Campus News

Spotlight

January 10th, 2014

Joanna is ambassador of world’s happiest country

A Nottingham student has been appointed as Youth Goodwill Ambassador of Denmark.

Joanna Hill is currently studying at the University of Copenhagen as part of her Law degree programme.

The Youth Goodwill Ambassador Corps now engages close to 350 current and former international students with the aim of promoting Denmark as an attractive destination for student exchange and career opportunities for talented foreign graduates.

Danish companies will be short of up to 21,000 graduate level employees by 2020. Attracting and retaining foreign talent has been identified as crucial to preserving Denmark’s status as a globally recognised country of innovation.

Although a relatively small country, Denmark is often recognised as the happiest nation in the world with the high levels of education, a unique welfare system and a high GDP.

Joanna says she has settled quickly in Denmark and could see herself living and working there in the future. “I have really enjoyed my first three months in Copenhagen,” she said. “There is a very relaxed way of life, everyone cycles everywhere and there is a big emphasis on communal living.”

Joanna will act as an ambassador for the duration of her studies in Copenhagen and for a further year once she returns to the UK.

Creating a new breed of aero research engineer

The University has secured multi-million euro funding to lead a pioneering research project to create a blueprint for tomorrow’s air transportation system.

The Integration of Novel Aerospace Technologies research project, known as INNOVATE, brings together doctoral students from around the world with 14 industrial partners, including Rolls-Royce, GE Aviation and EADS, and expertise from The University Of Nottingham, led by its Institute for Aerospace Technology (IAT).

INNOVATE is a €3.8m Marie Curie Innovative Doctoral Programme and will take a multi-disciplinary approach to look at the air transportation system. Each early stage researcher will develop novel technologies inside each of the core participating Nottingham research groups leading to their PhDs, while contributing to the blueprint as part of a team effort.

In a departure from a traditional PhD programme, students will undertake a placement with an industrial partners.

By breaking down traditional research silos and creating a new model, where researchers will be working as an interdisciplinary team, academics believe a new breed of engineers will emerge. Dr Hervé Morvan, Director of Research, IAT, said: “We firmly believe that this kind of integrated approach will be critical to delivering innovation to the marketplace.”

 Agreement to help train China’s finance experts

An agreement has been announced between The University of Nottingham and Guangdong University of Finance, to create a new Institute which will train up to 2,000 Chinese financial specialists each year.

The announcement of the Guangdong-Nottingham Advanced Finance Institute was made in Beijing as part of the UK Prime Minister’s visit to China.

Guangdong has the largest GDP of any Chinese province, estimated to be around £550 billion per annum and its provincial capital, Guangzhou, is recognised as the largest financial centre in China.

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Maths claims don’t add up

January 10th, 2014

Young girls are not struggling with their confidence levels. In my experience, when it comes to choosing which subjects they wish to study at A-level, girls know what they are interested in and they do it.

The reason I think many girls are put off studying maths and physics is simply because they’re not inspired enough. In my school, which I left last year, these subjects were largely male-dominated and many of us girls found it hard to relate.

Education and child care minister Liz Truss has claimed that the gender-gap among boys and girls studying maths and physics at A level comes down to girls’ lack of confidence. A report by the Institute of Physics showed that between 2010 and 2012, two thirds of pupils taking A-level maths were male. Four times more boys than girls studied physics.

But there are a number of reasons why young people choose different A-level subjects, and it’s usually not down to self-belief (or lacking it). In some cases, young girls may already have their sights on a particular job or industry. Others may just have grown up with certain interests.

A friend of mine who grew up in a bilingual household took three languages at A level because she was inspired by the language school that we both went to and had an obvious natural talent for them. Another friend has been an impressive piano player since she was five and has only ever been concerned with studying music.

For me, my A-level subjects were influenced somewhat by my teachers. I studied history, politics, French and drama. My history teacher invested so much in the subject and inspired me greatly to study more essay-based subjects at A level. Same goes for my politics teacher. Drama was already a natural interest of mine. French – I had to do it; I went to an international school which celebrated languages, but I enjoyed it and it gave me a real life skill.

I never thought to do science or maths, purely because the subjects didn’t thrill me and the teachers didn’t convince me they were worth studying. It wasn’t because I wasn’t good at them, I just couldn’t see the career path or why they were relevant to me.

Of course, career paths aren’t so obvious these days and there aren’t many well-known women in science/ maths that our generation can look up to in the field and say, “I want to be like her.” Off the top of my head, I can only really think of men in these fields (e.g. Professor Brian Cox, Stephen Hawking) but struggle to think of modern women equivalents. Science subjects did feature to an extent among my friends – some studied biology but never considered physics or maths. Again, mainly because they didn’t find it compelling. Many of them knew what kind of job they wanted after A-levels or what they wanted to study at university and none of those routes required hard maths skills.

Looking at my female mates around me, I don’t get the impression they’re a group too nervous or unsure to embark upon the so-called “macho” subjects of physics and maths, but instead a group of determined young women who know what direction they want to head in.

The question still stands why wasn’t that direction linked to either maths or physics?

The greater task for schools and society at large is to step away from these gender-stereotypes. Why is it that many of us still think of maths and physics as being “boys’ subjects”, but the arts courses are largely seen as a girls’ domain?

We need to steer away from an obsession with gender because it’s really not something schoolgirls (or boys) are thinking about.

Teachers should be equipped to let pupils know that they are capable to do anything they want to do and go in any direction they want regardless of their gender. Teachers are the ones on the front line talking to pupils everyday, and it should be their job to tell young people where a physics or maths degree can take you and why that place is worth going to.

It is also about creating role models who are really excited about the field of study and can bring it alive for students. But crucially it is about making the study of physics and maths more exciting and relevant to their lives. Some university technical colleges already exist to teach science and maths in a really practical, engaging way and these seem to be working to inspire a new generation of engineers, physicists and scientists. Perhaps we need more of these?

Interestingly, research from the Girls’ Schools Association (which represents girls’ only schools) shows that girls are 75 per cent more likely to take maths and two and a half times as likely to take physics than at mixed schools. President of the GSA, Hilary French, attributes this to the fact that “in a girls’ school, the pressure to opt for the subjects which are perceived as more ‘feminine’ just doesn’t exist and so the potentially talented female scientists and mathematicians are able to pursue their interests and achieve their full potential.”

Coming from a mixed, state school the reality is, however, that these figures can differ drastically in state schools. What is of real concern is the way in which we encourage young people to make the important life decision of what career they want to go down at the age of just 16.

We’ve decided for them that they can’t vote, they can’t drink but they can limit themselves to up as many as four areas of study that may dictate the direction the rest of their professional life will go in.

If the Government is really serious about tackling the gender divide between certain subjects at school, then it should think more broadly about the choices young people are forced to make from such an early age – which may, in truth, be nothing to do with their gender, and more to do with the barriers of the system they are working under.

Many young British girls today are full of confidence and self-belief when it comes to their abilities in the classroom. What they need is a more flexible and engaging education system rather than being bound by outdated stereotypes.

Emma Pearce is a news reporter on University Radio Nottingham (URN), a writer for Impact magazine and a broadcast assistant at BBC Radio Nottingham.

Article reproduced with kind permission of The Daily Telegraph.

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Issue 69

June 12th, 2013

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Marion’s bike challenge

June 11th, 2013

Professor Marion Walker MBE needed a really, really good reason to entice her back into the saddle for the first time in four decades for this year’s Life Cycle challenge. And, perhaps unfortunately for the self-proclaimed cycling scaredy cat, Vice-Chancellor Professor David Greenaway and his team found her kryptonite — the chance to raise funds for the cause closest to her heart: stroke rehabilitation research.

The carrot of funding to expand the University’s expertise and remit under her leadership, as well as highlighting the importance of stroke rehab, was too good an offer to refuse. But would Marion be getting on her bike to cycle between the capital cities of Great Britain and Ireland if it wasn’t in aid of ‘her’ cause?

Put simply… no.

“Because the focus is stroke rehab research, and as a Professor of stroke rehab research, it seems only right that
I should be a part of it,” says Marion. “And
I must admit that I’m really enjoying it — but also quite sore at the same time.”

But over every mile, up every hill and whenever a car goes past a little too closely — Marion’s least favourite part of cycling — she thinks about why she’s doing it and the cause the team of 12 is championing.

“It is a driving factor,” says Marion. “And it’s not so much the money that’s raised, it’s about raising the profile of the research and about spreading the word around that stroke rehabilitation research is a really important area for further development. Because we’ve got some rising stars at this University, and we’re already acknowledged as a centre for excellence for our work, but we want to move bigger and better and be expanding.”

Marion works closely with stroke survivor Ossie Newell MBE — who, following a stroke 13 years ago, has worked tirelessly to regain his quality of life — in determining research priorities at Nottingham. But unfortunately Ossie’s remarkable recovery is the exception rather than the rule.

“What’s lovely for us is that Ossie is our ambassador for stroke rehab so he helps us target the areas which are important to stroke survivors and their carers,” says Marion. “He helps us decide what the right outcome measures for our research are,  the things that are important to patients.

“Ossie is a unique person who has managed to overcome a lot of barriers because of his dogged determination. But the majority of patients find that difficult and need assistance. Ossie’s managed to do that with the help of rehabilitation, so he’s a good example of what can be achieved. But there are not many people like Ossie.”

With additional funding, further research and the prioritisation of areas that are most important to stroke sufferers, it is hoped there will be more and more stroke survivors who feel the ‘Ossie effect’ and manage to enjoy as full a life as possible.

“Stroke is the main cause of adult disability in the UK and the role of rehab is to improve quality of life for people,” says Marion. “It’s about making sure our research is focused at areas that are important to patients and their carers, because it’s a very bleak time in the aftermath of stroke and people struggle quite badly as a result.

“Anything our research can do to improve functional performance, functional ability in our patients, reducing the strain on carers and lessening the financial impact on social services — these are all major drivers. Basically improving the quality of life for those with stroke.”

That’s why, with all this in mind, the 50-mile training rides in the rain and the achey muscles don’t seem quite so bad.

Stroke rehabilitation research is one of the key priorities of Impact: The Nottingham Campaign. To find out more about Life Cycle 3’s community events on Sunday 1 September and stroke rehabilitation research at the University,
visit http://nott.ac.uk/cycle

There is also a raffle to raise money for the cause. Find out about the great prizes and where to buy tickets, visit
http://tiny.cc/LC3raffle

 

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Art and science

June 11th, 2013

When Simon Bailey and fellow ethnographers Kezia Scales and Joanne Lloyd began  researching how healthcare assistants look after people with dementia, they scarcely imagined their work would inspire a ground-breaking new play at the University’s Lakeside Arts Centre.

Inside Out of Mind explores the unseen world of dementia care and is based on 600,000 words of research notes made by Simon, Kezia and Joanne in local hospitals.

The play is not simply a thought-provoking drama exploring one of the biggest challenges facing health and social care: thanks to a unique partnership between the arts, academia and the NHS, it will be used as a tool to train and engage healthcare assistants.

As well as performances for the public, Lakeside will stage the play for healthcare assistants, who will then take part in workshops. Working with expert facilitators as well as actors, the staff will be able to reflect on their own practice and explore the experience of dementia sufferers.

The play is the brainchild of Justine Schneider, the University’s Professor of Mental Health and Social Care, who had been commissioned by the National Institute for Health Research to carry out a dementia care study.

Her researchers were trained as healthcare assistants and supported these basic-grade staff while observing how they worked and interacted with patients.

The result was a report of 50,000 words — and much more unused material, packed with insights into life on a dementia ward, and also infused with drama and comedy.

Professor Schneider approached Tanya Myers of Nottingham’s Meeting Ground Theatre Company to write a play based on the research. The collaboration between Meeting Ground, Lakeside, the University’s Institute of Mental Health and the NHS has created a unique piece of theatre.

Both Justine and Tanya see Inside Out of Mind as a bridge between the arts and academia, while giving an innovative approach to training and motivating NHS staff.

For Tanya, piecing together a narrative based on first-hand accounts of life on the ward was a moving experience.

“All the characters are fictional but derived from published case histories,” she says.  “The play is not just about dementia, it’s a series of love stories, with all dealing naturally with a sense of loss.  What I really hope is that it will create an empowering, safe place for people to talk about something that is so charged or taboo.”

Professor Schneider also sees the collaboration as a creative approach to demonstrating how academic research can help shape society.

She said: “As researchers know, the REF [Research Excellence Framework] now calls for us to demonstrate our ‘impact’. Translating research findings into theatre has made it easier for them to be taken on board by the practitioners who can use the insights from research to improve care for people with dementia.

“These healthcare assistants are the same practitioners who were the focus of the original study, so the presentation of the play to that audience is especially rewarding. But the public too will find that it raises profound questions about how we treat both people with dementia and those who care for them.”

Inside Out of Mind’s cast includes Maurice Roëves, a favourite at Lakeside, and local girl Holly Webb in her first theatre role. Holly’s great-grandfather had dementia and she cared for him for several years.

Audiences can expect a challenging play, but Professor Schneider sees it as an uplifting experience: “The NHS sponsors have been crucial partners in recognising the importance of enabling all of their staff to have a better understanding of dementia and even to laugh at it: this is going to be a very funny play — people will go out laughing.”

Shona Powell, co-producer and Director of Lakeside Arts Centre, said: “Inside out of Mind is our first theatre production to be based in academic research and we hope its impact will extend beyond Nottingham, with firm interest already registered from other health care authorities, regionally, nationally and even internationally.”

For the ethnographers whose research fuelled the play, Inside Out of Mind has given their work an unexpected dimension. Simon Bailey, who took his PhD at Nottingham’s School of Education, said: “It was never in our minds the research would be turned into drama. But after starting to write the report we realised the inherent drama of the situation and that made us think of theatre. I’m looking forward to seeing it.”

Improving Dementia Education and Awareness (IDEA) is a priority of Impact: The Nottingham Campaign. For more on IDEA visit
idea.nottingham.ac.uk

Inside Out of Mind is at Lakeside from Friday 14 to Saturday 29 June.
t: 0115 846 7777
w: www.lakesidearts.org.uk 

 

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June 11th, 2013

Slapdash Galaxy
Bank Puppets and Scamp Theatre
Date: Thursday 2 July
Time: 6pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £7

Inside Out of Mind
Meeting Ground and Lakeside
Date: Friday 14 to Saturday 29 June
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £15, £12 concessions, £9.50 restricted view; previews £10, £8 concessions
For time and dates, please visit: www.lakesidearts.org.uk

STEP UP Creatives Ensemble
New Perspectives Theatre Company
Date: Saturday 6 July
Time: 7.30pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

My Brother the Robot
Tall Stories
Date: Sunday 7 July
Time: 1pm and 3.30pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £6.50

Joe Moran: Forward
Three works for stage and gallery
Date: Tuesday 9 July
Time: 8pm
Venue: Djanogly Art Gallery and Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £15, £12 concessions

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
New Street Theatre and Lakeside
Date: Tuesday 16 July (preview), Wednesday 17 to Saturday 27 July
Time: Wednesday 17 to Friday 26 July 7.30pm, Saturday 27 July 2pm and 7.30pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £13, £10 concessions, £7.50 restricted view, £7.50 preview

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June 11th, 2013

Summer Symphony in the Park
Classical
Date: Sunday 16 June
Time: 3pm
Venue: Jubilee Avenue Meadow
(near Trent Building), University Park
Admission: Free

Summer Dances
University Wind Orchestra and Moonlighters Big Band
Date: Thursday 20 June
Time: 7.30pm
Venue: Great Hall, Trent Building,
University Park
Admission: £8, £5 concessions,
£4 UoN students

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June 11th, 2013

Nottinghamshire’s People
Ancestral Stories from the Archives
Date: Friday 7 June to Sunday
1 September
Venue: Weston Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

A Right Load of Old Stuff and Nonsense
An exhibition of puppets and machines built by Marc Parrett
Date: Saturday 25 May to Sunday 7 July
Venue: Wallner Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

Fine Art Degree Show
Works by students.
Date: Wednesday 19 June to Tuesday
25 June
Venue: Djanogly Art Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park.

University Summer Exhibition
Annual showcase and sale of art by students, staff and alumni
Date: Saturday 29 June to Saturday 13 July
Venue: Djanogly Art Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park

Subterranean [and above]
Pauline Woolley
Date: Until Sunday 7 July
Venue: Angear Visitor Centre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

David Measures
Watercolour Studies of Butterflies
Date: Saturday 13 July to Monday 26 August
Venue: Angear Visitor Centre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

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June 11th, 2013

Adult Learning in the Global University
Dr Alan Tuckett, President of the International Council for Adult Education and Honorary Professor in the School of Education
Date: Wednesday 19 June
Time: 12.30pm – 2pm
Venue: Room B35a, Exchange Building, Jubilee Campus
Admission: Free
email: educationresearchstaff@nottingham.ac.uk if you wish to attend. This seminar will be live streamed from: http://nott.ac.uk/tuckett

Butterflies and Science
Francis Gilbert, Associate Professor, University of Nottingham
Date: Wednesday 17 July
Time: 1pm
Venue: Room B3, School of Biology, University Park
Admission: Free

The Cosmic Web and Its Inhabitants
Caterina Lani, Centre for Astronomy and Particle Physics
Date: 20 June
Time: 6pm
Venue: Room B1, Maths and Physics building, University Park
Admission: Free

Last of the Plantagenets
Richard Buckley of the University of Leicester on the discovery of the remains of Richard III.
Date: 21 June
Time: 6pm
Venue: Highfields House, University Park
Admission: Free

 

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Events

June 10th, 2013

Fine Art Degree Show plus University Summer Exhibition

Fine Art Degree Show: Wednesday 19 June until Tuesday 25 June; University Summer Exhibition: Saturday 29 June until Saturday July 13. Both at Djanogly Art Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park. The gallery is open 11am to 5pm, Monday to Saturday, and noon to 4pm Sundays and bank holidays. Admission is free.

Students on the BA (Hons) Fine Art Degree programme use a wide variety of media. The University Summer Exhibition is an annual showcase and sale of work by students, staff and alumni.

Summer Symphony in the Park

Sunday 16 June, Jubilee Avenue Meadow (near Trent Building), University Park, from 3pm. Admission is free.

Join the University Philharmonia for a summer afternoon of music from around the globe and beyond. One of the world’s finest guitarists, the internationally acclaimed Xuefei Yang, joins the orchestra for Rodrigo’s sublime and ever popular Concierto de Aranjuez. Bring picnics, family and friends and enjoy an afternoon of orchestral classics in the summer sunshine in the beautiful grounds of University Park. The programme also includes music by Mozart, Bizet, Eric Coates, Tchaikovsky, Brahms and Holst.

Summer Dances: University Wind Orchestra and Moonlighters Big Band

Thursday 20 June, 7.30pm, Great Hall, Trent Building, University Park. Admission: £8, £5 concessions, £4 UoN students.

A programme filled with the dancing sounds of summer, including the premiere of postgraduate composer Angela Slater’s The Storm, Leonard Bernstein’s scintillating dances from West Side Story, and Buddy Rich’s explosive Channel One Suite.

Tickets www.lakesidearts.org.uk or telephone  0115 846 7777

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