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blogs.ed

blogs.ed

Staff and student blogs for our connected learning community

Search results for: associate chaplain urzula glienecke

Fellowship of the HEA

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/learning-teaching-conference-2022/fellowship-of-the-hea/

Fellowship of the HEA We would like to congratulate and celebrate the significant number of colleagues from across the University of Edinburgh who have been awarded different categories of Fellowship of the Higher Education Academy. These Fellowships are a measure of recognition for individuals based on their experience and dedication to teaching, leadership of teaching, […]


AHRC Creative Economy Studentship - Situating Artistic-Anthropological Research

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/neil-mulholland-edx/ahrc-creative-economy-studentship-situating-artistic-anthropological-research/

PhD Title: Situating Artistic-Anthropological Research AHRC Creative Economy Studentship Atelier Skye ATLAS Arts & The University of Edinburgh Atelier Network, May 2017 The University of Edinburgh, in partnership with the University of Aberdeen, Deveron Projects (Huntly, Aberdeenshire), ATLAS Arts (Portree, Skye) and Collective (Edinburgh) is seeking to appoint a suitably qualified PhD applicant for a Creative […]


Dawn of the ‘Designer Baby’: The He Jiankui Affair and Implications for Future Ethical Editing - by Julia Corcoran

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/mason-institute/2022/07/06/dawn-of-the-designer-baby-the-he-jiankui-affair-and-implications-for-future-ethical-editing-by-julia-corcoran/

The following is Part 4 of a five part student blog series sharing the excellent work of Edinburgh Law School undergraduate and postgraduate students on the Contemporary Issues in Medical Jurisprudence course. Crispr-Cas9’s discovery in 2012 has enabled scientists to edit the human genome. The technology is thought to be capable of curing certain cancers, […]


Tell Us About Your Methodology - Experience Sampling Methodology

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/research-bow/tell-us-about-your-methodology-experience-sampling-methodology/

Another month, another methodology. We have loved talking to our friends and colleagues on the PGR cohort to find out more about their research, and this instalment in our blog series, Tell Us About Your Methodology, is no different.  Here is our interview with 2nd year PhD candidate, Koraima Sotomayor-Enriquez (Clinical Psychology).    What methodology […]


Fellowship of the HEA

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/learning-teaching-conference-2023/fellowship-of-the-hea/

Fellowship of the HEA We would like to congratulate and celebrate the significant number of colleagues from across the University of Edinburgh who have been awarded different categories of Fellowship of the Higher Education Academy. These Fellowships are a measure of recognition for individuals based on their experience and dedication to teaching, leadership of teaching, […]


Seachdain na Gàidhlig 2024

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/s1848641/2024/03/28/seachdain-na-gaidhlig-2024/

This year I partnered with Fife Council, the Scottish Fisheries Museum, and the Anstruther Improvements Association to present two events for World Gaelic Week. Seachdain na Gàidhlig, or World Gaelic Week, is held every year to celebrate Scottish Gaelic language and culture. Fife Council’s Gaelic Community Development officer, Kirsty Strachan, worked tirelessly to prepare a […]


Weeknotes, 7th June

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/nickdaniels/2024/06/07/weeknotes-7th-june/

I missed a couple of months As you might be able to tell from the amount of time that’s elapsed between this post and the previous one, I’ve not hit any sort of routine with weeknotes yet. It seems like such a simple idea: write about your week on a Friday. The problem comes when […]


Professor Prakash Panangaden - research lunch

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/he-lab/2022/02/28/professor-prakash-panangaden-research-lunch/

Professor Prakash Panangaden will review the concept of probabilistic bisimulation and its extension to systems with continuous state spaces.  Surprisingly, it turned out that one can prove a striking logical characterization theorem: a theorem that pins down exactly what differences one can ‘’see’’ in process behaviours when two systems are not bisimilar.  I will outline […]


Look how we've grown!

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/cdcs/2021/03/08/look-how-weve-grown/

In just a couple of months’ time, the Centre for Data, Culture & Society will celebrate its second birthday.  We’re now a team of five, surrounded by a network of affiliates and associates, affiliates, fellows, trainers, researchers and PhD students.  Here are some of the other ways in which we’ve grown over the last two […]


Milkman: humour in a traumatised society

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/s1357934/2019/09/26/milkman-humour-in-a-traumatised-society/

Critics have frequently commended the humour of Anna Burns’s Milkman (2018), but beyond descriptions of the novel as ‘charmingly wry’ (New Yorker) or ‘darkly comic’ (The Telegraph), there has been little real insight into the part humour plays. This critical disinterest in humour – particularly in literature-  is widespread, partly because comedy has long been […]


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