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Monthly Archives: March 2021
Egg
This is a egg. A egg. Recently. Now, you might say, so what, that looks just like any old egg.
Posted in Domesticrox
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Red Tape
The announcement of a review of bureaucratic red tape in universities may bring either a smile of relief or a hollow laugh. Why are universities (and funding bodies) so entangled in this nasty stuff? Is it because they love to … Continue reading
Posted in Athena Swan, Equality, forms, panels, Science Culture, Science Funding, UKRI
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Chair
You’ll both no doubt recall an earlier post in which I showed an heirloom chair — one of six — that had been rendered useless (at least as a chair) by the depredations of a teething puppy. Here it is, … Continue reading
Posted in chair, heirloom, verdant woodcraft
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Burnout
As we ‘celebrate’ the anniversary of the UK’s first national lockdown this week, reflection seems in order. Things that seemed unimaginable last March, we now take in our stride, in the sense that we simply get on with them. Coming … Continue reading
Posted in education, kindness, pandemic, Science Culture, Spring
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How are Universities Supporting Those Worst Affected by the Pandemic?
This pandemic has thrown all kinds of inequalities into sharp focus, ranging from fundamental matters of health and wellbeing to job security. The consequences of all these issues will echo down the years ahead, long after the pandemic is a … Continue reading
Posted in Athena Swan, Equality, Liverpool University, National Academy of Sciences, pandemic, tenure clock, Women in science
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Sartre
‘Hell’, said Jean-Paul Sartre, is ‘Other People’. Although I expect he said it in French. And well might I sympathize. Much has been said about the mental health problems of people suffering from the absence of human contact during the … Continue reading
Posted in disclutteration, Domesticrox, Dreaming, dumpster, Jean-Paul Sartre, Marie Kondo, skip, Technicrox
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Stalemate
Following the input from the Rating Conferences that I wrote about in the last blog the MSc curriculum revision project team found ourselves going around in circles: Core courses or not? And if so how many? And what makes a … Continue reading
Posted in education, Materials Science
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Women as Natural Philosophers: Choosing to Challenge
When the Royal Society was founded in 1660, its first Fellows would have been known not as scientists, but as natural philosophers. Science and scientists were words that came into common parlance only around two hundred years later. So, the … Continue reading
Posted in Margaret Cavendish, Mary Astell, Rene Descartes, Women in science
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