you need to travel by car?

If it is an option for you why not consider changing up your travel to campus by walking, cycling or taking the bus? The University encourages sustainable travel wherever possible through the University’s Travel Plans.

Purchase the Stagecoach Unirider bus ticket for only £180 (if purchased before 2 October 2018) for unlimited travel on any Stagecoach bus in East Kent and East Sussex.

Or you can hire a recycled bike for £40 per term (plus £60 refundable deposit) to help you get around easily.

Alvise Sforza Tarabochia delivers Think Kent lecture on psychiatric photography

Dr Alvise Sforza Tarabochia, Lecturer in Italian in the Department of Modern Languages, has given an online lecture entitled ‘Making Madness Visible: Early Italian Psychiatric Photography’ for the University of Kent’s Think Kent series, which is now available on YouTube.

The 19th century saw the birth of psychiatry, photography and also Italy as a unified country. Their histories are curiously intertwined. While Italy was a young country, struggling to unify the provision of psychiatric health care across the peninsula, psychiatry was itself having a hard time, struggling to give visibility to its object – madness – and to its clinical practice, locked up, as it was, behind the walls of the asylum. Photography came to the rescue, enabling psychiatrists to make madness visible, in the portraits of the patients, and to advertise its clinical practice as a well organised, orderly and scientific endeavour.

The Think Kent lectures are a series of TED talk-style lectures produced with the intention of raising awareness of the research and teaching expertise of Kent academics and the international impact of their work. 

Watch the talk on YouTube here.

 

 

New Park Wood Building open for business

Park Wood Student Hub Now open for business!

 Standing in the heart of Park Wood, the new Student Hub opened its doors on Arrivals weekend, literally! Taking advantage of the brilliant sunshine the new look Woody’s Bar threw open it’s bi-fold doors to the outside seating area, with hungry students and parents trying out the modern international street food menu. Campus Coffee, designed, delivered and developed by students, quickly proved popular serving great tasting coffee with a conscience, with profits helping support students at Kent. Campus Coffee will continue to evolve and we’re excited to see it roll out across other Kent Union outlets

 Kent Union Officers had lobbied on behalf of students to improve the student space on campus. Aaron Thompson, the Union President, gave an impassioned speech on behalf of students at the opening “It’s amazing, it looks incredible and I can’t wait for students and staff to come back to campus and use it! It looks completely different and I think that the students of Park Wood will love it”.

 As well as Woody’s, there is a larger, more accessible SU Shop everything from warm morning pastries, fresh fruit and veg, to late night snacks and drinks. The self-service tills mean students can beat the queues and get on with their day. The SU Shop is open from 8am-midnight weekdays.

Two much anticipated dance studios, named after Misty Copeland (first African American Principal Ballet Dancer) and Vicky Featherstone (influential in British Theatre), are fully equipped providing the first campus studios for student groups.

Replacing the Park Wood study mobile, the 25 PC’s in the new Student Hub quiet area is expected to be popular with the 2,000 plus Park Wood students and links onto a social space for students and staff. Designed to be a calmer environment this space, opening onto a balcony will be bookable for student groups in the evening for their events/socials and/or fundraising activity.

View KTV’s coverage of the opening here.

KentVision Change Sessions on PGT and Assessment Running now!

The KentVision Change Session Programme continues …

There’s another two areas in the spotlight through October:

Does PGT administration feature in your everyday?

Is assessment or results processing always on your to do list?

If the answer is yes to either of the above questions, then you are most welcome at one or both of the upcoming Change Sessions. One session will focus specifically on PGT administration, while the other will dive straight into the vast depths of assessment and results processing.

Sign up is open now, so please visit our Change Session pages to find out more about either session and sign up – there’s several dates to choose from, so don’t delay if you would like your pick of the dates.

It doesn’t matter how much you already know about KentVision, each session is as valuable as you choose to make it. The sessions introduce KentVision, share a great deal of interesting information and even provide demonstrations in some cases. Yet they offer even more value as a chance for you to engage and ask us all the things you just haven’t quite found an answer to yet! (KentVision related things of course). So even if you already know a great deal, come along, ask questions, take in other attendees questions and look forward to KentVision in the knowledge you have prepared.

This won’t be the end of the Change Session programme, we’ll stay in touch, but if curiosity strikes you can always catch up on past topics or check up on future Change Session activity here. With a specific focus in mind, all sessions explore the need for change, illuminate opportunities, address challenges and encourage open discussion. Each attendee will leave more prepared both to move onto KentVision system training and to welcome the arrival of KentVision.

Three new Professors of Law for Kent Law School

Kent Law School is delighted to announce the appointment of three new Professors of Law: Professor Erika Rackley, who took up her post earlier this month; and Professor Diamond Ashiagbor and Professor Rosemary Hunter, both of whom will join the School in October.

 Professor Ashiagbor was previously Professor of Law and Director of Research at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. She has research interests in labour/employment law; regional integration (the European Union and the African Union); labour law, trade and development; human rights, equality and multiculturalism; economic sociology of law; socio-legal studies; law and the humanities.

 Professor Hunter is re-joining Kent Law School after four years at Queen Mary University of London. Her areas of expertise are broadly in feminist legal studies and socio-legal studies, with a particular focus on family law, judging and the judiciary, and access to justice. She is well known as one of the founders of the Feminist Judgments Projects, in which participants rewrite judgments in existing cases from a feminist perspective, imagining how a feminist judge might have decided the case if she had been sitting on the bench at the same time as the original judges. She is also one of the editors of the online journal feminists@law.

 Professor Rackley joins Kent Law School from the University of Birmingham – twenty years after she first started at Kent as a postgraduate research student. Her research focuses law, gender and feminism, with a particular focus on judicial diversity and the nature of judging, feminist legal history and image-based sexual abuse (including ‘revenge porn’). Her scholarship has shaped legislation and policy in the UK and has been widely cited by senior members of the national and international judiciary

FREE Language Taster Sessions in Arabic, Japanese, Mandarin and Russian

Are you interested in learning a language? Come along to our FREE taster sessions in room CHSR2 and CHSR3 in the Chipperfield Building. Choose from either Arabic, Japanese, Mandarin or Russian.

 The sessions are open to all students and will provide you with a short introduction to the basics of each language.

 We will be offering taster sessions at the following times on Thursday 20 September and Friday 21 September:

 Arabic: 12:00-13:00

 Mandarin: 13:00-14:00

Japanese: 14:00-15:00

 Russian: 15:00-16:00

 Book your place via the Workshops page in SDS or contact us at languageexpress@kent.ac.uk

FREE British Sign Language taster session

Come along to our FREE taster sessions in British Sign Language on Thursday 20 or Friday 21 September in room GS8.

 The sessions are open to both staff and students and will provide you with a short introduction to the basics of British Sign Language.

 We will be offering 4 sessions at the following times:

 Thursday 20 September 12:00-13:00

Thursday 20 September 14:00-15:00

Friday 21 September 12:00-13:00

 Friday 21 September 14:00-15:00

 Book your place here https://kent.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/british-sign-language-taster-sessions

 

Players offer staff a dramatic break

The University of Kent Players are holding a read-through and open auditions for their next production, a radio play of Scarlet Pimpernel. 

The play will be performed to a live audience by the University of Kent Players at Mungo’s, Eliot College, Canterbury campus, on Friday 30 November and Saturday 1 December 2018.

The University of Kent Players will be holding a friendly script read-through and get together at 17.30 on Tuesday 25 September  in Cornwallis South Room S33. This will be an opportunity for people to have fun, mingle and sit together reading through the script aloud. Please note that no casting decisions will be made from the read through.

Auditions will be held at 12:00 on Tuesday 2 October (Rutherford Cloisters room 15) (you don’t have to attend all two hours) and 17.30 on Thursday 4 October (in Templeman Library, Room D G 01).

The friendly group welcomes anyone regardless of experience and also welcome anyone who would like to assist backstage or with foley (sound effects). Please feel free to just turn up to auditions or contact the group (players@kent.ac.uk)

University of Kent Players:

The University of Kent Players are an amateur theatre group, consisting of staff from the University of Kent, Canterbury, raising money for charity on each production. They perform two productions per year at the Gulbenkian Theatre, Canterbury the most recent, a successful adaptation of Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.

Use your KentOne card to register at lectures

From the start of the 2018/19 academic year, we are trialling the use of KentOne card scanners to register your attendance at some of our larger lecture theatres on the Canterbury Campus. Watch the video to find out more.

Is my school part of the trial?

If you belong to one of the following schools you will be able to scan your card to register your attendance at certain lectures:

– School of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science

– Kent Business School

– Kent Law School

– School of Computing

– School of Economics

– School of Physical Sciences

– School of Psychology

Which lecture theatres are part of the trial?

– Woolf Lecture Theatre (W-LT)

– Rutherford Lecture Theatre 1 (RLT1)

– Marlowe Lecture Theatre 1 (MarLT1)

–  Keynes Lecture Theatre 1 (KLT1)

– Cornwallis Lecture Theatre 2 (COLT2)

– Woolf seminar rooms 1-6 (W1 – SR 1 to SR 6)

We are only trialling the card scanners in larger lecture theatres initially to check the system works effectively.

What are the benefits?

This new system will do away with paper registers and improve attendance monitoring. This will not only save time and costs but improve reliability and the overall student experience.

Feedback and questions

If you have any feedback or questions during this trial, which you would like to be included in the future development of this system, you can let us know by contacting the project team.