- Apr 5, 2014
- 25,922
Indeed. In fact no place anywhere except the kitchen, the bedroom and stonings.
My beard sales went well on Wednesday after the Ollie Robinson thing. Seems to have tailed off today.
Indeed. In fact no place anywhere except the kitchen, the bedroom and stonings.
There's a Deviance research group? Learn something new everyday.
And here I am trying to lecture my students on issues in the construction field such as exposure to Asbestos, Silica Dust, Noise and Hand Arm Vibration.
I knew I couldn't cut it in FE...
Reclaim Holloway is hosting four panel discussions throughout June at the London Festival of Architecture. Dr Rachel Seoighe from the University of Kent, an associate member of the Gender, Deviance and Society research group at Greenwich, will moderating the conversations and with some incredible speakers across architecture, women's services and rights, criminology and the women in construction movement.
There's a Deviance research group? Learn something new everyday.
So I get the bemusement of the OP. What has "deviancy" got to do with a course on construction / architecture?
There's a Deviance research group? Learn something new everyday.
So I get the bemusement of the OP. What has "deviancy" got to do with a course on construction / architecture?
mthe latest President of our Professional Body is a Woman and almost certainly better at her job than me.
After graduating she left my institution but walked into a lectureship at another. Unheard of, I thought. Within 2 years she was promoted to senior lecturer.
At . . . . . the 'university' of Greenwich.
And here I am trying to lecture my students on issues in the construction field such as exposure to Asbestos, Silica Dust, Noise and Hand Arm Vibration.
I knew I couldn't cut it in FE...
Reclaim Holloway is hosting four panel discussions throughout June at the London Festival of Architecture. Dr Rachel Seoighe from the University of Kent, an associate member of the Gender, Deviance and Society research group at Greenwich, will moderating the conversations and with some incredible speakers across architecture, women's services and rights, criminology and the women in construction movement.
Let me stop you there.
One of my worst ever PhD students submitted her thesis at 4.00 pm on the very last day of the 12 month extended window after the 3 years in the lab. She is the only one of my ex students to not publish a research paper. She spent a great deal of her time finding reasons for not coming in, and trashed her last experiment after making a schoolgirl error with some basic equipment
After graduating she left my institution but walked into a lectureship at another. Unheard of, I thought. Within 2 years she was promoted to senior lecturer.
At . . . . . the 'university' of Greenwich.
Let me stop you there.
One of my worst ever PhD students submitted her thesis at 4.00 pm on the very last day of the 12 month extended window after the 3 years in the lab. She is the only one of my ex students to not publish a research paper. She spent a great deal of her time finding reasons for not coming in, and trashed her last experiment after making a schoolgirl error with some basic equipment
After graduating she left my institution but walked into a lectureship at another. Unheard of, I thought. Within 2 years she was promoted to senior lecturer.
At . . . . . the 'university' of Greenwich.
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Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
An important point.
I think you have to make the distinction between teaching-led Universities
and research-led Universities. Chalk and cheese really. In the latter - the
emphasis is on research (income and outputs).
In a research-led university the emphasis is on research. Thanks for clearing this up, I was a bit confused.
Having worked in both FE and HE, there are two quite different, if overlapping, cultures at work here. At the risk of stereotyping, FE is very hands-on, vocational and can-do whereas HE (in a university context) is discursive, critical and reflective. It could be that the OP is uncomfortably straddling (as it were) these two cultures.
For what it's worth, when I moved from FE to HE I did find myself reflecting that the unis (esp the research-intensive ones) can be a bit up themselves. But there and again, I was more 'town than gown'.
Let me stop you there.