Nottingham Talent Roadshow 2010 - Professor Tony Avery
Highlights of the recent Nottingham Talent Roadshow held at the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery featuring a welcome by Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bob Webb and taster lectures from Professors Tony Avery and Steve Benford.
The event was attended by more than 60 Nottingham alumni.
What can career services offer Can firms shape their environments to gain an architectural advantage? Fires, Forests and Futures 2.3 Interception, evaporation and transpiration Career Flow: Identifying Life/Career Patterns Using a Circle of Strength Fighting Discrimination the South African Way - Judge Dhaya Pillay Seminar 9 Conservation Around 1919 & in Mexico City 2009: Reflections of Excellence Open house -- The Nottingham HOUSE at Solar Decathlon Europe 2010 13 Arts and Humanities Student Life 2: History 09 Arts and Humanities Student Life: English Language and Literature 18 Social Sciences Student Life 2: PPE 1.1 Teaching languages: language awareness Refresh this screen to play the animation file below, or click 'Launch in separate player' to open the file in a larger window (recommended). ‘Those who have been brought up to speak the [English] la 09 Social Sciences Student Life: Law Planning a project 1.3 Wilberforce’s ‘Conversion’ to Evangelicalism 1.2 Upbringing; MP for Yorkshire Introduction
Diane Morgan, Director of Career Services, talks about the department and what it can offer to London Business School students.
Michael G Jacobides, Associate Professor of Strategic and International Management talks about how firms can shape their environments to gain an architectural advantage.
The sustainability of the Ash forests of Victoria is contentious for a number of reasons, not least because of the pressures of population and economic growth, and climate change on their diverse uses. Attempts to take account of the principle of sustainability in weighing alternative uses have not been widely accepted and the methods used are themselves the subject of debate. But those attempts have been largely grounded in deterministic models. Recent experience in the Ash forests of Victoria
Water is arguably the most important physical resource as it is the one that is essential to human survival. Understanding the global water cycle and how we use water is essential to planning a sustainable source of water for the future.
A world authority on Career Development, Professor Norm Amundson, who was recently visiting from the University of British Columbia, spoke to thirty keen ANU Alumni and Friends on the topic of Career Flow, in particular how to identify life / career patterns by using a circle of strength. The seminar was held on Monday 12 April from 6pm - 7pm at University House, ANU.
Judge Dhaya Pillay 20 July 2009 Judge Pillay’s distinguished judicial work is a matter of international recognition; she has issued more than 800 judgments on issues such as closure of businesses, strikes, lock outs, affirmative action, equality, non-appointment, HIV and AIDS testing, reviews of labour arbitration awards, international employment contracts, whistle blowing, promotion of access to information and electronic transaction law. More than a hundred of her judgments have been publish
Professor Andy Lowe will head this session whcih will provide an historical context for the impacts of climate change on natural systems, explore changes at a species and community level and the challenges of planning for change in a fragmented landscape.
Mexico furnished the era of social and cultural change that started ‘right around 1910’ with its first popular revolution. By 1919 Mexico City had become a refuge for the world’s radicals. To a despairing world, it offered a unique site to safely experiment with all sorts of enchantments.
In this culturally promiscuous capital not only the meaning of Mexico was at stake, but also the meanings of major modernist concepts –revolution, the popular, avant-garde, authenticity,
Featuring: The 2009 Bennie and Candle Award Recipients
Moderator: Eric Philips, Reporter, WSB-TV
The Nottingham University team are now in Madrid building the house for the competition which opens on 18 June 2010.
The very first Solar Decathlon Europe 2010 kicks off with students from the Department of the Built Environment flying the flag for the UK.
Before they left Nottingham, they held an open house with a twist, in the shape of Michelin star chef Sat Bains, their Executive Chef, who has advised on the menu for their sustainable dinner party.
An interview with a current student studying History at Oxford. Including questions about why they applied, how they divide their time between academic and social life and what they are planning to do when they leave Oxford.
An interview with a current student studying English Literature and Language at Oxford. Including questions about why they applied, how they divide their time between academic and social life and what they are planning to do when they leave Oxford.
An interview with a current student studying PPE at Oxford. Including questions about why they applied, how they divide their time between academic and social life and what they are planning to do when they leave Oxford.
An interview with a current student studying Law at Oxford. Including questions about why they applied, how they divide their time between academic and social life and what they are planning to do when they leave Oxford.
Gantt charts, critical path analysis, SMART objectives and estimation skills are just some of the topics covered in this unit to help you understand how to plan for a project. You will gain an appreciation of the range of planning techniques available and the situations in which it is appropriate to use them.
William Wilberforce, the politician and religious writer, was instrumental in the abolition of slavery in Britain in 1807. This unit explores Wilberforce’s career and writings and assesses their historical significance. In particular it examines the contribution that Evangelicalism, the religious tradition to which Wilberforce belonged, made in the transitions between the Enlightenment and Romanticism. Throughout it relates Wilberforce’s career and writings to wider social and cultural devel
William Wilberforce, the politician and religious writer, was instrumental in the abolition of slavery in Britain in 1807. This unit explores Wilberforce’s career and writings and assesses their historical significance. In particular it examines the contribution that Evangelicalism, the religious tradition to which Wilberforce belonged, made in the transitions between the Enlightenment and Romanticism. Throughout it relates Wilberforce’s career and writings to wider social and cultural devel
William Wilberforce, the politician and religious writer, was instrumental in the abolition of slavery in Britain in 1807. This unit explores Wilberforce’s career and writings and assesses their historical significance. In particular it examines the contribution that Evangelicalism, the religious tradition to which Wilberforce belonged, made in the transitions between the Enlightenment and Romanticism. Throughout it relates Wilberforce’s career and writings to wider social and cultural devel













