Search results for: associate chaplain urzula glienecke
STATEMENT
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/s2071927_tpg-practices-2020-2021sem1/2020/10/12/statement/
I observe life, record and think unique moments. I am good at using objects in daily life to find connections between them and emotions. Common objects could evoke subconscious associations. My goal is to get people to think about themselves, to look deep into their memories, and to make the […]
First Blog Post
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/s2064711_drawn-from-the-city-2020-2021sem1/2018/08/08/hello-world/
First Blog Post – Cornish Dilapidation Cornwall is often associated with beaches, holiday-makers, and volatile weather. And although it is undeniably a beautiful county which I have lived in for as long as I can remember, it’s also home to one of the most volatile micro-economies in Europe. The introduction of COVID-19 related restrictions […]
Academic Development Programme
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/fnfscholar/2020/03/04/academic-development-programme/
My university is running a series of female academic development workshops throughout the year, which I have signed up to as a way to augment my FNF Emerging Leaders Leadership Scholarship programme. On 4th March, I attended a half-day session at St Leonard’s Land specifically for new Principal Investigators (PIs) and group leaders who are […]
Development of a Risk Prediction tool for entering a Nursing Home in those aged 65 and over in a Scottish Population
This project is a SCPHRP seed-funded research project. Seed-funding research was part of the SCPHRP remit during the period of 2008 ’ 2012. Institution: University of Dundee Principle investigator: Professor Peter Donnan Entering a nursing home in later life is associated with enormous impact on the health of an individual, as well as cost consequences […]
Religious Ecologies, Engaged Ethnography, and the Activist Imagination
The Ancestral Time project is pleased to feature Sarah McFarland Taylor, Associate Professor of Religion in the Department of Religious Studies at Northwestern University (Chicago, IL) and author of the award-winning book Green Sisters: A Spiritual Ecology (Harvard Univ. Press, 2007) for a lunchtime lecture: “Earth Has Hope: What Religious Ecologies, Engaged Ethnography, and the […]
how you plan to develop your project methodology
Requirements Analysis and Goal Setting: Firstly, the project team needs to work with potential users and stakeholders to clearly define the project’s objectives, scope and expected results. This includes defining the project’s Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), such as accuracy, profitability, user satisfaction, and so on. Data collection and cleansing: The project team should build a […]
Week 1 / Sensory Turn
I am interested in ‘Sensory Turn’. It analyses and describes a group of people’s social life and culture. It is both a research method and an investigative process. Before the sensory turn, ethnographic research was largely text-based. The ‘sensory turn’ took place in the 1980s. Researchers began to explore how they could apply their own […]
NEW STAFF
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/ncmagazine/2023/02/13/new-staff/
Dr Caleb Froelich is a Postdoctoral Research Associate for the Understanding the Spiritual through the Creative Arts project, where he is conducting research on the Fringe Festival. His doctorate was taken at the University of St Andrews. Dr Paul Fuller is Teaching Fellow in Buddhist Studies. An Edinburgh graduate (MA 1995), he has previously […]
About me
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/yair_fosado/
I am a Physicist with a strong multidisciplinary background in biophysics, computational physics, DNA nanotechnology, polymer physics and soft condensed matter. My work aims to understand how topology and geometry can be used to control the mechanical properties of soft matter. In particular, I am interested in the use of biology to assist the advances […]
January 2023: LSA Presentation
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/amaliaskilton/2023/01/20/january-2023-lsa-presentation/
At the Linguistic Society of America meeting in Denver, I gave a presentation titled “What causes the asymmetry between index and open-hand pointing in L1 acquisition?”. I was pleased to co-deliver this talk with my undergraduate student Alejandra González (Cornell). The abstract for this talk reads: For Western children, index-finger (IX) pointing gestures predict many […]
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