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Pandora’s Box: Open mic night

Start Date: 7 February 2024 6:00 pm

End Date: 7 February 2024 8:00 pm

Location: Vicarage Lecture Theatre, CVC008.

Pandora’s Box runs popular open-mic nights on the Exton Park Campus, hosted by the latest student editors. The nights are for current students (in any department) who want to read out and listen to contemporary creative writing.

Read out your latest poems, flash fictions or play extracts. Or just listen to what other students have written.

The nights are informal and fun. Bring along whatever you want to drink and nibble.

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Top tips: How to avoid scams

Scams can come in many forms and the majority are designed to steal your money or your identity.

This is commonly done by getting you to reveal your personal details, stealing your information, or even tricking you into willingly handing over the cash.

It’s important to know how to recognise a scam, and what actions to take if you fall victim to them.

Here are our top tips:

Beware of email and online scams

Be cautious when scanning your inbox, especially those emails which promise incredible deals, or say urgent action is required. Avoid clicking on suspicious links, and never provide personal information such as credit card details or passwords through emails.

Make sure your online shopping is secure

If you’re shopping online, make sure the website is secure. Only use reputable online retailers and avoid making purchases through public wi-fi networks which might not be secure.

Use strong passwords

Strengthen your online security by using unique and strong passwords for your accounts. Struggle to keep track of them? Use a password manager to keep them secure.

Update your software

Make sure your devices have the latest software. If your devices aren’t up to date, they risk not being totally secure.

Check your banking apps frequently

Make sure you’re keeping an eye out for any unauthorised or suspicious transactions on your bank statements. Many of us avoid our bank accounts when we’re worried about money, but doing this means you might not notice money going out of your account.

Trust your instincts

If something feels off or too good to be true, it probably is. Scammers often rely on a sense of urgency or incredible offers to lure you in. Take the time to investigate before making any decisions.

Head over to your bank’s website to read more on spotting frauds and scams, and also what to do if you fall victim to them.

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Theology and Religious Studies: Postgraduate ‘Find out more’ event

Start Date: 6 March 2024 2:00 pm

End Date: 6 March 2024 4:30 pm

Location: Hollybank, Parkgate Road or online

These sessions give you the opportunity to meet some of our academics, learn about TRS Chester, the course and flexible ways of studying with us, and the chance to ask any questions. We’d love to see you!

The events are offered in a hybrid format, meaning that you can join us in-person or online! We will cover the MA Theology and Religious Studies, the Doctor of Professional Studies (DProf) in Theology and Religious Studies, and our MPhil and PhD offerings.

For more information please email trs@chester.ac.uk or book your place here.

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Theology and Religious Studies: Postgraduate ‘Find out more’ event

Start Date: 22 May 2024 2:00 pm

End Date: 22 May 2024 4:30 pm

Location: Hollybank, Parkgate Road or online

These sessions give you the opportunity to meet some of our academics, learn about TRS Chester, the course and flexible ways of studying with us, and the chance to ask any questions. We’d love to see you!

The events are offered in a hybrid format, meaning that you can join us in-person or online! We will cover the MA Theology and Religious Studies, the Doctor of Professional Studies (DProf) in Theology and Religious Studies, and our MPhil and PhD offerings.

For more information please email trs@chester.ac.uk or book your place here.

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Theology and Religious Studies: Postgraduate ‘Find out more’ event

Start Date: 7 August 2024 2:00 pm

End Date: 7 August 2024 4:30 pm

Location: Hollybank, Parkgate Road or online

These sessions give you the opportunity to meet some of our academics, learn about TRS Chester, the course and flexible ways of studying with us, and the chance to ask any questions. We’d love to see you!

The events are offered in a hybrid format, meaning that you can join us in-person or online! We will cover the MA Theology and Religious Studies, the Doctor of Professional Studies (DProf) in Theology and Religious Studies, and our MPhil and PhD offerings.

For more information please email trs@chester.ac.uk or book your place here.

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LinkedIn: Getting Started

Start Date: 23 January 2024 6:00 pm

End Date: 23 January 2024 7:00 pm

Location: Online

Find out how the online professional networking site LinkedIn, can be used to get a job.

Knowing how to set-up and use an effective, personalised LinkedIn profile to connect online will help you discover job opportunities, gain information about the organisation, and promote yourself to employers.

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University of Law: March Open Day

Start Date: 19 March 2024 5:00 pm

End Date: 19 March 2024 7:30 pm

Location: Queen's Park

With our postgraduate courses taught by expert lawyers with real-life legal experience and an award-winning employability team, there’s no better place to begin your legal studies than with The University of Law.

Book your place

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Nick Fry, ‘Now Take Your Owl’ – Insights from the World of Medieval Medicine Using Examples from Chester and Beyond

Start Date: 5 June 2024 4:00 pm

End Date: 5 June 2024 5:00 pm

Location: CRV016 (the Music Room), Wheeler Building

In this illustrated talk, Nick Fry will share insights from the world of medieval medicine, using examples from Chester and beyond.

Nick Fry has worked for many years at Chester Cathedral in a variety of roles, including as Visits and Heritage Officer. He is also a Green Badge guide for the City of Chester. As a member of Deva Victrix, Roman reenactors in Chester, he takes a leading role as the Emperor Domitian at the annual Saturnalia Parade as well as at other events across the UK. A  longstanding member of the Chester Mystery Plays’ company, and a current board member, Nick has most recently been seen as Pontius Pilate in the outdoor City Passion on Good Friday, 2022 and in the 2023 Mystery Plays in the Cathedral, appearing as God.

This talk will take place in CRV016 (the Music Room) at the Wheeler Building – all welcome.

Host: Faculty of Health, Medicine and Society (FHMS) Historical Society

Admission is free, but booking encouraged for refreshment and seating purposes. Please contact fhsc.histsoc@chester.ac.uk or call 01244 512126 to confirm your place.

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Dr Janet Hargreaves: ‘This is Arnside 62, Nurse Kerr speaking’: Bringing community nursing to rural Westmorland 1917 – 1948

Start Date: 1 May 2024 4:00 pm

End Date: 1 May 2024 5:00 pm

Location: CRV016 (the Music Room), Wheeler Building

Dr Janet Hargreaves is a retired nurse lecturer with a continuing interest in nursing history. She has researched nurse education in the 1940s and 50s, nursing in conflict in Ireland in the early 19th century and in more recent years through oral histories with Médecins Sans Frontières nurses. Having retired to the small Cumbrian village of Arnside, she was intrigued to find detailed archives of the Arnside & District Nursing Association – which is the origins of this talk.  

Rural South Cumbria is characterised by numerous small villages and hamlets, separated by salt marshes, woods and limestone crags, leading to limited road and rail infrastructures. Whilst community nursing was available in cities from at least 1850, bringing nursing [and midwifery] to the widely dispersed inhabitants of the area was expensive and required a high degree of ingenuity and local voluntary effort.

This presentation uses the records of the old county-wide [Westmorland] and local [Arnside & District] Nursing Association minutes, along with other archival records and published histories to tell the story of the challenges faced to bring a full-time resident village nurse to Arnside. One Nurse: Mary Kerr, held the post of village nurse from 1937 -1945. Exploring her life as the village nurse brings the origins and spirit of the role, and its place in the development of community nursing, clearly into focus.

This talk will locate the Arnside and District Nursing Association within the wider development of community nursing and use a typical day in the life of Mary Kerr to bring the role to life.

This talk will take place in CRV016 (the Music Room) at the Wheeler Building – all welcome.

Host: Faculty of Health, Medicine and Society (FHMS) Historical Society

Admission is free, but booking encouraged for refreshment and seating purposes. Please contact fhsc.histsoc@chester.ac.uk or call 01244 512126 to confirm your place.

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Dr Stuart Wildman: The Workhouse Nurse in the Northwest of England, 1834-1914

Start Date: 6 March 2024 4:00 pm

End Date: 6 March 2024 5:00 pm

Location: CRV016 (the Music Room), Wheeler Building

Dr Stuart Wildman, Honorary Research Fellow, History of Medicine Unit, University of Birmingham

There was little reference to the care of the sick in the Poor Law Amendment Act (1834) but workhouses were important institutions as they dealt with almost five times as many sick people than their voluntary hospital counterparts. Caring for the sick and dependent would become more important within the workhouse, with the nurse progressing from lowly servant or pauper to trained and most numerous of employees by the end of the period. This research is based, primarily, on an analysis of Poor Law unions in the Northwest of England (Cheshire and south east Lancashire). This paper illustrates the composition of the nursing workforce, identifies the type of the men and women employed as nurses and shows the changes in the nursing service in the period before World War One. In addition, it explores the nature of nursing practice, the standards of care and the relationships between nurses, their patients, other officers and the guardians of the poor.

Stuart Wildman was a practicing nurse and lecturer. He completed a PhD entitled: Local Nursing Associations in an Age of Nursing Reform, 1860-1900, in 2012. Following retirement, he has taken up an appointment as an Honorary Research Fellow in the History of Medicine Unit at the University of Birmingham. His interests focus on the history of nursing and health care, in particular hospital and home nursing, in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He has published widely in a variety of journals.

This talk will take place in CRV016 (the Music Room) at the Wheeler Building – all welcome.

Host: Faculty of Health, Medicine and Society (FHMS) Historical Society

Admission is free, but booking encouraged for refreshment and seating purposes. Please contact fhsc.histsoc@chester.ac.uk or call 01244 512126 to confirm your place.

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