Some face-to-face events are returning. Check carefully for any requirements.

May
7
Thu
Outburst Fesitval @ Pegasus Theater
May 7 – May 9 all-day
Outburst Fesitval @ Pegasus Theater | Oxford | United Kingdom

OutBurst is the Oxford Brookes University festival at the Pegasus Theatre on Magdalen Road. Brookes will be bursting out of the university campus into the community, bringing great ideas, activities, and entertainment right to the doorstep of the Oxford public.

The festival, now in its fourth year, runs from 7-9 May and showcases cutting-edge research and expertise from across the university in a variety of stimulating and fun events for students, staff, and the local community, including installations, lectures, workshops, exhibitions, and discussions for all ages.

May
12
Tue
Which crowdfunding platform should we choose to present our project? @ Oxford Launchpad
May 12 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Which crowdfunding platform should we choose to present our project? @ Oxford Launchpad | Oxford | United Kingdom

The presenter will introduce different crowdfunding platforms which serve different purposes, for instance education-related initiatives, charitable works, new products and start-ups.

Presenter: Shan Huang, D.Phil student at Department of Education, Founder of OxFund

May
26
Tue
Speak Out Your Financial Needs and Let Your College, the University and the Crowdfunding Platform Know @ Oxford Launchpad, Saïd Business School
May 26 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Speak Out Your Financial Needs and Let Your College, the University and the Crowdfunding Platform Know @ Oxford Launchpad, Saïd Business School | Oxford | United Kingdom

Have you thought about using crowdfunding to fund your next degree, innovation, entrepreneurial project, charitable work, creative arts or sports club? What support you need from your college, the university and the crowdfunding platform? Speak out and let them know.

OxFund invited Jonathan May – the CEO and Co-founder of Hubbub, the representatives from the Development Offices at Green Templeton College, Keble College, Merton College, Regent’s Park, St Hugh’s College, Somerville College (the only Oxford college has its own branded crowdfunding platform) and University College, and the staff from ISIS Innovation who are working with Hubbub to build a Oxford-branded crowdfunding platform for Oxford staff and students to raise money for their entrepreneurial projects to form a panel to listen your needs.

More college’s development offices may join, as we are still in the process of confirming. Please check the Facebook event for the updates. Even your college’s development office is not in the panel, speak out your needs and we will pass them to the development office of your college.

Jun
4
Thu
Biosense Symposium @ Museum of Natural History
Jun 4 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Biosense Symposium @ Museum of Natural History | Oxford | United Kingdom

Join us at the Museum of Natural History for an evening of talks and networking to celebrate the research behind our new exhibition,‘Biosense’.
The exhibition features contemporary research, including how bacteria sense their micro-world, why oxygen sensing could revolutionise human medical treatment, and the way that the light around us affects our behaviour.

Jun
9
Tue
How I Raised 1 Million for Natural Disaster Victims – Michael Maher King, Founder of Smile Kids Japan @ Oxford Launchpad
Jun 9 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
How I Raised 1 Million for Natural Disaster Victims - Michael Maher King, Founder of Smile Kids Japan @ Oxford Launchpad | Oxford | United Kingdom

• Mike set up the volunteer organisation Smile Kids Japan (website under reconstruction…) in 2007 to promote sustainable and local volunteering at institutional care facilities (sometimes called orphanages) in Japan. This grew and has helped volunteers set up visits in 25 of the 47 prefectures in Japan, seeing several thousand people volunteer their friendship to kids in care. Following the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that struck Tohoku, Smile Kids Japan joined up with another NPO, Living Dreams, and Mike moved to the area to work full time on this project. Mike and the team raised over $900,000 in the months after the disaster, working with large corporate donors and setting up smaller events, including a 5 kilometre fun run that was carried out in 12 countries on the same day and raised over $100,000. The work was featured on the ITV ‘Tonight’ documentary news program, and in national papers. After giving a talk at TEDxTokyo and returning to the UK to study the alternative care system in Japan, Mike was invited by the Japanese Ambassador to meet and talk with the Emperor and Empress of Japan along with other Brits, including Lord Patten, who had been involved in the relief work.

• Mike is going to speak about fundraising strategies and will suggest (at least) three concrete ideas for fundraising that can be done before the end of term. These can be used for any charity fundraising, however the focus will be on post disaster, specifically on the situation in Nepal.

• The meeting aims to form a small team who can work on a flash fundraising event before the end of term, though you do not have to participate further if you just want to listen to the talk and learn more about fundraising.

To Book a place, click ‘going’ on our Facebook Event https://www.facebook.com/events/467192280115835/

OxFund — the Crowdfunding Society for Oxford Students
Email: hello.oxfund@gmail.com
Website: http://oxfund.wix.com/oxfund
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/OxFund/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/OxFund
Fund OxFund to run events: https://hubbub.net/p/oxfundsociety/

Jun
16
Tue
### FULLY BOOKED ### St Cross College 50th Anniversary Lecture – Thomas Heatherwick @ Headley Lecture Theatre, Ashmolean Museum
Jun 16 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
### FULLY BOOKED ### St Cross College 50th Anniversary Lecture - Thomas Heatherwick @ Headley Lecture Theatre, Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

#### This event is fully booked. ####

 

The second of the College’s 50th Anniversary termly lectures will be given by Thomas Heatherwick, designer of the 2012 Olympic Cauldron and one of Britain’s foremost design talents.

Thomas Heatherwick on Heatherwick Studio

Established by Thomas Heatherwick in 1994, Heatherwick Studio is recognised for its work in architecture, urban infrastructure, sculpture, design and strategic thinking. Having designed projects ranging in scope from a handbag to an urban master plan, Heatherwick Studio refuses to specialise and embraces the continuity of designing across different scales. In this talk, Thomas Heatherwick will present a series of the studio’s past and present projects, with a focus on the working process and how the studio approaches new briefs.

Free event, booking essential.

Jun
25
Thu
Working and understanding the behaviors of young people @ South Oxfordshire Food and Education Alliance
Jun 25 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Working and understanding the behaviors of young people @ South Oxfordshire Food and Education Alliance  | United Kingdom

SOFEA are holding an educational event involving working and understanding the behaviors of young people. It is happening on Thursday 25th June 2015 and all details are attached. You will need to RSVP

Jun
27
Sat
The Preservation of Ancient Buildings @ Oxford Castle
Jun 27 @ 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm

A talk in association with the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.

Medieval House to Energy Efficient Home @ Oxford Castle
Jun 27 @ 3:00 pm – 4:30 pm

A talk by Roger Hunt, the award winning writer specialising in sustainability, old houses, housebuilding and traditional and modern building materials.

Jul
22
Wed
Fundraising Through Digital @ Lecture Theatre 2, Mathematical Institute, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter
Jul 22 @ 5:45 pm – 7:00 pm
Fundraising Through Digital @ Lecture Theatre 2, Mathematical Institute, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter | United Kingdom

*How clicktivists, slacktivists and hacktivists are helping us beat cancer sooner*
Michael Docherty, Digital & Strategic Marketing Planning Director, Cancer Research UK

Cancer Research UK is the world’s leading cancer charity dedicated to saving lives through research. Our vision is to bring forward the day when all cancers are cured. Our work into preventing, diagnosing and treating cancer has helped double UK survival rates in the last forty years. Our ambition is to accelerate that progress so we see at least 3 in 4 patients survive cancer by 2034; the digital revolution playing an important role in helping us get us there.

We will explore the work we’re doing to increase our fundraising impact through digital, how we’re opening up our research for the digital world to engage with, and what might come next!

Free and all welcome, there will be a drinks reception after the talk.

Michael Docherty is Cancer Research UK’s Digital & Strategic Marketing Planning director. He’s been with the charity since late 2007, joining as Head of Online Marketing and later becoming Head of Digital before moving into the director role. In the last year Michael has continued to build digital capability into CRUK and drive the transformation of CRUK’s websites to make them robust, responsive, and above all, user-centric. Prior to CRUK Michael was a Group Marketing Manager at Telstra, Australia’s leading communications company, and has held various product and brand marketing roles at Yahoo!, Hutchison Telecoms & Fairfax Digital.

Image: Cancer Research UK / Wikimedia Commons

Aug
14
Fri
Sketches of Oppression: @ Ertegun House
Aug 14 @ 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sketches of Oppression: @ Ertegun House | Oxford | United Kingdom

A one-day free exhibit featuring powerful children’s drawings from Burma and Sudan.

The event is co-sponsored by Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust (HART) and Waging Peace. The drawings from Burma were collected on visits by HART to their partners. HART works with these partners and others in conflict or post-conflict areas, often facing persecution and oppression and trapped behind closed borders. The areas in which HART’s partners work are often not reached by larger organisations and Government support.

The pictures from Sudan were collected by Waging Peace, from Darfuri children living in refugee camps in Chad. Waging Peace is a non-governmental organisation that campaigns against genocide and systematic human rights abuses and seeks the full implementation of international human rights treaties.

These drawings are commanding and moving, providing an insight into the lives and minds of children living in these contexts.

Sep
18
Fri
Periodic Tales @ Inorganic Chemistry Lecture Theatre
Sep 18 @ 4:15 pm – 6:30 pm
Periodic Tales @ Inorganic Chemistry Lecture Theatre | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

The chemical elements, the fundamental ingredients of all matter, have fascinated people for centuries. Their stories have been richly described in Hugh Aldersey-Williams’ bestselling book, Periodic Tales, which forms the basis for a major exhibition curated by Compton Verney Art Gallery.

Hugh Aldersey-Williams will be joined by historian of science Jo Hedesan (Wellcome Trust Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Oxford) and chemist Peter Battle (Professor of Chemistry, University of Oxford) to discuss the ways in which the elements continue to inspire and fascinate us in an event supported by Compton Verney, the Department of Chemistry and TORCH.

The discussion will be followed by a drinks reception. All welcome and free to attend. Booking is required, please visit the Eventbrite page to book.

Sep
22
Tue
Heatherwick Studio @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Theatre, Oxford Brookes University
Sep 22 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm

The Oxford Architecture Society lecture series

Lisa Finlay is coming to speak to us from Heatherwick Studio.
Established by Thomas Heatherwick in 1994, Heatherwick Studio is recognised for its work in architecture, urban infrastructure, sculpture, design and strategic thinking. At the heart of the studio’s work is a profound commitment to finding innovative design solutions, with a dedication to artistic thinking and the latent potential of materials and craftsmanship. In the twenty years of its existence, Heatherwick Studio has worked in many countries, with a wide range of commissioners and in a variety of regulatory environments.

Sep
24
Thu
Workshop no.1 – Architecture in Watercolour @ The Abercrombie Building, 4th Floor, Studio Corner 5
Sep 24 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

The first OxArch workshop of the series ‘Behind Architecture: The Essentials’ is set to bring us back to the analogue process of representation. ‘Architecture in Watercolours’ presents an opportunity to begin the year with a little experimentation.

Anisha Meggi (currently studying her PhD) works with watercolour to capture the essence of a project with the physical and theoretical layering of watercolour paint and model making.

Come join us on the 4th floor of Abercrombie on Thursday at 4pm, if you’re interested in learning a new skill or pushing further what you already know about watercolour.

We will be providing some watercolour trays, watercolour paper and brushes. However, if you have you’re own watercolour sets, please feel free to bring them in.

Prices:
£7 for members
£9 for non members

Oct
24
Sat
‘Why Doctors Don’t Do Much Good and How You Can Do More’ – Dr Gregory Lewis @ Blue Boar Lecture Theatre
Oct 24 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
'Why Doctors Don't Do Much Good and How You Can Do More' - Dr Gregory Lewis @ Blue Boar Lecture Theatre | Oxford | United Kingdom

The Oxford Forum for Medical Humanities presents a talk on effective altruism and the true impact of a doctor, by (medical doctor) Dr Gregory Lewis.

Doctors have a pretty solid reputation as do-gooders, and many students go into medicine for altruistic reasons. But how much good do doctors do? If you are deciding whether to become a doctor in the UK, how many lives can you expect to save over the course of your career?

Dr Gregory Lewis, a full-time doctor and ex-Cambridge medical student, will present some of his research into these very questions. This talk should be of interest to medics and non-medics alike who are serious about the impact of their career.

Date: Saturday 24 October (Week 2)
Time: 4:30pm-5:30pm
Venue: Blue Boar Lecture Theatre, Christ Church

************************

WHY DOCTORS DON’T DO MUCH GOOD

If you want to save lives, should you study medicine? Probably not.

The conclusion of our research is that most people skilled enough to make it in a field as challenging as medicine could have a bigger social impact through an alternative career.

The best research suggests that doctors do much less to improve the health of their patients than you might naturally expect. Health is more determined by lifestyle factors, and most of the treatments that work particularly well could be delivered with a smaller number of doctors than already work in the UK or USA.

However, medicine is high earning and highly fulfilling, and we expect there are more promising opportunities to help others through biomedical research, public health, health policy and (e.g. hospital) management.

Overall, we think going to medical school would be the best way to have a social impact only if someone felt they were a significantly better fit for medicine than the other options we recommend.

Source: 80,000 Hours https://80000hours.org/2012/08/how-many-lives-does-a-doctor-save/

************************

BIOGRAPHY

Dr Gregory Lewis, a full-time public health doctor training in the east of England. He studied Medicine at Cambridge, where he volunteered for Giving What We Can and 80,000 Hours, and he did his FY1 at the John Radcliffe Hospital.

He will present some of his research into these very questions. This talk should be of interest to medics and non-medics alike who are serious about the impact of their career

Nov
10
Tue
Architectural Psychology in Theory and Practice – Talk by Prof Byron Mikellides @ Lecture Theatre B, Department of Experimental Psychology
Nov 10 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Architectural Psychology in Theory and Practice - Talk by Prof Byron Mikellides @ Lecture Theatre B, Department of Experimental Psychology | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Wine reception, snacks, and £5 year membership to PsyNAppS available. Alternatively, pay £2 for a single event!

Venue: Lecture Theatre B, Department of Experimental Psychology

********************

How do individuals and groups react to different environmental situations (home, office, hospital, street, shop, and so on)? What psychological processes are triggered by our environment, and how do they affect our perception, attitude and actions? How can individuals and groups change their environment so that it provides a more stimulating, less stressful and more enabling setting in which to live? How are our identities tied up with place? How might sustainability in environmental policy be better informed by current research?

Byron Mikellides is currently Emeritus Professor at the School of Architecture, Oxford Brookes University, where he has been teaching since 1968. He has published several influential books including Colour for Architecture (1976),with Tom Porter, Architecture for People (1980) and Colour for Architecture Today (2009),with Tom Porter. He has also contributed to several books, scientific journals and papers over the years, and lectured extensively in various countries particularly in USA and Scandinavia. He is also a former member of Directors of IAPS (International Association of People Environment Studies), a committee member of the Colour Group of Great Britain and an Honorary member of the Portugal Colour Group. He organised the Exhibition of Antonio Gaudi, in Oxford in 1983 and the ‘Colours of Savannah’ in Georgia, USA in 1996 for the Olympic Games.

His latest works include chapters in books such as Building Happiness (2010) on architectural psychology and Colour Design – Theory and Applications (2012).

********************

Psychology and Neuroscience Applications Society

The junction where psychology and neuroscience research meets action and innovation.

PsyNAppS aims to disseminate information about what you can do with your psychology or neuroscience degree and research. We are here to tell you everything Freud hasn’t. We want to show you how psychology and neuroscience can be applied practically to a variety of industries.

Jan
12
Tue
2015 Archaeological Findings of Westgate Shopping Centre with Ben Ford @ Key Learning Centre @ Oxford Castle
Jan 12 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm

Join Ben Ford as he speaks about the 2015 archaeological excavations from under the Westgate Shopping Centre @ Key Learning Centre, Oxford Castle.

Jan
19
Tue
Reclimbing Moseley’s Staircase @ Museum of the History of Science
Jan 19 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Reclimbing Moseley's Staircase @ Museum of the History of Science | Oxford | United Kingdom

Henry Moseley’s work brought X-ray physics to bear on the chemists’ periodic table. Join us at the Museum to hear Professor Russ Egdell (Chemistry) and Professor Justin Wark (Physics) reveal both the history and rich contemporary legacy of Moseley’s scientific work.

Doors open at 18.30.

Part of the programme of events for ‘Dear Harry…, Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War’, the special exhibition at the Museum of the History of Science.

Jan
27
Wed
Nuneham in the Oxford Landscape with Julian Munby @ Key Learning Centre @ Oxford Castle
Jan 27 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

Listen to Julian Munby, from Oxford Archaeology and an OPT Trustee, as he speaks about Nuneham in the Oxford landscape.

Feb
18
Thu
‘Urban governance and its discontents’ Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College
Feb 18 @ 9:00 am – 4:15 pm
'Urban governance and its discontents' Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College | Oxford | United Kingdom

As a cornerstone initiative of the Oxford Programme for the Future of Cities, we are proposing a new format for presenting and elaborating thinking on what urban governance does, when it succeed and fails, and how it can be re-organized to meet the challenges of the 21st century. We put academics on the cutting edge of global urban scholarship face-to-face with established innovative practitioners—architects, activists, policy makers, and artists.

Through a series of rigorous yet accessible public dialogues they will grapple with the intellectual and everyday implications of their theories and practices on cities to produce visionary but grounded research and intervention strategies for the future of city life.
Each debate will be preceded by a small panel of academics and practitioners presenting papers that speak to the same key issues. Building on the long-standing Oxford tradition of public debate, we hope to encourage productive engagement between intellectuals and practitioners that is too often missing from discussions of the city.

Feb
19
Fri
‘Urban governance and its discontents’ Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College
Feb 19 @ 9:00 am – 4:15 pm
'Urban governance and its discontents' Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College | Oxford | United Kingdom

As a cornerstone initiative of the Oxford Programme for the Future of Cities, we are proposing a new format for presenting and elaborating thinking on what urban governance does, when it succeed and fails, and how it can be re-organized to meet the challenges of the 21st century. We put academics on the cutting edge of global urban scholarship face-to-face with established innovative practitioners—architects, activists, policy makers, and artists.

Through a series of rigorous yet accessible public dialogues they will grapple with the intellectual and everyday implications of their theories and practices on cities to produce visionary but grounded research and intervention strategies for the future of city life.
Each debate will be preceded by a small panel of academics and practitioners presenting papers that speak to the same key issues. Building on the long-standing Oxford tradition of public debate, we hope to encourage productive engagement between intellectuals and practitioners that is too often missing from discussions of the city.

Feb
24
Wed
What can photography teach us about poverty? @ Ertegun Scholarship Programme
Feb 24 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

What do Apple’s design principles, World War II propaganda, selfies and mobile phone video scandals all have in common?

Learn more about the power of visual imagery and how the era of social media and mobile-phone technology allows us to craft a new, smarter public view of poverty, in what promises to be a fascinating talk!

Free wine and nibbles, as always

Apr
18
Mon
IN[SCI]TE Undergraduate Conference @ Merton College, Oxford
Apr 18 @ 9:00 am – Apr 19 @ 5:00 pm
IN[SCI]TE Undergraduate Conference @ Merton College, Oxford | Oxford | United Kingdom

IN[SCI]TE is a new interdisciplinary science, technology, and engineering conference, which will take place on Monday and Tuesday of 0th Week Trinity Term 2016. IN[SCI]TE is run by undergrads, and the talks will be both delivered by and aimed at undergrads.

The aims for IN[SCI]TE are to broaden the knowledge and awareness of science undergrads outside their field of study, to provide a setting for undergrads to give a talk at a scientific conference during their degree, and to inspire future scientists to enter areas of work that cross the boundaries in science.

We are now accepting applications for speakers! Submit an application at inscite.co/speakers/, or send the facebook page a message if you have any questions.

To keep up to date with the conference, like us on facebook.com/insciteco, and follow us @insciteco.

May
13
Fri
Sir Paul Nurse FRS- Nobel Prize winner and former President of the Royal Society @ Goss Lecture Theatre
May 13 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Sir Paul Nurse FRS- Nobel Prize winner and former President of the Royal Society @ Goss Lecture Theatre | Oxford | United Kingdom

The Biological Society are very pleased to announce that Sir Paul Nurse will be giving a talk on Friday 13th May.

Sir Paul Nurse won the Nobel Prize in 2001 alongside Sir Tim Hunt and Leland Hartwell for the discovery of the molecules that are active in controlling the cell cycle. He has previously been chair of Microbiology at Oxford, and was President of the Royal Society for 5 years. He is now Chief Executive and Director of the Francis Crick Institute in London.
He will be giving a talk on the work contributing towards his Nobel Prize, and more recent work.
This is a fantastic opportunity to hear Sir Paul talk and have the opportunity to ask questions, and we really hope many of you will be interested

This talk will be at 6pm on Friday 13th May, in the Goss lecture theatre, Medical Sciences teaching building
The talk is free for members, and £3 for non-members, with membership available on the door

Jun
25
Sat
Oxford Science Fair @ Oxford Town Hall
Jun 25 – Jun 26 all-day
Oxford Science Fair @ Oxford Town Hall | Oxford | United Kingdom

Check out http://www.oxfordshiresciencefestival.com/oxford-science-fair.html for a full list of stalls. This is a FREE, drop in event with something for the whole family. Saturday 25 June 12-5pm, Sunday 26 June 1-5pm.

Jun
26
Sun
HENRY MOSELEY – SCIENCE’S LOST HERO​ @ Phoenix Picturehouse
Jun 26 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
HENRY MOSELEY – SCIENCE’S LOST HERO​ @ Phoenix Picturehouse | Oxford | United Kingdom

Date/Time: Sunday 26 June, 18:00
Venue: Phoenix Picturehouse, Oxford
Admissions: Free, book online
Suitability: 14+
Book here: http://www.oxfordshiresciencefestival.com/sun-opening-weekend.html

Henry Moseley is regarded as one of the most important scientific heroes that never was. Just one year after solving one of chemistry’s greatest conundrums, he was killed in action at Gallipoli in World War One. His contribution to science is a lasting legacy, and his work underpins one of the key techniques used in modern science to understand the atomic make-up of materials. This film, created by Diamond Light Source, celebrates his life and work, and is followed by a panel discussion with leading scientists who rely on Moseley’s legacy to carry out their research today.

Jul
1
Fri
CABARET OF THE ELEMENTS @ Glee Club
Jul 1 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm
CABARET OF THE ELEMENTS @ Glee Club | Oxford | United Kingdom

Join us for a sensational evening of cabaret – an alchemy of acts delivered by Science Oxford’s network of creative science performers. If you love science, stage and stand up, you’ll be in your element with our periodic table-themed cabaret including science presenter and geek songstress Helen Arney and compered by award-winning science communicator Jamie Gallagher. See the everyday elements that make up the world around us in a new light, watch in disbelief as gold is created before your eyes, and learn about their origins and how they behave inside our bodies. Get your tickets now – once they are gone they argon!

Oct
14
Fri
Elain Harwood: The Kenyon Building and Modernist University Architecture @ Mordan Hall, St Hugh's College
Oct 14 @ 2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
Elain Harwood: The Kenyon Building and Modernist University Architecture @ Mordan Hall, St Hugh's College | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Elain Harwood will look at David Roberts’s work in Cambridge and Oxford, and will place it in the context of the growth of higher education in the 1950s and 1960s, and the development of a modern style for university buildings.

Elain Harwood is Historic England’s specialist on post-war architecture and an acknowledged expert on and champion for Modernist architecture.

This event is part of the series A Festival of Anniversaries.

Nov
30
Wed
BIOMOD information session @ Martin Wood Lecture Theatre, Clarendon Laboratory
Nov 30 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

BIOMOD (http://biomod.net/) is an annual bionanotechnology competition for undergraduates. Students from all over the world and from many different fields take part. Over the summer, teams design and carry out their own research projects¬, and present them at a ‘jamboree’ in October. Next year’s event will be hosted in San Francisco. Each team designs and builds simple machines and structures out of the basic molecules of life – DNA, RNA and proteins. BIOMOD is a student-driven initiative that offers a complete and authentic scientific experience – from designing a research project to conducting experiments and presenting your work to your peers.

This BIOMOD information session will raise awareness and answer questions about starting a team to represent Oxford University.

Jan
26
Thu
Oxford Botanic Garden Winter Lectures: Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate @ SaÏd Business School
Jan 26 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Oxford Botanic Garden Winter Lectures: Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate @ SaÏd Business School | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate

Mary Keen is a writer, lecturer and renowned garden designer and will talk about the garden, its dedicated gardeners, past and present, and her book, which celebrates the tradition of excellence at Eythrope.