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Courses, links, polls, discussion, articles and news from the Arts Faculty for those with an interest in, or studying, Art History, Classical Studies, English and Creative Writing, Ethics, Heritage Studies, History, Interdisciplinary Studies, Music, Philosophy and Religious Studies.

Twinterview with Radio 1 DJ and OU honorary graduate Huw Stephens

Huw Stephens, the Cardiff-born BBC Radio 1 DJ and founder of the Swn Festival, has received the honorary degree of Doctor of The Open University for "exceptional contribution to education and culture." After reporting from the degree ceremony on Saturday 7 May 2011 at St David's Hall, Cardiff, via Twitter [1], Huw agreed to a short twinterview (that's an interview via Twitter) with the Platform team. Here it is (don't forget to read it from the bottom up as newest tweets appear at the top)...     *More about Huw...* Huw Stephens was born in Cardiff in 1981. He joined BBC Radio 1 at the age of 17, becoming the youngest presenter to work on the network. Radio 1 in Wales, which he co-presented with Bethan Elfyn, was aired for seven years, showcasing new Welsh music. Huw started his own One Music show in 2007, and now hosts two BBC Radio 1 shows a week, as well as presenting regularly across the network. Huw’s first language is Welsh, and he presents weekly shows on BBC Radio Cymru, championing new music from Wales, and hosts programmes on S4C, including Bandit, the long-running music series. Huw was for three years the Student Radio Awards Chair, and is co-founder of the Boobytrap and Am record labels. He hosts the main stage at Reading Festival, promotes gigs for up-and-coming artists, and founded the annual Swn Festival in Cardiff, which focuses on new music talent. *Useful links* * Huw Stephens gets OU honorary degree - the full story [2] * Huw Stephens on Twitter [3]   [1] http://twitter.com/#!/huwstephens [2] http://www8.open.ac.uk/platform/news-and-features/bbc-radio-1-dj-awarded-ou-honorary-degree [3] http://twitter.com/huwstephens

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Average: 3.5 (4 votes)

Huw Stephens, the Cardiff-born BBC Radio 1 DJ and founder of the Swn Festival, has received the honorary degree of Doctor of The Open University for "exceptional contribution to education and culture." After reporting from the degree ceremony on Saturday 7 May 2011 at St David's Hall, Cardiff, via Twitter [1], Huw agreed to a short twinterview (that's an interview via ...

Degree joy for Jan following cancer battle

Jan Owen carried on studying for her degree throughout a year of gruelling cancer treatment. Often pausing to think "what's the point?" she persevered and is glad she did. She's now celebrating being in remission and achieving an OU degree...

Jan Owen at home with her course books
Jan, a bank clerk and mother-of-three from Landrake near Saltash, was awarded a 2:1 BA (Hons) in English Language and English Literature at the 2011 graduation ceremony in Torquay.

She said studying with the OU helped her battle through the long bouts of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. “It really gave me something to focus on,” she said. “And it’s made me realise how important education is and how much it broadens your horizons.”

Jan left school at 16 and worked in a bank. “Nobody in my family had gone to university, and I think I was just expected to leave school, get a job and get married."

But as she progressed in her work, increasingly she found that new entrants were graduates. “I might have had a bit of a chip on my shoulder. I thought 'everyone has a degree and I want one'.”

She began studying part-time for her degree in 2005, having already taken a foundation course with the OU in her 20s. But midway through her studies in June 2008, Jan was diagnosed with breast cancer. The illness was at an advanced stage and she underwent seven months of chemotherapy, a mastectomy, removal of lymph nodes in her left arm, reconstructive surgery, and five weeks of daily radiotherapy. She is currently part-way through five years of hormone therapy. 

Throughout her treatment at Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, Jan refused to give up on her studies, and spent the long hours at the oncology unit poring over her books and writing essays. “I thought that if I stopped, I would never start up again,” she said. “With the prospect of facing my own death and leaving a husband a widower and three young children motherless, sometimes I found it hard to see the point in carrying on with my studies.

“Spending hours working on the assignments trying to meet deadlines often seemed unimportant in the great scheme of things. But I’m glad I persevered, and I had a very understanding tutor who extended deadlines when I needed them.”

Jan is currently in remission. She is enjoying the break from studying, but is considering going on to study for a Masters degree. “My husband Nigel’s got a Masters, and now I’m starting to think I want one too,” she said.

She believes her studies have made her a good role model for daughters Mair, 10, Ellie, 11, and Georgia, 13. “The Open University is an excellent model of how education should be. It keeps you motivated and makes you want to learn,” she said.

“It’s an excellent way to get a degree, and in this climate when higher education is getting more and more expensive, I would certainly recommend it.”

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Average: 2 (9 votes)

Jan Owen carried on studying for her degree throughout a year of gruelling cancer treatment. Often pausing to think "what's the point?" she persevered and is glad she did. She's now celebrating being in remission and achieving an OU degree... Jan, a bank clerk and mother-of-three from Landrake near Saltash, was awarded a 2:1 BA (Hons) in English Language and English ...

BOOK CLUB REVIEW - May/June 2011 - Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve

Front cover of Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve

The May/June 2011 Platform Book Club Review is Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve and comes recommended by Marjorie, a Platform contributer, who suggested it in the book club forums.

The book is published by Scholastic and here's the blurb from Amazon...

Mortal Engines launched Philip Reeve's brilliantly-imagined creation, the world of the Traction Era, where mobile cities fight for survival in a post-apocalyptic future.The first instalment introduces young apprentice Tom Natsworthy and the murderous Hester Shaw flung from the fast-moving city of London into heart-stopping adventures in the wastelands of the Great Hunting Ground.

You have until June 30 to grab/buy/borrow a copy, read the book and post your review here on this forum – whether you loved it, hated it or only skimmed the first few chapters before giving up, we want to hear from you. The review we find the most insightful scoops £20 in book vouchers. So get reading! Oh, and we also have a copy of the prequel to Mortal Engines - Fever Crumb, shortlisted for the Cilip Carnegie Medal 2010 - for the winning review.

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The May/June 2011 Platform Book Club Review is Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve and comes recommended by Marjorie, a Platform contributer, who suggested it in the book club forums. The book is published by Scholastic and here's the blurb from Amazon... Mortal Engines launched Philip Reeve's brilliantly-imagined creation, the world of the Traction Era, where mobile cities ...

The Philosophy of Love

Two swans touching beaks to make a heart shape

The nature of royal weddings as very public declarations of love can cause us to reflect on love and partnership – and on 29th April when Prince William and Kate Middleton tie the knot, the royal couple will take a vow that declares a commitment to love and cherish ‘til death do us part’.

But what is ‘love’? What is it that makes us fall in love with someone and can we put a meaning on it? We’ve all experienced love, whether it is a friend, partner, family member, or a pet – but these are all very different kinds of love. So how do we define love when it encompasses such a variety of emotions?

Carolyn Price, senior lecturer in Philosophy, and Timothy Chappell, director of the Ethics Centre, at The Open University, discuss the nature of love, from love as a function, to ‘the Doppelganger problem’ – should we also love another person with the same traits and qualities as the person we already love? Finally, the notion of love as a duty within marriage is explored.

Listen to The Philosophy of Love on iTunes

You can also read a blog post by OU psychology lecturer and therapist Meg Barker who considers what we know about the state of modern marriage, in the first of a two-part post here.


 

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The nature of royal weddings as very public declarations of love can cause us to reflect on love and partnership – and on 29th April when Prince William and Kate Middleton tie the knot, the royal couple will take a vow that declares a commitment to love and cherish ‘til death do us part’. But what is ‘love’? What is it that makes us fall in ...

Find out more about poet and playwright William Shakespeare

The birthday of William Shakespeare, the English poet and playwright, is traditionally celebrated on 23rd April. Find out more about him and his work on OpenLearn.

 

 

 

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The birthday of William Shakespeare, the English poet and playwright, is traditionally celebrated on 23rd April. Find out more about him and his work on OpenLearn.       2 Average: 2 (1 vote)

Audio celebrates 300 years since birth of philosopher David Hume

David Hume

2011 is the 300th anniversary of the birth of one of the greatest figures in Western Philosophy – David Hume. As well as an economist and historian, Hume was specifically known for his scepticism and empiricism, and was also an important figure in the Scottish Enlightenment period in the 18th century.

In this audio collection, The Open University’s Nigel Warburton is joined by A.C. Grayling and other philosophers to discuss Hume’s key theories around the self, induction and his argument against miracles. A good entry point into philosophy and the work of David Hume. This material forms part of the Open University course A222 Exploring philosophy.

Listen to David Hume, 18th century philosopher, on iTunes.

 

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2011 is the 300th anniversary of the birth of one of the greatest figures in Western Philosophy – David Hume. As well as an economist and historian, Hume was specifically known for his scepticism and empiricism, and was also an important figure in the Scottish Enlightenment period in the 18th century. In this audio collection, The Open University’s Nigel ...

A219 tutor wins top US award for academic paper

Photograph of Dr Amanda Wrigley

Dr Amanda Wrigley, an associate lecturer on A219 Exploring the Classical World in the Open University's South Region, has won the Philadelphia Constantinidis Essay in Critical Theory Award 2010 for publishing a chapter of her thesis.

The prize is awarded by the (American) Board of the Comparative Drama Conference for ‘the best comparative essay on any aspect and period of Greek drama or theatre published in English in any journal’.

Dr Wright wins a plaque and $1,000 for her article 'A Wartime radio Odyssey: Edward Sackville-West and Benjamin Britten’s The Rescue (1943) in the academic journal Radio Journal - International Studies in Broadcast and Audio Media.

 She completed her PhD part-time in the Open University's Department of Classical Studies in 2009, on the topic ‘Engagements with Greek drama and Homeric epic on BBC Radio in the 1940s and 1950s’.
 

Useful Links

Dr Amanda Wright

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Average: 2.3 (4 votes)

Dr Amanda Wrigley, an associate lecturer on A219 Exploring the Classical World in the Open University's South Region, has won the Philadelphia Constantinidis Essay in Critical Theory Award 2010 for publishing a chapter of her thesis. The prize is awarded by the (American) Board of the Comparative Drama Conference for ‘the best comparative essay on any aspect and period ...

OU teacher training "outstanding".

Teaching computer class (Image: Thinkstock)

The Open University's teacher training programme, which was judged Outstanding by inspectors in Northern Ireland last year, has received a glowing report for its work in England.

Ofsted, the government's office for standards in education, has rated the OU's initial teacher education in England as Outstanding in all but one area. That area, Attainment, is rated Good.

The Ofsted report, based on its inspection in March,  says that the structure and flexibility of the Open University teaching training provides high quality training for people who in most cases would not otherwise have entered the teaching profession.

It says: "They are trained well and the very large majority successfully complete the course and secure teaching posts that suit their personal circumstances.

"The overwhelming majority of successful trainees remain in teaching beyond the early years, a testament to their personal qualities and to the quality of training and support they receive."

The Ofsted report follows a glowing assessment of the OU's teacher training programme in Northern Ireland, conducted by the Education and Training Inspectorate (ETI) last September.The OU was the only Northern Ireland institution to receive the highest grade, Outstanding.

The Open University offers a professional graduate certificate in education (PGCE) to teach in the 11 to 16 age range, with post-16 enhancement for most trainees, in: design and technology; geography;  mathematics;  modern foreign languages (French, German and Spanish);  music; and science (biology, chemistry and physics). Successful trainees can take an additional masters-level module, leading to a postgraduate certificate in education, at the end of the course.

Useful links

Picture: Thinkstock

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The Open University's teacher training programme, which was judged Outstanding by inspectors in Northern Ireland last year, has received a glowing report for its work in England. Ofsted, the government's office for standards in education, has rated the OU's initial teacher education in England as Outstanding in all but one area. That area, Attainment, is rated Good. The ...

Novelist pens first chapter of "top 100" book while studying with OU

Keith Scrivener's first novel, Viking Sword Saxon Shield, has already reached the top 100 in the American historical thriller charts - and he wrote the first chapter of the book while studying a creative writing course at The Open University.

Find out more in this article in Keith's local newspaper, the Essex Chronicle.

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Keith Scrivener's first novel, Viking Sword Saxon Shield, has already reached the top 100 in the American historical thriller charts - and he wrote the first chapter of the book while studying a creative writing course at The Open University. Find out more in this article in Keith's local newspaper, the Essex Chronicle. 2.166665 Average: 2.2 (6 votes)

Just over a year to go before Nikki, 23, achieves her degree

Nikki, 23, is studying towards an Open Degree with the OU, after first dipping her toe into life at a traditional university and deciding it wasn't for her.

Here she talks about what she's studying, how she's finding life with the OU, her forthcoming tutorial at the Tate Modern and the OU's grading system...

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Nikki, 23, is studying towards an Open Degree with the OU, after first dipping her toe into life at a traditional university and deciding it wasn't for her. Here she talks about what she's studying, how she's finding life with the OU, her forthcoming tutorial at the Tate Modern and the OU's grading system... 2.5 Average: 2.5 (10 votes)

OU academic directs award-winning film

Still of Roma child from film Vortex

The feature film Vortex, directed by John Oates from the Child and Youth Studies Group in the Open University's faculty of Education and Language Studies with his Hungarian colleague Csaba Szekeres, won a Premier Award at the British Film Institute on  Thursday (24 March). This top award was given by the British Film and Video Council in the Learning on Screen Awards competition 2011.

The film is a co-production by The Open University and the Hunnia Filmstudio, Budapest, and is a documentary that follows the lives of young Roma children and their families living in poverty in a remote village in rural Hungary.

Vortex also won top prize in a Hungarian film festival last year, for its hard-hitting portrait of the lives of an ethnic minority group.

The OU’s Child and Youth Studies group conducts national and international research, including the Young Lives project tracking the development of children in Ethiopia, India, Peru and Vietnam over 15 years.

Image: Still from Vortex

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The feature film Vortex, directed by John Oates from the Child and Youth Studies Group in the Open University's faculty of Education and Language Studies with his Hungarian colleague Csaba Szekeres, won a Premier Award at the British Film Institute on  Thursday (24 March). This top award was given by the British Film and Video Council in the Learning on Screen Awards ...

Five centuries of reading experience

Fantastical illustration of a stack of books, with arms, reading each other

Mark Twain was no admirer of Jane Austen. “Every time I read Pride and Prejudice,” he said, “I want to dig her up and hit her over the skull with her own shin-bone!”

Twain's views are revealed in the UK Reading Experience Database (RED), newly relaunched by the Open University.

The database provides an insight into the habits and practices of British readers during the period from 1450 to 1945. Many famous readers are included in RED – Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, Robert Louis Stevenson – but the experiences of ordinary readers are equally valuable to the project. The collection has over 30,000 entries, making it possible to find out, for example, what servants in the eighteenth century were reading, or what people read during World War Two.

“The information in UK RED will help to uncover broader trends or patterns in reading practices as well as allowing us to chart the reception of famous books and authors through history. It also makes it possible for readers of today to compare their own reading to that of people in the past,” says Bob Owens, RED's Lead Investigator and Professor of English Literature at the OU.

Explore the RED database here.

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Mark Twain was no admirer of Jane Austen. “Every time I read Pride and Prejudice,” he said, “I want to dig her up and hit her over the skull with her own shin-bone!” Twain's views are revealed in the UK Reading Experience Database (RED), newly relaunched by the Open University. The database provides an insight into the habits and practices of ...

An interview with Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson

Tanni Grey-Thompson

Born with spina bifida, Tanni Grey-Thompson is a wheelchair user, one of the UK’s most successful disabled athletes and three times BBC Wales Sports Personality of the Year. In 2004 she was awarded an honorary doctorate from The Open University. In an interview in 2010 she talks to Platform’s Robyn Slingsby about London 2012, the challenges of being a mother, discrimination, her heroes and skiing.

She’s just turned 40 and although she no longer trains to compete at world-class level, Paralympian Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson certainly has her hands full. While she admits that not having to watch her weight anymore is a huge relief, she’s a huge advocate of the fact that exercise fuels the brain. She still does a lot for sport since retiring in 2008 – with 16 Paralympic medals to her name - but confesses that her biggest challenge yet is being a mum.

“Winning the 100 metres in Athens for me, as an athlete, was the best thing I did. It was probably the closest thing to perfection in terms of any race I did, technically and in terms of my preparation. The trouble with me is I’m never ever  happy with what I’ve done, I’m really self critical so for most of my athletics career I didn’t think I’d done enough, and then at the point I didn’t think I could do any more, I retired.

“But, to be honest, having Carys, my daughter, has been the hardest thing I’ve ever done. Being a mother is way harder than any of the work stuff I do because it changes every day. One day she eats peas, the next day she refuses to eat peas and she’ll sit there and say she’s never eaten peas in her life. We’ll be in a shop and I’ll buy her an outfit she says she likes and then you get home and she won’t wear it. It changes every day.

“I was in Beijing for two months last year and before we went, Carys went into school and told the teacher that I was making her going to the Olympics . We had tickets to the opening ceremony and she asked if there would be fireworks, that’s all she was interested in. But once she was there she loved it.”

Permanent state of chaos

Tanni juggles a lot of commitments and has to manage her diary carefully so she spends enough quality time with her husband Dr Ian Thompson and daughter Carys, seven, at their home in Eaglescliffe. How does she do it?

“We live in permanent state of chaos, and that’s fine. There’s a lot of guilt put onto mothers that you have to be perfect mother who cooks, cleans, washes and can hold down a job. I just think that’s nonsense, it’s about not beating yourself up over things and I don’t feel guilty if I give my daughter cheese on toast for tea, even though my own mother would have thought it was dreadful. It’s about not feeling guilty about the stuff you can’t change.

“I really enjoy my work and do lots of different things and I love it, and that has consequences on my husband and daughter but you try and balance it the best you can.

“When I was little my mum stopped working when my sister was born – she’s two years older than me – and went back to work when I was 19, and the world’s not like that anymore. Very occasionally Carys will ask me why I’m away – usually because she wants something out of me. I’ve learned from right back when she was really little that children are amazing at making you feel guilty.

As well as her charity work, Dame Tanni has been involved in the bidding for and planning of the Olympics in London in 2012 – and she’s very excited about it.

Tall poppy syndrome

“London will do an amazing job, when you look at the bid process the team were really professional and did their homework. There’s a bit of a tall poppy syndrome within UK culture, we do sometimes see the negative. This is the best opportunity in sport to showcase what we do and show the world what we’re good at.”

What about disabled access?

“I joined the board at Transport For London (TFL) last year, and going into it my view was why can’t we make all underground stations accessible? But then you look at putting a lift into a tube station and find out you don’t get much change out of £150 million. A lot of work has gone into making the newer stations accessible, but there are issues about air conditioning on the tubes, line upgrades, platform rebuilds, health and safety, and access is one part of it so it all has to go in the melting pot that is the TFL budget and it’s a hard balancing act.

“Every single London bus is wheelchair accessible, every taxi is, so we’re starting off at a much stronger point than any other Olympic or Paralympic city has for quite a while and, for me, the key is educating people. Not a lot of people will know this but there’s a really cool underground map which shows the accessible stations, so the ones I can’t use are in pale grey so they don’t cloud my view of where I can travel. So for me the key is education and we’ll have amazingly well trained volunteers at Games times to help people get to where they want to go. Education is key.

“2012 can be a platform to try and make London more accessible in a wider sense to everyone - mums with prams, wheelchairs, blind people.”

Discrimination

Dame Tanni has no problem getting around but says disabled people do suffer discrimination and things like access to higher education are more challenging.

“The reality for disabled people is that education is harder. So whether they miss school time because of illness or they’re in hospital of if they’ve missed things because of their impairment, I sometimes think that higher education isn’t seen as an option.

“When I was in school I’d just sat my O Levels and the careers teacher told me he could get me a nice job answering phones. I said I wanted to go to uni and he basically said ‘Don’t be so silly, what do you want a degree for, it’ll be difficult and won’t help you because you’ll probably end up answering phones anyway.’”

As it turned out my first job was working for British Athletics and part of my job was in fact answering phones, and I really enjoyed it. But lots of people look at impairment and it starts off as inherently negative and if someone tells you that you can’t do something then it’s very easy to believe that. The beauty of the OU is that people come back when they feel they’re ready to but they also have the flexibility, which makes a real difference.”

So, if Dame Tanni could study an OU course, what would it be?

“Law, I always wanted to do law. I went to Loughborough University, which didn’t offer law so I did politics. It was something I was interested in and actually it’s been incredibly useful. I always thought there wasn’t politics in sport and then you get involved and realise there’s loads.”

Self belief

And what about trying a new sport, what she go for?

“Skiing, but I hate the cold and the wet and being out and going downhill doesn’t appeal to me. I like the concept of skiing and saying that I will ski one day, but I don’t think Ill ever actually go skiing.”

Dame Tanni is an inspiration in her own right, but who does she admire?

“I was at the Young Sport conference, to look at what you can do beyond sport to help people, and Desmond Tutu was there and he was just so cool. His charisma and his personality and the way he talked about Africa was just incredible, so I’m a huge fan of his.

“My mum, who has passed away now, was stroppy and stubborn but just an amazingly strong person to have around, she was really cool. We used to argue a lot but she brought me up to have a lot of self belief.

“And Gareth Edwards. I was brought up by mother to believe that he is the closest thing to perfection that will ever walk this earth and it was the way he played, he knew he was good but he wasn’t arrogant and you listen to some of his stories and he was a really cool bloke. I still get awe struck when ever I meet him.”


 

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Born with spina bifida, Tanni Grey-Thompson is a wheelchair user, one of the UK’s most successful disabled athletes and three times BBC Wales Sports Personality of the Year. In 2004 she was awarded an honorary doctorate from The Open University. In an interview in 2010 she talks to Platform’s Robyn Slingsby about London 2012, the challenges of being a mother, ...

Y180 - Making Sense Of The Arts

Hi there, I am taking this course starting in June '11, I thought I would start a thread for anyone wanting to chat about the course.

I'm a 43yr old chef who hasn't studied anything since completing my City & Guilds in Catering over 20 years ago, so I'm hoping the course won't be too hard.  My job is very (summer) seasonal, so I'm reading up on WW1 poetry, Chartism & Suffragettes now before the course opens.

 

Hi there, I am taking this course starting in June '11, I thought I would start a thread for anyone wanting to chat about the course. I'm a 43yr old chef who hasn't studied anything since completing my City & Guilds in Catering over 20 years ago, so I'm hoping the course won't be too hard.  My job is very (summer) seasonal, so I'm reading up on WW1 poetry, Chartism & ...

Michael Jarvis - Wed, 16/03/2011 - 10:35

The perils of academic publishing

In the Free Speech blog, OU philosopher Nigel Warburton posts about the perils of academic publishing. "If we are going to have a lively academic environment we need to accept that from time to time blows will land below the belt," he writes. 

Read the full post here.

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Average: 4 (1 vote)

In the Free Speech blog, OU philosopher Nigel Warburton posts about the perils of academic publishing. "If we are going to have a lively academic environment we need to accept that from time to time blows will land below the belt," he writes.  Read the full post here. 4 Average: 4 (1 vote)

What's next for actress and OU graduate Romola Garai?

Actress Romola Garai

From an unflinching portrayal of the life of a Victorian prostitute in The Crimson Petal to a comically dreadful wife in the film adaptation of One Day, OU graduate Romola Garai is set for stardom...

Read the full interview with actress and Open University graduate Romola Garai in The Observer  - in which she talks about graduating from the OU in 2010 with a first in English Literature.

You can also watch Platform's video interview with Romola after her graduation at The Barbican, London, last year.

 

 

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From an unflinching portrayal of the life of a Victorian prostitute in The Crimson Petal to a comically dreadful wife in the film adaptation of One Day, OU graduate Romola Garai is set for stardom... Read the full interview with actress and Open University graduate Romola Garai in The Observer  - in which she talks about graduating from the OU in 2010 with a first in ...

AXR272 Residential Art History Course

Hi, I'm doing this course starting in May through to July. Anyone here done it and if so any tips.... Thanks Fitch.

Hi, I'm doing this course starting in May through to July. Anyone here done it and if so any tips.... Thanks Fitch.

Ian Fitchett - Thu, 10/03/2011 - 18:31

What should you do if a cash machine overpays?

 

 

 

 

 

If a cash machine pays you more than you asked for, should you keep the money? Yes, says Professor of Philosophy Tim Chappell, Director of the Open University Ethics Centre. "The bankers get plenty of free lunches. Why shouldn't their customers too?" 

Read the debate in BBC News Magazine, and Professor Chappell's blog for 5 March.

What would you do? Vote in our poll here.

Useful Links

 

 

 

 

 
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        If a cash machine pays you more than you asked for, should you keep the money? Yes, says Professor of Philosophy Tim Chappell, Director of the Open University Ethics Centre. "The bankers get plenty of free lunches. Why shouldn't their customers too?"  Read the debate in BBC News Magazine, and Professor Chappell's blog for 5 March. What ...

So, what does academia think of Wikipedia?

Wikipedia logo
The collaborative online encyclopedia Wikipedia is consulted by students, academics and other experts in their field. But many such readers are reluctant to contribute to it. 

Why? Dr Panagiota Alevizou is a researcher in the Open University's Institute of Educational Technology who is trying to find out.

She and other academic volunteers on the Wikimedia Foundation Research Committee are running a high-profile survey to uncover the barriers to scholarly participation –  and they want to hear from as many OU folk as possible. 

"We would like to hear from experts in their field,  who do not contribute, what has deterred them from participation. But we'd also like to hear what motivates people who do participate, either randomly or actively, and gain an insight into the opportunities this offers. 

"It is important we have a large volume of respondents to get a representative sample, so we're hoping as many as possible will take part. The online survey only takes about 15 minutes to complete." 

She said the anonymity of Wikipedia may be an issue for some academics because they can't get credit for their postings. But it is precisely this anonymity is which motivates many people to participate.  

Other possible deterrents could be technical difficulties interfacing with Wikipedia, and not being able to cite particular academic resources because they are not open or accessible to all. 

Some academics continue to be sceptical about Wikipedia's credibility as a source of accurate information, she said. "A lot of people say they do not like Wikipedia, but it is a very popular site and it has masses of information, which can be vetted.  

'It's like any other resource in that, if you're doing research, you don't just rely on one book or one encyclopedia. An encyclopedia is an entry point to research."

Take part in the Wikimedia survey here

 

Useful links 

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The collaborative online encyclopedia Wikipedia is consulted by students, academics and other experts in their field. But many such readers are reluctant to contribute to it.  Why? Dr Panagiota Alevizou is a researcher in the Open University's Institute of Educational Technology who is trying to find out. She and other academic volunteers on the Wikimedia Foundation ...

Creative writing lecturer wins book award

life of Montaigne front cover
Sarah Bakewell, associate lecturer for Creative writing (A215), was announced the winner of the 2011 Duff Cooper Prize on 22 February.

Critically acclaimed, her biography of Montaigne, How to Live: A life of Montaigne, was previously one of only three shortlisted for the Costa Biography Book Award 2010.

How To Live: A life of Montaigne is the first full life of Montaigne in English for nearly 50 years, and is not a straightforward biography in the traditional sense. 

Sarah relates the story of his life by way of the questions he posed and the answers he explored. It traces his bizarre upbringing (when he was made to speak only Latin), youthful career and sexual adventures, his travels, and his friendships with the scholar and poet Etienne de La Boetie and with his adopted 'daughter', Marie de Gournay.

The Duff Cooper Prize was named for Duff Cooper, First Lord of the Admiralty and wartime British Ambassador to France, made 1st Viscount Norwich shortly before his death in 1954. It celebrates the best in non-fiction writing, with the first annual prize being awarded in 1956. Previous winners include Robert Service, William Dalrymple, Peter Hennessy, Seamus Heaney and John Betjeman.

Sarah teaches for the Arts Faculty in London, where she also teaches for City University.

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Average: 2 (1 vote)

Sarah Bakewell, associate lecturer for Creative writing (A215), was announced the winner of the 2011 Duff Cooper Prize on 22 February. Critically acclaimed, her biography of Montaigne, How to Live: A life of Montaigne, was previously one of only three shortlisted for the Costa Biography Book Award 2010. How To Live: A life of Montaigne is the first full life of Montaigne ...

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Who's your favourite TV expert on British TV (current or of all time)?

David Attenborough
55% (399 votes)
Mary Beard
5% (33 votes)
Martin Lewis
3% (24 votes)
Jo Frost
2% (15 votes)
Brian Cox
21% (150 votes)
Maggie Aderin-Pocock
0% (1 vote)
The Hairy Bikers: David Myers & Simon King
2% (18 votes)
The Two Fat Ladies: Clarissa Dickson Wright & Jennifer Paterson
1% (8 votes)
Gareth Malone
2% (18 votes)
Monty Halls
0% (3 votes)
Other
7% (52 votes)
Total votes: 721

David Attenborough 55% (399 votes) Mary Beard 5% (33 votes) Martin Lewis 3% (24 votes) Jo Frost 2% (15 votes) Brian Cox 21% (150 votes) Maggie Aderin-Pocock 0% (1 vote) The Hairy Bikers: David Myers & Simon King 2% (18 votes) The Two Fat Ladies: Clarissa ...

Do you agree with Professor Tim Chappell that if a cashpoint overpays you, you should keep the money?

Yes, the banks take a lot of ours
21% (8 votes)
No, it's dishonest
72% (28 votes)
No, you might get into trouble
8% (3 votes)
Total votes: 39

Yes, the banks take a lot of ours 21% (8 votes) No, it's dishonest 72% (28 votes) No, you might get into trouble 8% (3 votes) Total votes: 39

Do employers favour Science and Technology degrees over Arts and Humanities?

Yes
75% (220 votes)
No
25% (75 votes)
Total votes: 295

Yes 75% (220 votes) No 25% (75 votes) Total votes: 295