News and Events
Request publicity for your IATL-funded project or event | Sign up to the IATL mailing list
IATL team update
Welcome back to our Teaching Fellows Elena Riva and Naomi de la Tour, congratulations to our Early Career Teaching Fellow Francesca Iezzi on her new appointment, congratulations to our Academic Manager Caroline Gibson on her long-service award, and welcome to Fiona O’Brien as part-time Office Manager.
ICUR receives honourable mention in Awards for Innovation in International Education
ICUR (The International Conference of Undergraduate Research) has received an Honorable Mention for Warwick in the 'International Partnerships' category in this year's awards from the Institute of International Education (IEE).
Getting Started in Pedagogical Research
Thursday 19 January 2017, 12:00-14:00 | Teaching Grid, Library
WIHEA, IATL & Monash University invite WIHEA Fellows, WIHEA Members and IATL funding recipients to join Dr Chris Thompson, Associate Dean (Education) & Senior Lecturer at Monash University, in a workshop for those new to the field of pedagogical research.
WIHEA Masterclass: Is there a future for the lecture?
Wednesday 18 January 2017, 14:00-16:00 | Teaching Grid, Library
WIHEA, IATL & Monash University invite you to join Dr Chris Thompson, Associate Dean (Education) & Senior Lecturer at Monash University, in an interactive workshop for Warwick staff around the theme of lectures, and what relevance they still hold in a modern higher education system.
IATL modules: places still available
We have a small number of places remaining on some of our interdisciplinary modules in the spring term. Studying on an IATL module gives you the opportunity to work with students and lecturers from across the university, developing connections between ideas, experiences and practice.
Further collaboration between Warwick and Monash
IATL has received funding via the WIHEA Monash Warwick Visiting Educator Scheme to bring Dr Christopher Thompson, Associate Dean Education, Faculty of Science, Monash, to collaborate with IATL staff and WIHEA Fellows in January 2017. Chris will contribute to our Strategic Project with Chemistry, discuss interdisciplinary pedagogy with Warwick colleagues and offer at least two open events, details of which will be announced by the start of next term.
IATL funded project leads receive HEFCE Catalyst Funding
Congratulations to Georgia Kremmyda and Volkan Degirmenci for receiving HEFCE Catalyst Funding for the project 'Developing a student-driven educational model between, beyond and across disciplines', which will develop a conceptual model for exploring the ways in which students act as co-producers of learning, and how they might work beyond traditional disciplinary boundaries. Project partners are Gwen Van der Velden (WIHEA), Nicholas Monk (IATL) and Colin Eddie (UnPS Ltd).
Monash and Warwick staff and students hold workshop week
Two staff members and three students from Monash visited IATL recently to work with us on key joint initiatives: the International Conference of Undergraduate Research (ICUR) and the undergraduate research journal Reinvention, both based in IATL and supported by the Monash-Warwick Alliance, are being combined with a new initiative, the Compass Programme, to become the ICUR Experience. Compass will support a new student network and collaborative undergraduate research across institutions internationally.
Deadline extended for BCUR 2017 abstract submissions
25-26 April 2017 | Bournemouth University
The British Conference of Undergraduate Research (BCUR) promotes undergraduate research in all disciplines. The deadline for abstract submissions has been extended to 15 January 2017.
Drug Laws: The Worst Censorship of Research since the Catholic Church Banned the Telescope
Wednesday 11 January 2017, 18:30-20:30 | Room 0.004, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick
This free public lecture, which contributes to the IATL module Censorship and Society, will be delivered by Prof. David Nutt, the Edmond J Safra Chair and Professor of Neuropsychopharmacology at Imperial College, London, who is perhaps best known as 'the scientist who was sacked' by the Home Secretary because he compared the harms of horse-riding with taking ecstasy.