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December 07 Cambridge & Chelmsford for your information the essential source of information for Anglia Ruskin students Festive second issue of your new student magazine Intrepid Anglia students in Amazon expedition Student Focus – Osama Naji www.anglia.ac.uk Editorial Feature Contents Editor’s note 2 Listening to you 3 FYI – The launch 4 Amazon adventures 6 Christmas/Chaplaincy 9 Christmas/Overindulgence 10 Christmas/Charity 12 Assessment problems 13 Student Focus: Osama Naji 14 Faculty Focus: FHSC 16 Staff Focus: Gill Betmead 18 Environment team 20 Employment Bureau 22 Library 23 International Student Support 24 Student Money Advice & Rights Team 25 Ruskin Gallery 26 Dear Deborah 27 Competition 28 Publication of next edition: 18 February 2008 Send articles to: Ruth Andrews r.andrews@anglia.ac.uk by 7 January 2008 The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of the editor or our University. 2 Listening Feature to you Welcome to the ‘difficult’ second issue of your student magazine. Listening to you A first issue of a mag (or a first book or first album) is always well planned, deliberated over and worked on at length, launched with a bang and with luck greeted with plaudits. Once it’s launched and displayed however, you are faced with the realisation that you’ve got to do it all over again for the next issue. I’m hoping that this second issue will not be an anti climax. Surveys and questionnaires seem to be everywhere nowadays, and we know that some of you feel overwhelmed by them. But for our university, they can be a crucial part of understanding what we are getting right and what we are getting wrong, and we take them very seriously. Each year there are two big whole-university student surveys involving different groups of students and asking different sorts of questions, yet there is quite a bit of overlap between the two. Confused? Read on. I’ve tried to keep to the same format as the first issue with a student focus article on p 14 featuring Chelmsford based architecture student Osama Naji. For the next issue I’d like to interview a student from outside the Cambridge/Chelmsford axis, and so am keen to hear from any student from Fulbourn, Peterborough, CoWA, SEEVIC or indeed any outpost of our far flung empire willing to give up an hour of their time and a photo. Think how proud your mum will be to see you on the cover, and there’s a cup of coffee in it for you, and a cake if the budget can stretch to it. The staff focus this issue features Gill Betmead from the Careers Service in Cambridge; find out everything you’ve ever wanted to know about Gill on page 18. Ideas and nominations for a subject for the next staff focus would be very welcome as I would like to feature a member of the academic staff next time, and academics are well known to be shy and retiring creatures who may need some encouragement to step forward into the limelight. The faculty focus this time features our newest faculty – Health and Social Care – and can be found on p 16. The rest of the mag, like last time features an eclectic mix of articles, ranging from the very serious (what to do to deal with problems with assessments on page 13), through the exotic (the report of Anglia students’ Amazon trip on p 6) to details of where to go for a mince pie and a glass of mulled wine at Christmas (Chaplaincy article on p 9). It just remains for me to wish you a lovely, restful and peaceful Christmas break. I’ll be back with the (hopefully not so difficult) third issue on 18th February 2008. Ruth Ruth Andrews Senior Administrator, Office of Student Affairs Editor, For Your Information r.andrews@anglia.ac.uk Fancy a bit of spare cash? Do you want to become an Anglia Ruskin University model? The National Student Survey is probably well-known now. It has just completed its third year and gets a fair amount of press coverage when its results are published every September. The NSS is aimed at final year undergraduate students only and all of them are asked to complete it. This year, 56% of ours did so. Our own Student Experience Survey is mailed to a 25% sample (about 5,000) of all our taught students, all years and both undergraduate and postgraduate. This year we had responses from 23.5% of the sample. Each year we spend a good deal of time during semester one working through the results of the two surveys, making sure our Faculties and Support Services understand the messages we have received from our students and developing action plans for improvement. In the Spring we publish a report on both surveys together with the action which we are taking. If you would like to read the 2006 feedback report in full you will find it on Student ANET at http://web.anglia.ac.uk/anet/students/feedback_%20NSS_2006v3.doc The key messages from the two 2006 surveys were to do with: • • • • • Feedback on assessments – quality and promptness Collection points for the return of assessments Cost of placement/work experience Ways of using your feedback to improve teaching and learning The need for Faculties to get module guides to the library in good time so that books can be ordered • The need to communicate better with students • Reducing late changes to timetables and rooms • Improving the curriculum pages on our university website And as the Information Screens, new student email system and the new Student Information Centres show, we have been getting on with this list. The 2007 survey results are now with us and will soon be available on ANET for you to see what this year’s students – and this might include you – have said. In the next edition of For Your Information I will look at some of the key messages for 2007 We are always on the look out for fresh faces to represent Anglia Ruskin in our printed and on-line material. If you’re a current student, postgraduate or undergraduate, no matter what course, or even if you’ve already graduated, then we’re looking for you! All you have to do is drop us a line at advertising@anglia.ac.uk and we’ll be in touch. Dr Paul McHugh Director of Student Affairs 3 The launch Cambridge launch – Julia Latif (cover girl), Clare Gregory (SSS Cambridge) and Debbie Burden (SSS Chelmsford) at East Road Are you still haunted by visions of a gaggle of women in branded T-shirts, one dressed as a town crier, bearing down on you with a student mag in one hand and a lolly in the other? Then you must have been around for the launch of For Your Information during the week beginning 15th October. Myself and my loyal band of volunteers were at East Road campus during the morning of the 15th, accosting students with the mag, ignoring their Monday morning protests and sweetening the deal with lashings of lollies. I even managed to rope in our cover girl Julia Latif, and the sight of Julia handing out mags with a picture of her on the cover was for your information something that caused quite a few double takes. It was a matter of some pride that only one grumpy student refused to take a copy, despite being actively chased for some distance by a very determined town crier. We moved on to Fulbourn in the afternoon where nobody escaped our clutches. We devised a cunning plan, waiting outside the lecture theatre until unsuspecting students came through the door discussing the (obviously riveting) content of the lecture, complete with hand gestures whereupon we thrust our mags and lollies into hands outstretched in expanding a deep philosophical point. The next day found us in Chelmsford, covering both Rivermead and Central campuses. Perhaps because she was on home ground here, Debbie Burden our town crier decided she would take no prisoners and as a result no one dared refuse to take a copy. The town crier’s bell was even brought into play at one point on Central campus, rather unnecessarily I felt, as I was standing right next to it. All in all it was a very visible launch, and thanks to everyone who gave up their time to help out. One valuable lesson learnt was never to underestimate a student’s capacity for sweet eating. We learnt very quickly not to offer the bucket for you to help yourselves, as this resulted in pockets and bags being filled and buckets being emptied far too quickly. Despite this lesson, and the subsequent rationing of sweeties, I was still obliged to buy up all the lollies in the SU shop in the Tindal building. Apologies then to any students who went in to buy a Chupa Chup or a Drumstick that day only to be disappointed, but had you succumbed to the advances of the town crier, you’d have got one for free. Ruth Andrews – The launch 4 Chelmsford launch – Debbie Burden and Debbie Barker (SSS Chelmsford) taking a well earned and non alcoholic break at the SU bar at Rivermead. 5 Amazon Feature expedition San Raphael Falls, the highest in Ecuador (A day trip) Photo by Kat Powell, expedition leader Did you know that Foundation Scholarships worth up to £750 are offered each year to students studying at Anglia Ruskin University to assist with a period outside the UK to undertake a study visit in connection with their chosen course? Application forms available each academic year from November with a closing date the following February. For more information and to request an application form from November each academic year please go to the Office of the Secretary & Clerk’s webpage, at http://sec-clerk.anglia.ac.uk/ then click on the blue box at the top named Anglia Trust. Last academic year, a group of intrepid Anglia eco-explorers led by Kat Powell received grants from the Trust, and below you’ll find a report from expedition member Pauliina Laurila along with some stunning photos. Anglia Students’ Amazon Adventures 6 I am writing to you and the Anglia Trust Foundation about my experiences on our Amazon expedition. Anglia Trust has kindly supported our ARU Amazon expedition team. We went to the Oriente of Ecuador, the highlands of the Andes in the cloudforest where humidity is very high and climate is mostly cold, though we had a lot of warm sunny days as well. Team life proved to be quite a challenge and everything didn’t go exactly as planned, surprise surprise. But we were able to carry out research as was our objective. We just had to change the plans we had made. For example we had planned to do frog research but found out that the frogs were hard to find – every time we went out looking for them we could not find any (and when we were not looking there were plenty of frogs around making lovely sounds). The first four weeks we were staying at a hostel situated close to the town of Baeza, secondary rain forest, waterfalls and Cosanga river. In the river we were lucky enough to encounter torrent ducks which are very rare in the whole of South America. So torrent ducks became our group project. I really enjoyed those hours sitting on a rock by the river and just watching in awe their amazing lifestyle as these small birds dived in to strong currents in search of food. We did several hikes to the surrounding forest and its waterfalls. It was amazing. The ground was so muddy that everyone was simply wearing wellies and up to their knees in mud. My worst fear at that time photographed it every single hour every night. We still have all the data handling awaiting us but it was a very interesting project right from the start. We saw an unbelievable amount of huge moths and beetles that we would have missed otherwise. And most of them stayed on the sheet through the day. Pauliina collecting behavioural data on torrent ducks. Photo by Kat Powell, expedition leader turned out to be losing my welly to the mud. There were not so many mammals around since it is the highlands and secondary forest. But this turned out to be a good thing for me because I have always been only focused on mammals and now my eyes opened to all the insects that were around in unbelievable shapes, colours and numbers. I am also grateful that I started to focus on the amazing world of plants and trees out there! For the second part of our expedition we moved to Yanayacu, a biological research centre. It is only 5+ km from our first place but a 45 minute walk from the road surrounded by national park and many bird watching sites. There we carried on with individual projects and I tried to carry on with the torrent ducks because I had heard they are also seen over there. But despite several attempts I never found the ducks over there. Our new group project was the nocturnal insect project: we put up a white sheet with a light on and About my personal adventures. One day I went to the river on my own looking for the ducks, as I often did. But then it happened, just before returning to the centre I took one wrong turn to a path I didn’t know... and I got lost. When I realised I was lost my mistake was to carry on instead of trying to find my way back. After walking for a long time and aware that it would be dark soon I made a decision to go in to the river because that was the only way I knew – the river would eventually take me back to where I started. And walking in the dense forest was impossible without a machete. I didn’t have any equipment with me since I had only gone out for the afternoon, thinking I would stay on the path... I filled my water bottle from a waterfall and proceeded in the river... After maybe a good two hours in the river it became dark, and I had to accept the fact that I could not 7 Amazon expedition Feature find my way back. So I had to get up from the river and spend the night in the jungle, alone. Wow, that was some experience... I laid down in this sheltered pit that seemed like some animal had used it before. My trousers and shoes were completely soaked so I had to take them off. It didn’t rain much that night and since I was close to the river I only listened to the sound of the water and was not so scared of the sounds of the jungle. But it was definitely the longest and coldest night of my whole life..!!! The sun sets at 7pm and rises at 6.30am. Loooong wait... And it was freezing cold. I had to get up every 20 minutes to exercise so I wouldn’t freeze! All night I was wondering if the others are looking for me and thinking that if they are they must be worried sick. I knew how bad the bigger river looks with its huge currents. But I was ok, my only worry was the cold. In the morning I put on the wet trousers and shoes and headed into the river again. After a couple of hours I finally came to the point I had been waiting to see: a little bridge downstream. Only I found out that there must be another bridge since I still couldn’t find my way to the familiar path... So I decided to stay where I was and 8 just wait. After some time (feeling desperation rising within me) the team who had been looking for me, and worried sick, found me. Happy ending! I heard that there were also 10 local Ecuadorians looking for me all over the river, upstream and downstream. Back at the centre I had the longest hot shower and slept for almost 16 hours. Next day I realised how lucky I had actually been: two of my team members had seen a jaguar close to where I had slept. About being a vegan in the Amazon. It was so very sad to see with my own eyes how much destruction eating meat and consuming dairy causes to the environment. In the Oriente, cattle is the number one reason for the destruction of the forest. And you could see it everywhere. Where there used to be primary forest now is only secondary or no forest at all: just cattle. And as we have here, the same over there: calves without mothers, mothers without calves... The calves that were fortunate enough to be with their mothers had a muzzle on so that they won’t be able to suckle and that leaves more milk for people. I left a week earlier than the others, as I had planned from the beginning, to go travelling on my own. I had three more weeks before I was supposed to return to England. I had a wonderful time. When I went to Northern Peru I stayed with the family of a new friend I had met. The families were so poor it was a mind altering experience for me. I felt so incredibly fortunate to have the chance to be in their lives for a moment. Christmas/Chaplaincy Christmas at Cambridge The Chaplaincy in Cambridge is delighted at the success of Eid and Diwali and hopes that Christmas will be an equal success. On Monday 3rd December we shall light the campus Christmas tree at 4.45pm. This will be in Theatre Square. We shall sing some carols and then say a prayer before the tree. Then there will be mulled wine and mince pies. Come and sing along. Then just a few days before I was supposed to return to Quito and England I had an accident. I was in the Andes with a friend of mine driving his motorcycle, heading to the coast of Southern Ecuador. We had stopped by the side of the road. We were stationary and just ready to continue again. That’s why I had my helmet on when the car hit me... I flew across the air for 15 metres! I went unconscious and my friend had a hard time getting help (the car ran, like they often do) and had to wait quite a while for the police and the ambulance. Then I got to experience even that side of Ecuador. Our Carol Service will be on Thursday 13th December at 4.15pm. This will be held in Zion Baptist Church right next to the campus in East Road. The service will rehearse the story of the birth of Jesus and reflect on its meaning for us today. There will be a chance to sing favourite carols and to hear Anglia Gospel Choir and other pieces. Again there will be mulled wine and mince pies afterwards. The SU will hold their XXXmas Party on Friday 14th December. If you go, look out for Mary and Joseph who have found a baby-sitter for the night so that they can join in the celebrations for their Son’s birthday. On a different note, Jane Goodall the ‘chimp-lady’ will be visiting Anglia Ruskin University on Tuesday 4th December at the invitation of Roots and Shoots Society. We are expecting Jane to speak in the Mumford Theatre at about midday. Free tickets are available from the SU office. She may also be available for signing books and general conversation at the time of Soup on the Run, the regular charity lunch on Tuesdays at 11.50–1.30 in Helmore Street. Christmas at Chelmsford University carol service for students and staff in Chelmsford Cathedral at 5pm on Monday 3rd December, followed by refreshments in the Cathedral. Christmas party in the Chaplaincy Centre, Sunday 9th December from 5pm. The Chaplaincy Centre (90 Ransomes Way on the Rivermead campus) will be open every day throughout the Christmas and New Year season offering Christmas snacks and hospitality. Ivor Moody Chaplain, Chelmsford Nigel Cooper Chaplain, Cambridge The wildest thing is that I’m fine – I have a trauma of coxae, but no fractures! Incredible, especially when there are so many people who say you need to drink milk and eat meat for healthy bones. I cannot believe how lucky I am. But it took me almost two weeks to get fit enough to fly home. During that time the locals were so helpful and kind, I never needed to feel lonely. So this is my story. Pauliina Laurila 9 Christmas/Overindulgence Overindulgence: the downside Over the past month Student Support Services has been running a Mental Health Awareness road show at our Cambridge and Chelmsford campuses, handing out smiley face stickers, happy cakes (of the safe kind!) and non-alcoholic drinks. Although these were intended to be fun events, the message behind the smiley faces was nevertheless a serious one. Hospital admissions for alcohol and drug-related problems soar during the festive season, and there’s no doubt that many people use the annual Christmas and New Year celebrations as an opportunity for massive overindulgence. Too much turkey is one thing, but binge-drinking and drug-use can lead to many problems, not least financial ones, and have some potentially serious consequences for your health and well-being. ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah’, you may be thinking, but read on. Did you know that abusing alcohol or taking recreational drugs can have serious long-term consequences for your physical and mental health? Whether you drink too much, or partake in ‘recreational’ drug use, the outcomes are not all pleasant… irritability, impaired thinking, increased heart rate and anxiety to name but a few. 5 reasons why you really don’t want to drink too much too often A few sobering facts about the links between drink/drugs and mental illness 1 Alcohol 2 You may feel foggy headed and lethargic all morning after a really heavy bout of drinking, perhaps all afternoon too… not really the best preparation for a day of study. 3 Excessive alcohol consumption can affect your looks – girls, you may be concerned to hear that too much booze causes your skin to age prematurely and you may find yourself getting ugly red spider veins across your cheeks and nose. Guys, don’t forget that beer guts and the eau de ‘stale booze’ odour are never ‘in’. All in all, best to keep alcohol within sensible limits. 4 Please be aware that what you are putting into your body may feel good at the time, but can have dire consequences for your future. Please read on…. 5 10 Too much drink distorts the way your brain cells work and you need every one of those little beauties for your time at University, if you want to be successful in your studies and get the degree you’re aiming for. Alcohol can also affect your sex drive – men may experience ‘brewers’ droop’, as it’s known in the trade, and women may find their sex drive decreasing. However, and most importantly, too much alcohol affects your ability to make rational decisions… you could end up thinking ‘Will it really matter that I haven’t got a condom, because she is really hot?’, or wake up the next morning thinking ‘Why am I be in bed with this man?’ For those who drive into University, you could well be over the limit on the morning after a night before. Alcohol impairs judgement and slows response times, and this could lead you to make bad decisions when driving, leaving you to face a hefty fine, or the removal of your licence, if you get stopped and breathalysed, serious injury or worse… • Regular drinking can leave a person tired and depressed. There is evidence that alcohol changes the chemistry of the brain itself and that this increases the risk of depression. • Regular drinking can make life depressing – family arguments, poor work, unreliable memory and sexual problems. • If we drink alcohol to relieve anxiety and depression, we could become more depressed. • Self-harm and suicide are much more common in people who have alcohol problems. • Psychosis: long–term drinkers can start to hear voices. Cannabis • All forms of cannabis are mind-altering. In other words, they change how the brain works. Where can you find help and support? If you do feel like you’ve got a problem with drink or drugs there are a whole range of people in Student Support Services on both campuses willing to give confidential advice and support. We will be able to point you in the right direction to get the correct support for you! Call in, or phone us on: Chelmsford: 0845 196 4340/4242 Cambridge: 0845 196 2298/2598 And finally Despite appearances to the contrary, we are not telling you not to have a good time this Christmas, just do it in moderation and above all do it safely. Remember: it’s your body, your night out, your responsibility. Merry Christmas from everyone at Student Support Services! Debbie Burden Student Support Services, Chelmsford • Cannabis may interfere with a person’s capacity to concentrate, organise and use information. • Cannabis can leave users feeling apathetic, lacking in energy and motivation. • Around 1 in 10 cannabis users have unpleasant experiences, including confusion, hallucinations, anxiety and paranoia. • If you already have a mental illness, using cannabis can make things much worse. 11 Christmas/Charity Assessment Helping the lonely in Cambridge What exactly is Contact? A Contact Christmas dinner – photo by Philip Mynott Contact is a student run charity that aims to look after elderly and housebound people who live in Cambridge and might be lonely from day to day. It involves students from Anglia Ruskin University as well as from Cambridge University. Part of this work includes giving ‘parties’ at the end of every term. It was this that I got involved in first. At Girton College one Thursday afternoon in December, we gave a Christmas dinner to about sixty people. We also had some break dancers and ballet dancers providing some entertainment over the meal. My job included helping with wheelchairs from the fleet of taxis to the hall, serving the Christmas dinner and then sitting and chatting with some of the elderly people. Everyone invited was full of Christmas cheer and thought the occasion was fantastic. Many of these people live alone and for some this was the only Christmas dinner they had that year. It felt very worthwhile to be part of this event and spurred me on to join the visiting service that Contact also arranges. To apply for the visiting service I had to have a Criminal Records Bureau (CRB), check which Contact insist on to protect those they work with. This isn’t nearly as sinister as it sounds and simply involved me 12 showing some ID documents to the Contact Administrator, who arranged everything else. I was then given the phone number of a lady who lives near to me. Contact tries to place students with people they share interests with and this worked well for me. I am a medical student and the lady I visit used to be a nurse so we can compare times and experiences which is interesting for us both. We also share a love of travel and have visited places all over the world in our conversations. The lady I visit is wheelchair bound and on a couple of occasions we have been to the theatre in Cambridge. This was challenging with a wheelchair but well worth it to see the pleasure it gave! I have been a visitor for the past two years and the two of us now have a great relationship. Every Monday evening that I visit I value the chance to forget about work and university and just enjoy making somebody else’s day. Last April I joined the Contact committee to continue the work Contact does as I think helping others is such an important aspect of life. For people who are lonely, an hour a week and the occasional party can make a real difference. It’s also been a valuable experience for me. I’ve learnt a lot about someone else’s life and now I find it easier to pick up a conversation with people older than myself. I also enjoy the quiet evenings chatting and watching television. If you’d like to join our volunteer team, we’d love to have you. There are always lots more people who need visitors and extra hands at parties are always welcome. No experience is required – all you need is a keen and friendly spirit! Check out: www.MakeContact.org.uk Or, if you have any questions: rg315@cam.ac.uk Rachel Gottschalk, on behalf of Contact What to do to deal with problems with assessments The submission of an assignment triggers a large volume of activity within Faculties and the Registry. We use the Academic Regulations www.anglia.ac.uk/anet/academic/ public/academic_regulations.doc to ensure that all due processes are followed so that all students have a fair and equal chance to succeed. As students you may find it useful to consult your abridged version of the Assessment Regs (www.anglia.ac.uk/ anet/students/newregs/AssessRegs_ 0707.doc) Do Not Forget the Following: 1. Check that you have followed the guidelines in your module guide and consulted your module tutor with your queries. 2. Check the library website for guidelines on referencing – http://libweb.anglia.ac.uk/ referencing/referencing.htm 3. Tell your Student Adviser if you have any problem affecting your learning and your ability to submit on time. Dates for submission appear in your module guide, together with the assessment criteria. Such criteria are derived from the: Code of Practice on Assessment of Students www.anglia.ac.uk/anet/academic/ public/assessment_revisedjan07.pdf but may be made specific to subjects/assessments. 4. Print a coversheet for each module from your e-vision account. If you have any doubts at all about your assignment see your module tutor. The name of this academic member of staff and their contact details will be on your module guide. 7. Make sure you meet the deadline and get the assignment to the appropriate Student Information Centre. If you have any special circumstances which might affect your performance in assessment contact your Student Adviser via the following link: www.anglia.ac.uk/ ruskin/en/home/ central/stuadv.html. If you are struggling to complete assignments because of health or personal circumstances you may be eligible to claim mitigation. Your student adviser will discuss this with you but you must claim within five working days of the due date for the assignment. You will have to provide evidence to support your claim. See Assessment Regulations Section 7. Marking be within 20 working days (30 working days for Major Projects). Your Faculty will tell you how to obtain this. Marks will be provisional and cannot be confirmed until the Assessment Panel. What happens if I fail? Get help from your module tutor as soon as possible and make sure you know when the resubmission date is – see your e-vision account. Also, the Academic Regulations have a whole series of measures to help in these circumstances. These are: 5. Complete a receipt for each module submitted (these can be obtained from the Student Information Centre). 1. Every module allows a second attempt except if you are eligible for compensation and then you might not have to resubmit. 6. Ensure both are attached firmly to your assignment before submitting. 2. Even if you fail a module twice it may be possible to help if your degree pathway allows you to take alternative modules to make up the credit. The limit to this within a degree is 60 credits in total and 30 in any one level/ year. 1. All Faculties mark according to their module marking criteria within the module guide. 2. All first markers have a sample of their marks checked by another academic. 3. A sample of all level two and above work is sent to external examiners. The Twenty Day Rule Students are entitled to receive written feedback on their work and this must 3. If you have failed compulsory modules you may be able to transfer to the Faculty Framework degree. 4. Remember our procedures for extensions and mitigation – you should use where appropriate. And Finally Remember, if you have a disability or specific learning difficulty you may want to seek advice from our Learning Support and Disability Resources Teams. Good Luck! 13 Student Focus Following my difficulties finding a student volunteer for the last issue, I decided to take a more sensible approach for the second issue, so I practised what I preached by using one of the services I spend so much time promoting and asked the Employment Bureau in Chelmsford to find me a suitable candidate. My search criteria were vague; I needed a male, Chelmsford based student (to balance up last issue’s female Cambridge based one), preferably photogenic, and willing to give up an hour of their time and have their face splashed all over their University. (By the way, I in no way wish to imply that non photogenic students will not be featured here – I have nothing against the non photogenic, indeed I count myself as one of their number, and surely we are what Photoshop was put on this earth for? It just so happens that the first two students featured in the mag have been extremely good looking, without the aid of electronic manipulation of their images.) Student Focus Osama Naji 14 Much to their credit, Brenton and his colleagues from the Employment Bureau, came up with the perfect candidate and set up a meeting for the following week. An unsolicited testimonial here for the Employment Bureau – if you haven’t already investigated opportunities for part-time work during your study or post-graduate employment, make contact with them now, they are good! Back to For Your Information, Osama Naji is a second year Architecture student based at Chelmsford. His accent is a strange international amalgam, with hints of many accents and yet also somehow impeccably English. More impeccably English than most English people’s accents in fact. This is the result of an early education at International School in Saudi, where the mixture of nationalities also instilled in Osama a knowledge, respect and tolerance of different cultures. Osama came to Chelmsford following 18 months in Berlin, staying with a cousin and studying graphic design. He is a truly international student then. Another benefit to Osama of such a cosmopolitan background seems to be a high level of self sufficiency; an ability to adapt to different surroundings and people, and a capacity to organise himself and his workload with ease. During his first year at Anglia, Osama stayed in the student village at Chelmsford. Here he found a friendly crowd of international students, all in the same boat and all a long way from home – an ideal situation for creating firm and lasting friendships. Further relationships were forged via participation in sports; football and rugby – my mention of cricket merely raised a wry smile; too parochial a sport for such a cosmopolitan man perhaps. Osama’s membership of the Arab Society at Anglia Ruskin has also provided him with a strong support network. This second year finds him sharing private accommodation with friends, a change that came about mainly for financial reasons. I wondered how the organisation of courses and teaching at Anglia compared to that of other institutions. On Osama’s course here at Anglia the first year was a gentle affair, easing the student into study. Once eased in however, the workload has reportedly doubled in the second year. In Germany, by contrast, the first year was tough – designed to filter out those not up to speed rather than to bring them gently up to the necessary level. There are merits in both approaches, I suppose. To add to the time pressures of his second year, Osama has taken on a part time job at Chelmsford’s finest Multiplex, to complement the odd pieces of work found for him by the Employment Bureau (EB). Osama, like me and many others I’m sure, needs this extra pressure as an incentive to get his time organised and his work done quickly. There’s nothing like the knowledge that you have a fixed period of time in which to get an assignment done for concentrating the mind. You have my solemn assurance that the subjects for these student focus articles are selected randomly and not on the basis of their capacity for sycophancy. Despite this, Osama like Julia in the last issue has very few bad things to say about Anglia Ruskin University. He finds the library facilities excellent; he is aware of the services offered by Student Support and is a keen user and advocate of the Employer Mentoring scheme (if you don’t know about this, and you’re a 2nd year student in AIBS or Law, get in touch with Jan Haldane [Chelmsford] and Katie Morris [Cambridge] – check on ANET for contact details). Osama finds the new buildings at Rivermead welldesigned and ecologically sound – praise indeed from a student of architecture. He is aware of, and a user of the various sources of information, WebCT, Anet, the new information screens and the new email arrangements. I even tested him on this last one by contacting him via his new email address, and of course he responded to my email and passed the test. As a conclusion to our interview, I asked Osama the standard survey type questions – would he recommend Anglia to his friends? The answer was yes. Name one of his university’s best selling points. For such a widely travelled student, Osama’s response was perhaps not surprising – Chelmsford’s location half an hour from London, and from Stansted airport and through here, access to the rest of the world. I demanded at least one small criticism and one did emerge – the need for more contact with tutors, especially in order to receive and discuss feedback. My thanks to Osama for giving up his time for this interview. He didn’t even take me up on my offer of a cup of coffee. Ruth Andrews 15 Faculty Focus Within the faculty you will find a comprehensive range of courses ranging from nursing, midwifery and social policy to operating department practice, social work and social care education. All range from undergraduate to postgraduate study levels and are delivered in a flexible manner where possible to enable part-time study, and accommodate a working and/or family life. The new William Harvey Building on the Rivermead campus, Chelmsford The Faculty of Health and Social Care (FHSC) The faculty was established in 2007 and so is the newest, and largest faculty at Anglia Ruskin University. With over 8,000 students, Anglia Ruskin University’s Faculty of Health and Social Care (FHSC) is the largest graduate provider of health education in the East of England. The faculty’s vision is to improve the health and social care of individuals and communities within Cambridgeshire and Essex 16 through the delivery of highquality education, research and consultancy. Our mission is to strengthen and expand the East of England health and social care workforce of the future, and to continue to build on the faculty’s local, national and international reputation and to ensure that we continue to provide NHS Trusts and regional businesses with high quality research and high quality professional graduates. The faculty is based across two campuses in Cambridge, at East Road and Fulbourn, within the new and purpose built William Harvey building on the Rivermead Campus at Chelmsford and we also have a campus in Peterborough. This unique geographical spread enables us to deliver our vision of providing health and social care education across the region and offers a distinct advantage to locally-based students and businesses. Also available is an extensive variety of exciting and innovative high-profile conferences, weekend courses, workshops and study days. Professional taught Doctorates, PhD research programmes and bespoke work with the health services, local authorities, private or independent sectors all continue to exceed the demands of health and social care practitioners. The Departments We have six departments with staff delivering the portfolio of courses which provide opportunities for joint working, inter-professional links and new networks. The departments work with each other to facilitate high-quality responsive provision in line with changing service requirements in the health and social care environment. They are as follows: • Acute Care • Allied Health and Interprofessional Learning • Child and Family Health • Intermediate and Continuing Care • Mental Health and Learning Disabilities • Social Studies and Primary Care The departmental structure of the Faculty of Health and Social Care is both straightforward and innovative. It creates an environment that enables all staff to work in partnership to maximise their potential to develop. Promotion and delivery of all work within the faculty is actioned in a proactive manner, with a clear management presence across all campus locations to ensure that all faculty staff feel valued and supported. Facilities Across all of our sites we have modern well equipped teaching facilities that enable students to develop key skills in a safe and supportive educational environment. We recently opened a new Health and Social Care building in Chelmsford. This was a joint venture with Essex Workforce Development Confederation. This new style of health education delivery ensures that newly qualified professionals will be work-ready from the first day they start employment. The building has cutting edge simulated clinical environments, giving students the opportunity to get hands on experience in a variety of settings. All our students are benefiting from this fantastic facility including nurses, midwives, operating department practitioners, complementary therapists and counsellors. Research activity Research is an integral part of the Faculty of Health and Social Care. The faculty provides a creative and energetic environment for undertaking research that addresses real issues across the full spectrum of health and social care. Research in the faculty unites academics, researchers, postgraduate students, research users and service users in a shared community of enquiry. The faculty’s reputation for undertaking high quality, meaningful and timely research continues to grow. Researchers within the faculty are involved in multiple collaborations with local, national and international agencies in the statutory and voluntary sectors. Currently, we are working on externally funded projects in the following areas, mental health, oncology and social policy with funding from organisations such as the Department of Health, Essex County Council, Mental Health Foundation, The Home Office and South Essex Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust. There are also a number of international collaborations with partners in Israel, Russia, the Ukraine, Canada, and the United States of America. Faculty researchers have also developed considerable experience and a growing reputation in the use of multiple research methods, including participatory inquiry and collaboration with service users. Further information Please visit our website www.anglia.ac.uk/fhsc for details about campus location, facilities or our research and consultancy. 17 12 Staff Focus Gill Betmead is possibly the perfect subject for an interview. No questions are needed; Gill takes you through her life (which is an interesting one), her career (ditto), the changes she has seen at Anglia (which are many) and her views on students and the help that the careers service can offer them (which is great). And she takes you through all this with an infectious energy and enthusiasm and obviously loves her job. And she takes a marvellous photo and looks at least 15 years younger than her age. A lesser person might be jealous; I was just grateful to have found such a wonderful subject. And possibly a little bit jealous. Gill is such an effective and empathetic careers adviser partly because of her own chequered career; she knows how soul destroying it can be to find yourself in the wrong job and how fulfilling the right one can be once you find it. Hence helping people to find it is her passion. Those of you lucky enough to know Gill may be surprised to learn that she began her career as a branch librarian at Birchington on Sea library. In fact, if you were to devise a job and a location totally unsuited to Gill, I would suggest that this would be it. I hasten to add here that I mean no disrespect to librarians – my best friend is one in fact – and today it is a whizzy, hi tech, interactive and exciting career. Thirty years ago however, I should imagine it was more like its stereotype – ladies with hair buns and glasses armed with date stamps urging you to keep quiet. Not Gill at all really. I googled Birchington on Sea and the websites I found were for a bowls club and a guide to what trains could be spotted there. Enough said. Despite this, Gill lasted three years in this classic square peg in a round hole post, and I should imagine did much to enliven the lives of Birchington’s largely retired population. Gill Betmead Cambridge Careers Team Leader 18 Marriage and a move to Hertfordshire saved Gill from this quiet seaside town and led her to a post as a library/resources assistant at a secondary school. This was a slightly squarer hole for our square peg and Gill found that she enjoyed helping students with their homework and to fill in their UCAS applications. Following a break to have children however, and despite her vow never to work in a library again Gill found herself in a job in the library of Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology (CCAT), an institution for which nearly 30 years and five name changes later (for the college, not for her) she still works. Gill has seen many changes as the institution evolved from CCAT to Anglia Ruskin University, the biggest of which is the development of student support services to complement the academic provision. It is as part of these support services that Gill now works, following counselling training, voluntary work with offenders and a Diploma in Educational Guidance for Adults. Living proof then that the perfect job does exist, and that you don’t necessarily find it via a direct route; Gill’s route to her post as a Careers Adviser was far from direct. And it does seem to be her perfect job – one she is passionate about and one she looks forward to doing every day. Part of this is due to Gill’s relationship with her colleagues and the calibre of these colleagues in Student Support Services. It is partly due to the job itself; the fact that Gill never knows what each day will bring. If a student comes in to Gill expressing a burning desire to be an embalmer (and they have done by all accounts), then Gill will do her utmost to research the route into this noble profession and help the student fulfil their (rather strange) ambition. I came away from the interview full of enthusiasm, feeling that the world was my oyster careers-wise. And if I feel like that, as a forty something person who is still not quite sure what she wants to do when she grows up, then imagine how enthused a student must be. I urge you to make an appointment with the careers service soon. Don’t, as many do, wait until your final year. And form an orderly queue behind me. Ruth Andrews How to access the Careers Service in Cambridge and Chelmsford We put as much information as we can online so you can access it 24/7. Just go to www.anglia.ac.uk/careers and follow the links. Or phone to make an appointment on: Cambridge – Helmore 341, Tel: 0845 196 2298/2598 Chelmsford – 2nd floor Tindal (above the bar), 0845 196 4242/4240 19 Services/Environment Save on Travel There are discounts available on bus travel1 and at local cycle shops and we run cycle training schemes throughout the year.2 Help green our University! Our Environment team is responsible for managing waste, travel and energy use at Anglia Ruskin University. We are committed to eliminating, preventing or minimising our University’s impact on the environment. Here is an outline of how you can become actively involved: Have you switched off? You can save energy at home (University or private accommodation) by: • Switching off lights when not needed • Switching off electrical items such as TVs and computers • Unplugging phone chargers • Using your water wisely Did you know that… 95% of the energy used by mobile phone chargers in the UK is wasted energy? Only 5% is actually used to charge the phones – they still use power when left plugged in so don’t forget to unplug your charger! Standby still uses power so please remember to Switch Off rather than use standby! Save 1/3 on train fares with a young person’s railcard (ages 16–25 and students aged 26 or over in full time education) See www.youngpersons-railcard.co.uk If you need cycling maps for Chelmsford or Cambridge please contact us. 20 ✓ Yes! Plastic bottles only Water bottles Yoghurt pots Fizzy drink bottles Sandwich packaging Milk containers Plastic drink cups Squash bottles Drink cartons Washing up bottles (rinsed out) Food packaging Food and drink cans Drinks cans Plastic bottles Clean food cans Glass bottles and jars Clean foil Paper Cardboard We produced approximately 3409 tonnes of waste last year and approximately 14% was recycled.3 A quick guide to what can be put into the bins is on the next page. No! Bleach bottles (rinsed out) What a load of rubbish Help us to recycle more and send less rubbish to landfill by using our recycling facilities on campus and in our accommodation. ✗ What can be recycled? We are also due to launch a car sharing scheme so that you can share your journey to University. This will help you save carbon emissions and costs. Watch out for more details. General waste Crisp packets Mixed glass Glass bottles Plastic bottles Glass jars Food & drink cans General waste Paper Costa Coffee cups Contact details; carla.shaw@anglia.ac.uk mark.norman@anglia.ac.uk Magazines Laminated paper Pamphlets Label backing sheets Brochures Sticky labels Further information can be found on our website; www.anglia.ac.uk/environment Newspapers Post it notes Envelopes (remove windows) Tissues/hand towels Clean cardboard Paper Please flat pack General waste 1 • Dressing appropriately for the season – i.e. wear a jumper if you are cold rather than adjusting the heating Recycling Guide Essex campus only Paper Cardboard 2 Essex campus only but we hope to launch in Cambridge soon! 3 Waste figures do not include skips that leave our site but are from our general waste streams Cardboard with foodstuff 21 Services/Employment Services/Library The Employment Bureau – University Library Your recruitment team 24 Hour Opening On campus to help you find a permanent job after graduation! David Negus, a 2007 graduate in Multimedia Systems The Anglia Ruskin Destination of Leavers Survey 2005/6 produced in association with HESA (Higher Education Statistics Agency) showed that 93% of Anglia graduate respondents successfully entered employment, or continued their education. This is an increase on the previous year’s figure of 90%. Without a doubt, these are impressive results. But behind the statistics there are individual stories to tell and we thought we would share a couple of the many successful placements made by the Employment Bureau in recent months. David’s employer, CGEye (a specialist in 3D computergenerated imagery), contacted the Employment Bureau in August with details of a vacancy for a Graphic Designer that needed to be filled urgently. Within two days, Stephanie, the Graduate Recruitment Consultant in Chelmsford, had three interviews arranged and one day later David was offered the job! As you can see from his comments below, David was delighted: Anglia Ruskin Enterprise “I doubt very much that without your help I’d have got a job like the one I was offered last week. I accepted the job straight away and couldn’t be happier. A big thank-you to Sarah and Stephanie who were very helpful and really sincere in their efforts”. Chelmsford Cambridge & David Negus, BA Multimedia Systems ureau Employment B ent team Your recruitm work for Temporary t Jobs for Permanen t Building, Michael Ashcrof ead Campus rm ve Ri , on pti Rece Campus 8, Cambridge & Helmore 00 45 196 3616 Chelmsford: 08 45 196 2564 08 : ge rid Camb k/eb www.anglia.ac.u .uk/e www.anglia.ac 07100205 22 b However, not all job placements are so straightforward! Often the process of sending CVs, arranging interviews and organising assessments can take several weeks to organise. This is when the recruitment consultants at the Employment Bureau really benefit students and graduates as they liaise closely between potential employer and employee. Natalia graduated in 2007 with a BA (Hons) Business Management and was keen to pursue a career that would make use of the skills and knowledge acquired during the course of her studies. It took a few months and several interviews before Natalia found a job which suited her career aspirations, salary expectations and was based within the right geographical region for her. Now she is settled into a challenging role and making great progress in her career. “As a recent graduate, I was becoming more and more stressed with looking for a job; having registered with a number of recruitment agencies, I still received only limited response. I realised that the Employment Bureau at Anglia Ruskin University would be best positioned to deal with my situation as they specialise in the placement of graduates. They have extensive contacts in the field, and were able to line up a number of interview appointments for me straight away. I really enjoyed working with them, the whole process was tailored according to my requirements and I was regularly contacted with the feedback and information about potential placements. Now, I’m pleased to say that I have found a great job in Business Management! I would recommend every student to register with the Employment Bureau as soon as possible, and make it the starting point of the job searching process. You might not need to look any further, and land your dream job with minimum effort!” Natalia McDonagh, BA (Hons) Business Management 2007 Contact details for the Employment Bureau team and current vacancies can be found on the Employment Bureau website at www.anglia.ac.uk/eb. For those of you who may struggle to find the spare time to register during the week, Sarah White, the Business Development Manager for the Employment Bureau will be opening the Chelmsford office on the following Saturdays in order to interview/advise 2008 graduates: 19th January, 9th February, 1st March, 29th March, 26th April and 17th May 2008. To book an appointment, please email Sarah on s.white@anglia.ac.uk or call direct on 0845 196 3609. Based at Cambridge? Deadlines pressing? The 24 hour pilot at the Cambridge Library may help. We are open continuously from 8.30 am on Monday through to 12 midnight on Friday, every week until the Christmas break. On these days, the staffed service runs from 8.30 am to 9 pm (5 pm on Friday) with the full range of self-service provision for the rest of the time. The trial will be reviewed in the light of usage. Library and study skills – get smart! The University Library and Student Support Services offer a programme of 30 minute drop-in sessions to enable you to improve your study and information-finding skills. These cover a range of topics including • Making sense of your reading lists • Using journals • The Digital Library, or how to use the library without leaving your PC • Researching your assignment • Essay writing • Reading for academic purposes • Exams and revision The sessions are full of valuable tips, they will help you to study more effectively, and they will save you time and effort in the future. For details of programme content and times, check University Library noticeboards or the website under Help & Advice: Training Sessions (libweb.anglia.ac.uk/ helpdesk/train.htm). Could help you get better grades! If you missed it… If you are a new or a returning student, and you missed (or have completely forgotten) your introduction to the library, try the online Welcome pages on our website at General Information: Welcome for New Users (libweb.anglia.ac.uk/ induction/video.htm). These contain all the basic information you need to get you going with using library services for your studies. 23 Services/International Services/Money International Student Support Student Money Advice & Rights Information for International students Cambridge Are you staying in the UK over the Christmas holidays? If you are staying in the UK during the Christmas holidays you might like to celebrate with other students at the International Students House (ISH) in London. Located near Oxford Street ISH offers accommodation from £11.99 – £20.00 per night from 16 December – 26 December plus a range of traditional events for Christmas Day (25th December – including Christmas dinner) and Boxing Day (26th December). Further details can be found at www.ish.org.uk/xmas.html. International student house is open all year (including New Years Eve) and is cheap place to stay overnight in central London. Visit their website for booking information. Alternatively, what about joining the world famous New Years Eve (Hogmanay) celebrations in Edinburgh? International Friends is organising a trip from 30th December – 2 January. Travel from Cambridge or London, accommodation and the all important street pass from £229. Further details are available at www.internationalfriends.co.uk. Bookings can be made via the Student Union in the Helmore Building in Cambridge or directly by calling 01223 244555. In Chelmsford there will be a Christmas party in the Chaplaincy 24 centre, 90 Ransomes Way on Sunday 9th December from 5pm, and the Centre will be open throughout Christmas and the New Year offering Christmas snacks and drinks etc and an open invitation to use the facilities, especially the television! If you are staying in Cambridge, and have some free time on Christmas Eve (24th December) you may like to attend the famous Nine Lessons and Carols service in Kings College Chapel. This is a very popular event and to ensure you gain entry you need to join the queue by 9.30 am for entry into the Chapel at 13.30. This service is broadcast on national television! Further details are available at: www.kings.cam.ac.uk/chapel/ ninelessons/index.html There will be other activities over the Christmas break that were not confirmed at the time of going to press. If you are staying in Cambridge or Chelmsford over Christmas then leave your contact details with your International Student Adviser: Jean Yeadon (Cambridge campus – HEL 122) Rachel Shilling (Chelmsford campus – 2nd Floor Tindal) who will then let you know what’s happening. questionnaire you received in November. In April there will be a follow up questionnaire which will look more at the experience you have had on your particular course. The information you give is invaluable when helping us improve the student experience. A new International Society in Chelmsford • Entitlement to student loans and grants Would you like to join an international society in Chelmsford? One of our postgraduate students would like to set up a society with the help of the Student Union. If you are interested in the idea and would like to join please e-mail international@angliastudent.com. • Access to Learning Fund Whatever you do over the Christmas break, enjoy yourself! • Income and council tax International Student Satisfaction Survey Many thanks to those who took the time to complete the The Student Money Advice and Rights team on the Cambridge campus is based in Student Support Services on the third floor of the Helmore building (Hel 341). We provide advice and assistance over a wide range of financial matters relating to students including: Caroline Shanahan, Head of International Student Support • Funding for part-time and postgraduate students • Welfare benefits • Childcare funding • Money management Chelmsford and see us straight away – we are not miracle workers but we will do our best to help you sort things out! Julia Manley Senior Student Money Adviser 0845 196 2288 j.l.manley@anglia.ac.uk Rodney Blair Student Money Adviser 0845 196 2600 r.blair@anglia.ac.uk Matt Hayler Access to Learning Fund Administrator 0845 196 2975 m.hayler@anglia.ac.uk Hannah Newham Administrator 0845 196 2389 h.j.newham@anglia.ac.uk Check out our budget planner on our website www.anglia.ac.uk/ruskin/en/home/ central/studentsupport/services/ financial/cambridge.html and, if you missed our money management workshops in Welcome Week but wished you hadn’t, we are running some more sessions in the New Year – info about dates and times will be available later in December. We operate a daily drop-in session between 10.00am and 2.00pm for quick queries; appointments can be made at other times. If you are having a financial crisis, or can see one looming on the horizon, come The Student Money and Advice Team at Cambridge – they’re not as scary as they look By the time you read this, you may have seen members of the Student Money Advice & Rights Team on the Chelmsford campus dressed up in overalls promoting our ‘Money MOT’ campaign. As a follow up to that, we will be promoting some more campaigns in the New Year, so do look out for us! In January we will be running an event to make students aware of Trusts and Charities they may be able to apply to for extra funds (handy after the expense of Christmas!) There are numerous trusts and charities that give small grants to students. If you miss our event in January, or just can’t wait until then, do come and visit us at Student Support Services, 2nd Floor, Tindal, Rivermead Campus where you can pick up one of our information leaflets about applying to Trusts and Charities, have a chat with a Student Money Adviser or use a computer programme called Funderfinder. This has a database of trusts and charities that you can research. In March we will be encouraging you to get to grips with your money with our ‘Spring Clean Your Finances’ campaign so please get involved with that when you see us, after all everyone’s finances could do with a clean up! We hope Kim & Aggie would be impressed!! 25 Ruskin Gallery Letters Anglia Ruskin exhibition pays tribute to St Trinian’s originator Ronald Searle Cambridge Evening News) from 1935–39 (where his predecessor was Sidney Moon) and Granta. They were signed R.W.F. Searle. As cameras are rolling on the latest film in the St Trinian’s saga, Anglia Ruskin University is preparing to pay tribute to the originator of the cartoons, on which the films are based in the form of a stunning exhibition of his life’s work. The first film, staring Alastair Sim and Joyce Grenfell, was made in 1954 and it chronicled the unruly adventures of the ‘school for young ladies’. Now being revisited by top names including Rupert Everett, Colin Firth, Russell Brand and Stephen Fry, it is bringing Ronald Searle, a former student of the Cambridge School of Art which now sits at the heart of Anglia Ruskin University, back into the media spotlight. The exhibition Ronald Searle – A Celebration will be open on 10 January at the Ruskin Gallery on the University’s Cambridge campus, to follow the launch of the film, planned for release on 21 December 2007. The show will feature the legendary graphic artist’s St Trinian’s cartoons along with his famous political sketches and truly sobering wartime illustrations. Ronald Searle has been described as the greatest graphic artist of our time. His distinctive brand of visual commentary and satire has been familiar to generations through seven decades of continuous output. 26 His studies were interrupted by the outbreak of war. He was captured by the Japanese and spent much of the war as a prisoner. During this time he secretly produced a body of drawings that record in graphic detail the misery and degradation of this experience. The drawings are now held at the Imperial War Museum. A caricaturist, cartoonist, illustrator, designer and publisher, Ronald Searle was born in Cambridge in 1920, the son of a railwayman, and educated at Boy’s Central School, Cambridge. He started work as a solicitor’s clerk, before studying in the evenings and later full time at Cambridge Technical College and School of Art (1936–1939). He said of this time, ‘At the Cambridge School of Art it was drummed into us that we should not move, eat, drink or sleep without a sketchbook in the hand. Consequently, the habit of looking and drawing became as natural as breathing.’ While studying, Seale had his first professional work published in the Cambridge Daily News (now the Dear Deborah Deborah Bowen is a Student Adviser at Cambridge. Her regular Agony Aunt column will deal with real problems students may be having with their academic life, the University’s modular system, rules and regulations. Commenting on the exhibition, Anglia Ruskin University’s Vice Chancellor Professor Michael Thorne said: ‘This prestigious exhibition is a fitting tribute to the Cambridge School of Art’s greatest living alumnus.’ ‘While Ronald is unable to attend this fabulous celebration of his life’s work, he is working very closely with us to give us access to his entire catalogue. We are also borrowing some prints from some very famous celebrities who are fortunate enough to own some of his work.’ After the war, Searle forged a highly successful career as a humorous artist whose range would span everything from the hugely successful St Trinian’s characters to gritty documentary/ reportage drawings, and the hardhitting political comment for which he is most keen to be remembered. ‘This will be one of our finest exhibitions yet.’ Said Martin Salisbury from Anglia Ruskin University: ‘Since his time as a student at Cambridge School of Art, Ronald Searle has been an inspiration to generations of art students. His work sits within a particular tradition in Britain of graphic satire and he is often referred to as the ‘artist’s artist’ within this genre. Although best known by the public for his creation of the St Trinians phenomenon, his work as a biting political and social commentator may perhaps be the more lasting contribution to the arts.’ He was presented with an Honorary Doctorate of the University by Anglia Ruskin University in November and will be putting his name to a student prize, The Ronald Searle Award for Creativity in the Arts, during 2008. Since the early 1960s Ronald Searle has lived in France. Now in his late 80s, he has received numerous awards for his work and been honoured with major retrospective exhibitions of his work. For more information please contact c.langton@anglia.ac.uk or visit www.anglia.ac.uk/searle The exhibition is open 10 January to 13 February. Open to the general public 10:00 to 16:00 Monday to Friday. While we are waiting for the flood of real letters to arrive, we’ve come up with this ficticious effort in an attempt to explain a bit more about extensions and mitigation. Please send your questions to r.andrews@anglia.ac.uk Dear Deborah I’ve had a terrible time recently and I’m worried about being able to hand my work in on time. It all started with a guy I’d had my eye on for ages. I knew he was going to be out, so I went out with friends – my sole intention being to impress him. He didn’t appear to notice me, so after a few drinks, I started dancing outrageously on a table in the bar. The table collapsed, I sprained my ankle, then followed the indignity of being thrown out of the club. I hobbled home on my sprained ankle with only the alcohol to numb the pain. I don’t remember much after that apart from waking up in the morning with a stinking hangover, reaching for the glass of water next to my bed, and drinking it, only to discover later, it contained the contact lenses I had put in it the night before. What with the ingested contact lenses, the sprained ankle and the extra hours I am having to work to pay for the broken table, I am very behind with my work. Is there any way to get extra time to complete it? Priscilla, Preston This unfortunate chain of events could so easily have been avoided had you taken the time to check the sturdiness and quality of the table prior to mounting it. Nevertheless, it’s happened now and you should see your Student Adviser as soon as possible to discuss your options. The University offers three ways in which students can get extra time on their work: 27 Competition Competition Time Short-term extensions which can be given for up to 5 working days (exceptionally 10). Long-term extensions which can be given for anything over 10 working days and up to one year. These are for very exceptional cases. Extensions cannot be given on exams, and you MUST request an extension BEFORE the hand-in deadline on the date your assessment is due to be submitted. Check your blue guide to Assessment Regulations to see if you meet the criteria for an extension. The winner of last month’s competition was Diana Zheleva (pictured above) from Chelmsford who wins a £25 gift voucher. The winning answers (as if you didn’t know them already) are listed below: 1. ARU stands for Anglia Ruskin University 2. Julia Latif is studying BA Film studies 3. I love being a student at Anglia Ruskin because ARU fulfils all of my expectations :) To be in with a chance of winning your very own £25 gift voucher – and it will be the easiest £25 you’ve ever earned – have a go at the questions below. Email your questions to me at r.andrews@anglia.ac.uk. This issue’s brain teasers are 1. What did Debbie Burden dress up as for the magazine launch? 2. Who led the Anglia Students’ expedition to the Amazon? and the tie breaker 3. How scary is the scary moth pictured on page 7? 28 Mitigation – this is where the University takes into account any unforeseen/ unexpected circumstances which are likely to have an adverse affect on your studies, over a long period of time. Mitigation forms are available from the Student Adviser or the Student Information Centre (Rac 013 Cambridge, 1st Floor Ashby House at Rivermead or Johnson Building J022 at Central). They can also be downloaded from the Student Adviser website (www.anglia.ac.uk/student advisers). Mitigation claims are considered anonymously at Mitigation Panels, and the sorts of circumstances considered include sudden illness/ accident that prevents attendance at exams, bereavement or hospitalisation close to a date on which an assessment is due to be submitted. In order for a mitigation claim to be accepted, it must be agreed that the difficulties you have experienced amount to mitigating circumstances and that evidence of those circumstances has been provided by a responsible third party. Your Student Adviser can give you more information on the types of evidence you should produce. Most mitigation claims are medical mitigation claims and in such cases, the University would require a supporting letter or a statement from a doctor, counsellor, or other medical professional. It follows that if you find yourself unwell on an exam day or when an assignment is due in, you should contact your GP. If an appointment is not available, or you can’t get to the surgery because of the nature of your illness – tummy bug, or infectious illness, for example, you should ask to speak to the Practice Nurse who should be able to assist. You should ask that the nurse makes a record of the call, in case you need evidence for mitigation. Finally, by far the best way to manage your academic workload is to plan ahead and get your work in before setting off for a night on the town to celebrate. Oh, and by the way, never leave your contact lenses soaking next to the bed…