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19 November 2015 |
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News
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Professor Craig Calhoun: After the Paris Attacks
"LSE grieves at both the personal and the global level".
Read LSE Director, Professor Craig Calhoun’s
blog post following the tragic
events in Paris on Friday 13 November.
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The Paul Marshall Building,
44 Lincolns Inn Fields
The School’s next major development project took a step forward this week
with the announcement of the six architects shortlisted for the RIBA design
competition. The architects are from across the world and were selected from
over 80 expressions of interest.
Julian Robinson, LSE’s Director of Estates said: "This was the hardest one
yet. The response was amazing with many high profile firms from across the
world submitting. We have tried to pick a stimulating shortlist which will
produce a range of different design responses to this extraordinary site.
What an opportunity? We can’t wait to start the design dialogue."
For more information and the list of architects,
click here.
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LSE academic awarded
prestigious Frederick W. Lanchester Prize
Giacomo Zambelli,
Associate Professor in the
Department of Mathematics
(with co-authors Gerard Cornuejols, Tepper School of Business, and
Michele Conforti, University of Padova) has been awarded the prestigious
Frederick W. Lanchester Prize for 2015 by the
Institute for Operations Research and
the Management Sciences.
The prize, which honours "the best contribution to operations research
and the management sciences published in English in the past three years",
was awarded for their book
Integer
Programming (Springer, 2014).
The prize, conferred since 1954, is so selective that it was not awarded
four of the previous six years.
Martin Anthony,
head of the Department of Mathematics, said: "I am delighted that Giacomo’s
outstanding work in mathematical operations research and his ability to
communicate it has been recognised by the award of this prestigious prize.
The prize committee has noted that this major book ‘will serve the next
generation of researchers to further advance the field in the years ahead’.
We congratulate Giacomo on this achievement."
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LSE Cities celebrates ten years of Urban Age
The world’s most respected climate change economist, Nicholas Stern,
world-leading architect Norman Foster, and Andrew Adonis, the recently
appointed Chairman of the National Infrastructure Commission, are among
those speaking at a series of debates at LSE from 19 November to 3 December
2015.
The Urban Age 10 Global Debates mark a decade of the Urban Age project.
They are presented by LSE Cities and Deutsche Bank’s Alfred Herrhausen
Society, in association with Guardian Cities, to celebrate ten years
of the Urban Age programme.
More
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LSE Library celebrates Customer Service Excellence award
LSE Library was recently awarded the Customer Service Excellence industry
standard (CSE).
Throughout 2014-15 Library staff consulted with students as customers of
library services, ensuring that services were focused on their needs. As a
result, policies and procedures have been revised, together with a re-launch
of front line services, whilst focusing on the five core criteria of the CSE
framework: customer insight, the culture of the organisation, access and
information, delivery and timeliness and quality of service.
Nicola Wright, Director of Library Services, said: "This has been a real
team achievement and I am very proud of the team and the partnership we have
with our students."
The assessment report highlighted the impressive high level of corporate
commitment and leadership shown in putting the customer at the heart of
service delivery, which is being embraced by all staff, with an excellent
training programme to underline vision and values.
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LSE statistician shares international science journalism award
The team behind the BBC programme,
Climate Change by Numbers,
which included LSE professor
Lenny Smith (pictured), has won the gold
AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Award in the category of ‘In-Depth
Reporting’.
The awards recognise outstanding reporting for a general audience and
honour individuals (rather than institutions, publishers or employers) for
their coverage of the sciences, engineering and mathematics.
The judges said that the team "used clever analogies and appealing
graphics to discuss three key numbers that help clarify important questions
about the scale and pace of human influence on climate. The program featured
a trio of mathematicians who use numbers to reveal patterns in data, assess
risk, and help predict the future."
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Transparency, big data and international cooperation at the heart of
Korean health system success A transparent system, data analysis and
active international cooperation are at the heart of Korea's successes in
health system development said Dr Myongsei Sohn (pictured), President
of the Korean Health Insurance Review and Assessment Centre (HIRA) at a
public lecture at LSE on Monday (16 November).
The event, hosted by LSE Health, explored the lessons learnt from the
Korean experience of health system development since the introduction of a
universal health insurance scheme in Korea in 1989.
More
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Three Approaches to Awareness-Raising: LSE Spectrum and intersex
awareness Intersex Awareness Day
takes place annually on 26 October.
In a new post for the
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion blog Hayley Reed, co-chair of
Spectrum (the LSE LGBT+ staff network), discusses how to ensure maximum
impact from awareness-raising by keeping up the momentum; talking to people,
rather than simply about them; and using powerful visual messages.
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Academics out and about
Dr Ken Shadlen, Department of International Development, participated
in the 2015 conference on
Intellectual Property Statistics for Decision Makers, hosted by the
European Patent Office in Vienna on 3-4 November. His presentation was on 'The Effects of Restrictions on Secondary
Pharmaceutical Patents in Brazil and India' - work co-authored with Bhaven
Sampat from an ESRC grant on secondary patents.
Professor Cathy Campbell, Head of the Department of Social Psychology,
attended a symposium entitled ‘Community Mobilisation for Health, Human
Rights and Gender Justice' hosted by Sonke Gender Justice in Gauteng, South
Africa. She presented a paper entitled Community Mobilisation and Women’s
Agency: intimate partner violence in extreme settings.
Professor Jean-Paul Faguet, Department of International Development,
spoke at the Overseas Development Institute's
2015 CAPE Conference: bricks and dollars on 11-12 November, on how
governments can avoid the mistakes of the past and effectively deliver
greater investment in infrastructure.
Dr Francisco Torres, European Institute, has published a special
issue of the Journal of European Integration on
The Governance of EMU:
recasting political, fiscal and financial integration', co-edited with
Erik Jones of Johns Hopkins University. In October, he also gave a
presentation on 'The Governance of EMU: sustainable integration and
structural reform' based on his joint work with LSE's Dr Annette Bongardt,
at the University of Évora in Portugal and participated in the final
roundtable of the conference on ‘The Long and Tortuous Path of the Euro
Crisis: institutional innovations and monetary policy’ at the University of
Porto.
Dr Annette Bongardt, European Institute, presented her most recent
paper on EMU and Structural Reform at King’s College London on Monday
16 November. The paper is part of her joint work with Dr Francisco Torres.
In October she also presented the paper at the Faculty of Economics of the
University of Porto. She has also co-authored a paper with Professor Iain
Begg, Dr Francisco Torres, and Professor Kalypso Nicolaïdis (Oxford
University) entitled EMU and Sustainable Integration.
Dr
Chaloka Beyani, Department of Law and United Nations Special
Rapporteur on the human rights of internally displaced persons, addressed
the
Third Committee of the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday 28
October on the issue of governance structures for internally displaced
persons. Dr Beyani also gave a public lecture at NYU on 'Global Migration
Crisis and Europe'. On Tuesday 10 November Dr Beyani gave evidence in London
to the House of Lords Select Committee on Sexual Violence in Conflict. Today
(Thursday 19 November) he also spoke at a UN/Swiss side event 'Connecting
CEDAW (Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against
Women) to the Women Peace and Security Agenda' in Geneva.
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Celebrating 120 years of LSE Join Professor Michael Cox
tonight, Thursday 19 November for a Ralph Miliband Programme public lecture,
Red flag over Houghton Street? The Radical Tradition at LSE - Myth, Reality
and Fact.
2015 is Urban Age’s 10th anniversary and the LSE history blog caught up
with Urban Age to find out more in
The Urban Age, ten years on. Don’t forget to book a place on a
Foundations exhibition lunchtime talk: the next one will be in the
Library on Tuesday 24 November. Finally, have you missed out on our LSE
history trivia series?
Catch up here.
2015 is LSE’s 120th anniversary. Join in the celebrations at
lse.ac.uk/lse120
#LSE120 |
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Notices
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The 2015 Staff Survey is here! The survey was launched
yesterday and will be open until Friday 11 December.
All staff should have received an email with a link to the
survey from Aon Hewitt, the consultancy running the survey. If you haven’t
received a link, please contact
Aon Hewitt. For more
information about the survey please visit the
Staff Survey webpage.
Every member of staff makes a valuable contribution to LSE as a
world-leading research and teaching institution. This is your opportunity to
continue to develop the School for the benefit of staff, students and
everyone we interact with now and in the future.
All responses will be completely anonymous.
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LSE Security LSE experiences security alerts on an infrequent
basis, but when we do it’s important that we all take the necessary
precautions and follow the instructions of LSE’s well-trained and efficient
security team.
The team is on duty 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. If you notice
anything suspicious or have any concerns please contact the team immediately
on 020 7955 6555. For other queries or if you would like to know more
about LSE’s security arrangements, please call the security control room on
020 7955 6200.
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#AskTheDirector is back Do you have a question for the LSE
Director? Professor Craig Calhoun (@craigjcalhoun)
will be live on Twitter to answer your tweets from 10.30-11.30am on
Wednesday 25 November.
Feel free to ask him a question in advance, or during the ‘live hour’,
using the hashtag #AskTheDirector.
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LSE Procurement
Message from
Glen Humbles, Head of Procurement
From
16 November, the Purchasing Team changed its name to the LSE Procurement
Team. The name change reflects our move to a more strategic advisory
approach to procurement in LSE.
We
have updated
our website to reflect this change and have simplified the online
guidance to both staff and suppliers to make it easier to find solutions to
procurement requirements, but we would welcome your feedback on areas you
think may be useful additions to the website.
The
website includes the new
Procurement Strategy, which clearly states our aims for achieving high
service quality and best value for money in all procurement activity.
We
have recently recruited a new Deputy Head of Procurement who is to join us
next month. Once we have the new team in place we will arrange meetings to
discuss your upcoming procurement requirements, but in the meantime, please
feel free to
contact us to discuss any procurement related issues you may have.
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LSE Teaching and Learning Development Fund
This fund supports projects aimed at developing innovation in curriculum
design, teaching, learning and assessment.
For information about making an application, see our
Teaching and Learning Development Fund: FAQs page where you will find
details of the criteria for funding, information about application deadlines
and an application form.
The Michaelmas term application round is now open and runs until Friday 4
December.
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Leadership Foundation for Higher Education’s Aurora Programme
Last year the School was pleased to sponsor four places on the Leadership
Foundation for Higher Education’s Aurora Programme. This programme is
specifically aimed at women and seeks to encourage women in academic and
professional services roles to think of themselves as leaders, to develop
leadership skills, and to help institutions maximise the potential of their
most talented women.
This year we will have secured eight places on the next programme
starting in February 2016. The programme is ideal for colleagues who are early in their career who
would like to develop and explore issues relating to leadership roles and
responsibilities and have not yet attended another similar leadership
development programme. This would be of particular interest
to Professional Service Staff Bands 6 and 7 and Assistant Professors.
Full details of the programme can be
found here. A copy of the application form can be obtained from Chris
Watt on ext. 6205 or c.watt@lse.ac.uk.
Closing date for applications is Friday 11 December.
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Have your say on equity, diversity and inclusion at LSE Do you
have any ideas or suggestions to ensure that the School develops as a
welcoming, inclusive and encouraging environment for all? What are your
views on gender, ethnicity, sexuality, identity, disability, mental health,
and different learning styles and needs at LSE?
If you would like to have your say on any issue related to equity,
diversity and inclusion at LSE, please submit your feedback and suggestions
to the EDI Taskforce via http://ow.ly/UHWTL
or edi.taskforce@lse.ac.uk.
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LGBT+ websites
If you encounter a website that has been incorrectly blocked by LSE’s
web content filter Sophos (for instance, a LGBT+ resource that has been
blocked as ‘Adult/Sexually Explicit’, or a research website that has
been classified as ‘Spam’) you can anonymously report the
issue here.
Wherever possible, the restriction will then be lifted - for all users -
within one working day. The Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Taskforce
has worked closely with Spectrum (the staff LGBT+ network) and IMT, to
address more effectively, and anonymously, the unintentional blocking of
LGBT+ related websites.
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PCs in Teaching Rooms - don't forget to log off! Please could
teachers and lecturers remember to log off from the main teaching PC when
they have finished their lesson.
Due to a security feature, you may notice the PC will ‘lock’ after a
short period of inactivity. Unfortunately if you then forgot to log off, the
next person who uses the room will have to manually restart the PC to gain
access, which can be time consuming and frustrating.
To keep your work and identity safe, please also remember not to leave
your screen unattended and open as anyone will be able to use it.
For more information about the audio visual services at LSE, visit
lse.ac.uk/imt.
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LSE Teaching Café: using your research in your teaching On:
Wednesday 25 November from 10-11am (breakfast available from 9.30am)
LSE Teaching Cafés are for academic staff to exchange ideas and practice
in an informal setting.
This first Café of 2015-16 will focus on research-led teaching. Three
academics - Jennifer Jackson-Preece (European Institute), Peter Ramsay (Law)
and Lea Ypi (Government) - will talk about their experiences of using
research in their teaching, followed by open discussion of the topic at
tables.
If you teach at LSE and are interested in joining us, contact us at
TLC@lse.ac.uk.
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Search for Lay Governors The Nominations Committee invites
expressions of interest from high calibre individuals capable of playing an
active role in the life of the School as lay members of the Court of
Governors. Governors do not have to be alumni, but great enthusiasm for the
School and a passion for the social sciences are essential.
Governors may be appointed to serve on the Council and on various School
committees. The Nominations Committee is particularly interested in
recruiting governors with experience in finance, auditing, estates, health
and safety, human resources and organisational development.
If you know of someone who might be suitable for governorship, please
feel free to bring this opportunity to his/her attention. Applications
should be received by Thursday 10 December.
More information can be
found here. For any other enquiries please contact Joan Poole in the
Governance Team at j.a.poole@lse.ac.uk
or on ext 7825.
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Challenge yourself to learn Excel before Christmas
Do you struggle using Excel? IT Training has devised an LSE work-based
Training Needs Analysis (TNA) to help you find the level of training you
need. There are 40 questions divided into five sections, corresponding to
the five one-hour Excel courses running from 24 November-16 December.
You can choose to finish the TNA at the end of any section. Or, if you’d
like to take all five courses, you can elect to skip the TNA entirely. To
enrol on any but the first course, however, it is strongly recommended that
you take the TNA first, and attend the course appropriate to your result.
The TNA will take 15-45 minutes, depending on your level of expertise and
how many sections you complete. If needed, you can close it and come back
later, starting where you left off.
This is a new, trainer-led Excel programme pilot. If participants feel it is
useful, further sessions will be scheduled in the New Year. Try the
TNA
and then email it.training@lse.ac.uk
with your course level to secure your place.
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Advertising/Closing dates during Christmas closure
HR recommends avoiding advertising vacancies during the weeks immediately
prior to and after the Christmas break as we tend to receive a lower
response rate from applicants during this time.
If you do wish to advertise around the
Christmas vacation, please take note of the deadlines and information
found
here.
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Bean Counter Pancake Day On Wednesday 25 November the
Bean Counter,
basement of 32 Lincoln’s Inn Fields,
will be hosting its monthly Pancake Day.
There will be freshly made-to-order pancakes available with all of your
favourite toppings including Nutella, lemon juice, and fresh fruit.
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Book your Christmas evening reception
With the festive season fast approaching, LSE Catering has tailored
some Christmas reception packages for you to enjoy.
The receptions are perfect for a departmental get-together, formal event
or celebration with warm mince pies, hot mulled wine and smoked salmon
canapés on offer.
To view the options or to book a reception, visit the
hospitality
ordering system.
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Are you a budding photographer?
Do you have some holiday photos you’d like to share? Taken any
impressive snaps while out and about in London?
Send them to
lseperspectives@lse.ac.uk and they could be featured in future
editions of
LSE Perspectives. Each month 12 photos taken by the LSE community
are chosen to appear in LSE Arts online gallery.
Find out how to
submit here or email
lseperspectives@lse.ac.uk for more information.
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LSE
in pictures
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This week's picture features the newly re-furbished LSE Language Centre
in 20 Kingsway.
For more images like this, visit the
Photography Unit
or check out the School's
Instagram page.
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Events
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Interfaith Prayer Vigil for victims of the Paris attacks On:
Friday 20 November from 11am in the
Faith Centre, second floor of the Saw Swee Hock Student Centre
Staff and students of all faiths and none are welcome to come together
for prayers, readings and silence to remember those who have died and to
pray for peace.
Led by Revd Dr James Walters, LSE Chaplain, Rabbi Natan Levy, Board of
Deputies of British Jews, and Imam Asim Hafiz OBE, HM Armed Forces.
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Spectrum events TONIGHT - Film night: XXY
Join Spectrum on Thursday 19 November at 5.45pm in NAB.2.14 for a
screening of XXY.
Refreshments will be provided and the film will be followed by an
opportunity for some informal networking. XXY, a 2007
Argentine-Spanish-French drama, tells the story of Alex, a 15-year-old
intersex person.
Book your
place here.
Kenya: the next milestone for LGBT+ rights?
On: Monday 23 November at 6.30pm in CLM.2.02, Clement House
The past few months have seen many historic developments in LGBT+ rights
in Kenya. Please join us for a discussion of what these developments
mean for LGBT+ people on the ground with Eric Gitari, Lorna Dias and
Sandé Ligunya.
This public event is free and open to all, and is followed by a Q&A and
a reception. This event is supported by the Human Dignity Trust, the
Kenyan National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, Spectrum and
LSE Law.
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The Creative Economy: invention of a global orthodoxy On:
Wednesday 25 November from 6.30-8pm in the Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House
Speaker: Professor Philip Schlesinger,
Professor in Cultural Policy in the Centre for Cultural Policy Research/CREATe
at the University of Glasgow and Visiting Professor in the Department of
Media and Communications at LSE.
Respondents: Professor Angela McRobbie (pictured),
Professor of Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London,
and Professor Jonothan Neelands,
Professor of Creative Education at Warwick Business School and Research
Project Director of the Creative Industries Federation.
The discourse of the creative economy is everywhere. First developed by
the British New Labour government in the late 1990s, it has influenced a
global way of thinking about the relations between culture and the economy.
This lecture will address its rise and diffusion and the role of political
entrepreneurship in the continuous reworking and dissemination of an
orthodox mode of thought, illustrated by examples from the UK, EU and UN.
What are the appeals of the creative economy? Why have counter-arguments
been so ineffective? What are the consequences for how we understand
cultural work?
More
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15 Years of Global Media at LSE: Anniversary Celebration
On Monday 30 November, the Department of Media and Communications
will celebrate the 15th anniversary of its Global Media programme.
The event will start with an afternoon seminar featuring guest speakers
including LSE’s Director, Professor Craig Calhoun, and Dr Raka Shome of the
National University of Singapore as well as an alumni panel.
The seminar will be followed by a gala dinner, to be attended by special
guest Lord Anthony Giddens.
More
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How Can the UK Improve Productivity and Still Build the Workforce?
On: Wednesday 2 December from 6.30-8pm in the Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New
Academic Building
Speakers: Vince Cable (pictured), MP for Twickenham from 1997-2015 and served as UK
Business Secretary from 2010-2015; Diane Coyle, OBE, Professor of Economics
at the University of Manchester; Bronwyn Curtis, global financial markets
economist and a member of LSE's Court of Governors; and Anna Leach, head of
the economic analysis team at CBI.
This event marks the official launch of the
LSE Business Review blog
bringing together a panel of prominent economists to discuss productivity,
the UK’s economic future and the road ahead.
The evening will end with a networking drinks reception.
More
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Podcasts of public lectures and events
In Conversation with Amartya Sen
Speaker: Professor Amartya Sen
Recorded: Friday 6 November, approx. 86 minutes
The Long Goodbye: how the crisis casts a long shadow
Speaker: Martin Wolf
Recorded: Monday 9 November, approx. 72 minutes
Phishing for Phools: the economics of manipulation and deception
Speaker: Professor Robert J Shiller
Recorded: Wednesday 11 November, approx. 72 minutes
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60
second interview
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with..... John Smith, Assistant Chef Manager at LSE Garrick
I’m 47 years old, and have been a chef since the age of 16. I’m married to my wonderful French wife Christel and we have a beautiful one year old girl called Skye.
I enjoy sports, particularly rugby, football, snooker and darts, and am a lifelong Liverpool FC fan. I love cooking so much that I spend a lot of my spare time cooking for my family.
What is the best part of your job at LSE?
I love creating delicious food for the LSE community to enjoy. There is nothing more satisfying than the feeling you get when someone has enjoyed the creation you spent time making.
If you were marooned on a desert island, which LSE department would you like to have with you?
Definitely the Catering team, they are a great bunch of people to work with.
You are a contestant on the dinner party programme Come Dine with Me. What do you cook?
Starter: Pan-seared scallops cooked in butter and garlic, served with a mango, orange and basil salsa.
Main: Medallions of beef with a red wine and tarragon jus, fondant potatoes and a butternut squash, sweet potato and carrot puree.
Dessert: Trio of desserts - Italian lemon meringue, chocolate, orange and pistachio brownie, raspberry and coconut sorbet.
Where is the most interesting place you have visited?
Prague. The scenery is stunning, the buildings are beautiful, and there is lots of history to discover around the city.
Who was your hero when you were growing up?
My Grandmother, she always knew the answer to your question and she was always cooking something, which is what got me interested in food and is the reason I became a chef.
If we opened your fridge right now, what would we find inside?
Meats, fish, cheeses, vegetables, salad, eggs, wine, cider, yoghurts, fruit, and much more (alcohol at home of course, not at work!). |
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Training
and jobs
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Upcoming LTI workshops
Encouraging Active Learning
Monday 23 November from 12-1.30pm
This practical workshop is an opportunity to explore and evaluate a range of
learning technologies and their possible role in fostering active learning
in your teaching.
Moodle Surgery
Tuesday 24 November from 1-2pm
Lunchtime drop in session for any of your Moodle queries. Booking is
essential.
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Research Division Training Sessions
The Research Division would
like to invite anyone interested in research funding or already with
an award to attend the following event.
Have you applied for funding in the past?
Tuesday
1 December
Morning session: 10am-1pm
Afternoon session: 2-5pm
Do you have a draft grant proposal you are working on? After running
two successful workshops on "Fundamentals of Grant Writing" last academic
year, Professor John Wakeford of Missenden Centre is coming back to the
School to lead a hands-on grant proposal clinic designed to explore the
grant proposal process.
In small groups of six senior academics, you will review real-life
applications to help develop your proposals further. Please note: you will
be required to bring a full draft proposal with you.
Prerequisite: Previous experience of applying for funding and/or attendance
of "Fundamentals of Grant Writing" workshop during either December 2014 or
July 2015.
All training sessions are delivered to you by Research Division. For more
information, email
researchdivision@lse.ac.uk. For a list of upcoming Michaelmas term
events,
click here. For daily updates, follow us on Twitter
@ LSE_RD.
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Jobs at LSE Below are some of the vacancies currently being
advertised:
- Postdoctoral Research Officer (EPSRC), Statistics
- Administrative and Projects Assistant, GLPD: Governance,
Legal and Policy Division
- Assistant Professor, Accounting
- Assistant Professor in Gender, Development and Globalisation,
Gender Institute
- Assistant Professor in Global Health Policy, Social Policy
- Assistant Professor in Health Economics and Policy, Social
Policy
- Assistant/Associate Professor in International Relations (Gender
and International Relations), International Relations
- Associate Professor in Global Health Policy, Social Policy
- Data and Policy Analyst, Academic Registrar's Division
- Development Associate, LSE Advancement
- Donor Relations Manager, LSE Advancement
- LSE Fellow (postdoctoral) Fellowship in Political Science
(two posts), Government
- Professor/Associate Professor in Economics, Economics
- Programme Assistant, Summer School and Executive Programmes
- Research Administrator (internal only), Statistics
- Research Assistant - Democratic Audit, Government
- Research Officer, Middle East Centre
- Research Officer, Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion
- Technical Analyst, LSE Advancement
For more information, visit
Jobs at LSE and login via the instructions under the 'Internal
vacancies' heading. |
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Get
in touch!
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If you have some news, an achievement, or an aspect of LSE life that you
would like to share, I would love to hear from you. Do get in touch at
communications.internal@lse.ac.uk or
on ext 7582. The next edition of Staff News is on Thursday 26
November. Articles for this should be emailed to me by
Tuesday 25 November. Staff
News is emailed every Thursday during term time and fortnightly during
the holidays.
Thanks, Nicole
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