Can't get enough?
Categories
- Assessment & Feedback
- Digital community
- Digital Heroes
- Dissemination
- Employability
- Internationalisation
- Meetings & Events
- Placement student showcase
- Research
- Small project funding scheme
- Social media
- Staff-student partnerships
- Technology in fieldwork
- Training & resources
- Uncategorized
- Video
- Work/Academic placements
Tags
- 'Sharing Good Practice' event
- Academic Writing
- Alastair Culham
- Blackboard (VLE)
- Careers Placements Experience Centre
- Department of Art
- Department of Typography & Graphic Communication
- Digital Development Team
- Digital Literacies for Student Employability
- digital literacy
- E-books
- Existing and Emerging Biotechnologies (EEB) Framework
- Gerry Leonidas
- Guy Pursey
- iPad
- Julian Park
- Katerina Lazidou
- Letters to Santa
- Matthew Nicholls
- Nadja Guggi
- Neil Morris
- Pat Parslow
- Rachel Glover
- Research
- Sam Holton
- School E-Learning Co-ordinators (SELCs)
- School of Biological Sciences
- School of Construction Management and Engineering
- School of Systems Engineering
- Sir David Bell KCB
- Social media
- Staff training & development
- Student employability
- Student engagement
- Summer Employment Experience and Discovery (SEED)
- Teaching & Learning Showcase events
- Tee Nadan
- Undergraduate Research Opportunities Programme (UROP)
- Video
- VLE
- Wikis
- Yammer
Tag Archives: George Brewster
SEED placements: showcasing success
Last week SEED students were invited to present about their experiences at the SEED Showcase event. The evening was an opportunity for placement supervisors, employers, parents and fellow students to see the kind of things a SEED placement entails. There were … Continue reading
Posted in Employability, Meetings & Events, Placement student showcase, Research, Work/Academic placements
Tagged Emily Shaw, George Brewster, Harriet Taylor, James Buller, Kara Swift, Knowledge Transfer Centre (KTC), Opsview, Peter Finnan, Rachel Glover, Seb Lear, Shay Mullineaux, Summer Employment Experience and Discovery (SEED)
Leave a comment