Insight Magazine (16) - London's university courses and news

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Discover how London is pushing the boundaries of science and technology Read why London is the world’s business and financial capital Find out how London’s creative arts schools inspire and showcase talent Explore why London is the global centre for health and public policy Study in London A city of opportunities Arts courses Science courses 6 8 12 Business courses 10 in sight Issue sixteen www.studylondon.ac.uk The latest news and courses from London’s universities International relations London students receive mentoring advice from leading politicians Health courses Chinese language competition

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Welcome to insight, the quarterly magazine providing you with an in-depth look at the latest courses, news and research from London's universities.

Transcript of Insight Magazine (16) - London's university courses and news

Page 1: Insight Magazine (16) - London's university courses and news

Discover how London is pushing the boundaries of science and technology

Read why London is the world’s business and financial capital

Find out how London’s creative arts schools inspire and showcase talent

Explore why London is the global centre for health and public policy

Study in London A city of opportunities

Arts courses

Science courses6 8 12Business

courses 10

insightIssue sixteen www.studylondon.ac.uk

The latest news and courses from London’s universities

International relations London students receive mentoring advice from leading politicians

Health courses

Chinese language competition

Page 2: Insight Magazine (16) - London's university courses and news
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insight is produced by London & Partners four times a year. The editorial content of insight is produced by Study London under licence from London Higher. London & Partners Limited is registered in England and Wales under No: 7493460. Registered office at 2 More London, London SE1 4RR. Credits: Some facts have been supplied by HESA data.

Cover image: Nishali Patel Inset: Three Faiths Forum. insight is designed and printed by Fatpipe Limited www.fatpipe.co.uk

The views in insight are not necessarily those of London & Partners. Although every effort is made to ensure the accuracy and reliability of material published in insight, London & Partners does not accept responsibility for the veracity of claims made by contributors or the advertisers. All material is strictly copyright and all rights are reserved.

WELCOMETo subscribe for free, visit www.studylondon.ac.uk I ssue 16

Boris Johnson, Mayor of London November 2011

CONTENTS

NEWS02 Read about the latest courses, research

and student successes from London’s universities

buSiNESS & fiNaNCE06 buSiNESS bOOT CaMP How London’s

universities can turn your ideas into a world-beating business07 President of Lebanon invite • Future leaders • Solar mobile business • Top management courses

CrEaTivE arTS08 WHEN DrEaMS bECOME fiLMS London life inspires and supports the city’s student filmmakers09 Acting spotlight • Music business • Singing winners • Tate honour • Fashion partnership

SCiENCE & TECHNOLOGY10 rObOTiC SurGEONS Researchers in the

city are leading the development of the latest medical robots

11 Supercomputer • Chemistry with Biomedicine • Fighting acne • Computer games

HEaLTH & PubLiC POLiCY12 iNTErNaTiONaL STuDENT SuPPOrT

Student unions are changing and they are supporting the city’s students more than

ever before13 Midwife honour • Physiology prize • Health

partnership • Cancer and dementia funding

rEGuLar fEaTurES14 CaLENDar Of EvENTS Discover

London’s diverse festivals and celebrations16 LONDON’S HiDDEN GEMS The Museum of London The making of a world city. Discover how the Museum of London is telling the unique story of the world’s best big city

Earlier this year I attended two ‘business boot-camps’, at London Metropolitan University and Kingston University. Both visits demonstrated that London is a fantastic city because it is brimming with entrepreneurial spirit across a huge range of sectors.

The boot-camp plays a key role in helping budding entrepreneurs to

transform their brilliant ideas and business plans into viable start-up businesses, which have become more important than ever before for the capital’s prosperity. London’s future business leaders are shown the ‘inside track’ through the boot camp, with lots of solid advice from leading experts including how to start and grow successful, thriving companies.

In this edition of insight you can read about how London’s universities are supporting students to maximize their full entrepreneurial potential.

Next year, not only will London be welcoming the world for The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee and the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the capital will also be the launch pad for international celebrations to commemorate Charles Dickens’s 200th birthday.

Dickens is one of this city’s best known and most loved icons. A Londoner himself, he created an incomparable pageant of other London characters, but perhaps the greatest character to permeate his stories is the city itself. That rich Dickensian vision of London - with its everyday bustle, its blend of gritty enterprise and aspirational ambition, its Christmas cheer - is one that lives on in the imagination of everyone who reads his novels.

Inside this edition of insight you can read how the Museum of London is leading the celebrations by recreating that atmosphere of Victorian London.

London is alive with history and its future is waiting to be shaped by you. We are an open city and students from across the globe are most welcome here. Study in London and who knows, you could be starting the business of your dreams tomorrow, right here in the greatest city on earth!

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NEWS

2 www.studylondon.ac.uk

iN thE NEWS the LAteSt NeWS FROM LONDON’S UNIVeRSItIeS

THREE international students from London Metropolitan University have won places on this year’s ParliaMentors programme.

The award winning project gives the next generation of leaders the skills, experiences and networks they need to advance their careers.

The competition encourages students of different faiths and beliefs to work together on a project with mentoring support from MPs and Peers.

Carolin Albrecht, Ahmad Abdul Wahed and Thupten Thupten all completed a rigorous selection process and will now receive advice from leading NGOs, think tanks and politicians.

International relations

Source: three Faiths Forum

London Metropolitan University students

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NEWS

to subscribe for free visit www.studylondon.ac.uk 3

Source: Alec O

dahara

TWO students from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) have won second place in a prestigious Chinese language and culture competition.

The 10th annual Chinese Bridge competition honoured James Bilbow, an undergraduate in Chinese and Business Management, and Alec Odahara (pictured), an undergraduate in Chinese and Korean. The competition is famous as the world’s most difficult Chinese competition for non-native speakers.

The students were asked to deliver a speech in Chinese, answer questions about Chinese culture and demonstrate a talent associated with China, such as storytelling, calligraphy, martial arts or dancing.

They beat more than 6,000 contestants from around the world to win a full one-year scholarship to study in China.

There are over 10,000 Chinese students in London.

Chinese language skills Mobile EnglishENGLISH language experts at University College London (UCL) have developed an interactive English grammar course for the iPhone. Students can use the mobile app to practise their language skills and study English whenever they want and wherever they are.

Unlike student textbooks, the exercises and tests used in the app database are continually changing, providing students with an exciting learning environment.

The course materials have been developed by UCL researchers who are established leaders in English grammar.

Did you know?

130English language schools in London(Source: englishUKLondon)

There are over

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Mouldy new clothes

NINELA Ivanova, an MA Fashion student at Kingston University London has used fungi as inspiration for her latest clothes designs. Mushrooms and mould are both types of fungi, which are usually found growing naturally where they play an important role in decomposing organic matter.

Source: Kingston University London

THE University of London is celebrating its 175th anniversary with an exhibition of rarely seen items from its archives. The exhibition will take place in Senate House, the Art Deco masterpiece that houses the University’s extensive library.

The University was founded in 1836 and is the third oldest university after Oxford and Cambridge. It has since grown to encompass 19 colleges teaching 120,000 students.

University of London birthday

NEWS

Ninela has used fungi patterns to create delicate and feminine womenswear. Three of her designs actually incorporate the fungi sealed in PVC shoulder pads. Success awaits the Bulgarian student, who has already showcased her unique designs at this year’s London Fashion Week.

Find a friend on your phoneTHE University of Westminster has created a new mobile phone application to help its students organise their university lives and meet new people. The app, called iWestminster, gives students the tools to manage their student lives. They can access campus maps, information about their courses and university events whilst being able to

communicate with staff via their phones.

Students will also have access to the find-a-PC tool, which updates the availability of the University’s 1,286 computer seats every 15 minutes.

In addition, students can organise their social lives using the find-a-friend feature.

Ninela Ivanova with one of her designs

THE Institute for the Study of the Americas at the University of London has launched a new MSc in Environment and Development in Latin America and the Caribbean.

The course is the first of its kind in the UK focusing on the environmental and social issues that result from economic development and globalisation in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Uniquely, students will be able to examine natural resource exploitation in the region. They will also develop an understanding of the global debates supporting the policy and practice of sustainable development.

Environment and development

A MATHS graduate at Royal Holloway, University of London, has won a prestigious academic honour placing him among the top mathematical achievers in the UK.

Jonathan Grant received the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications (IMA) award in recognition of his high achievements. The talented student consistently scored top grades throughout his course.

Maths award

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to subscribe for free visit www.studylondon.ac.uk 5

Olympic recovery centre

2012 OLYMPIC SPECIAL - NEWS

FIVE postgraduate students from Royal Holloway, University of London will have the chance to complete internships at the London 2012 Games thanks to the International Paralympic Committee (IPC).

The interns will complete two week-long placements at the IPC’s headquarters during the build-up to the London 2012 Paralympics. The Sport Management (Paralympic Sport) students will learn about sports management and Games operations. The internships will also count towards their course assessment.

TEAM Singapore will use University of East London (UEL) as their recovery centre during the London 2012 Olympic Games. UEL will provide high performance athletic services to Team Singapore

athletes competing at the Games. While Team USA will use UEL’s new, state-of-the-art SportsDock facility during the Games as their sport performance and operational base.

Source: University of East London

Staff sign the agreement

2012 film A FILM production company managed by graduates from Queen Mary, University of London, is capturing the experiences of British athletes preparing for the London 2012 Olympic Games.

Mile End Films will film Team GB as they test themselves in training regimes specially designed to produce gold-winning athletes.

The film is a three-year project commissioned by UK Sport to film the lives of people who are driven by the desire to represent their country at an international level.

Paralympicinternships

The Olympic Stadium

Source: Olym

pic Delivery A

uthority

Did you know?

70,000volunteers to help make the Games happen, many of them students(Source: www.london2012.com)

London will use over

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business & FinAnCe neWs AnD COuRses

business boot-camp

The Mayor of London Boris Johnson recently visited London Metropolitan University’s ‘business

boot-camp’, a programme for students who want to set up their own company.

“London is brimming with entrepreneurial spirit across a huge range of sectors,” the Mayor said. “These brilliant boot-camps will help budding entrepreneurs to get the inside track from the experts on how to start and grow successful, thriving companies.”

The boot-camp is a series of tailor made seminars providing advice and support to student entrepreneurs.

London Metropolitan has also established a business incubator unit in east London’s Tech City where students can attend training courses.

Here they will learn how to pitch ideas and negotiate deals whilst also gaining a better understanding of intellectual property law and the various legal requirements to establish a business. In addition the incubator provides office space and access to a network of like-minded entrepreneurs.

Did you know?

(Source: London & Partners)

NINEout of ten executives say that working in London has increased their understanding of global business

Universities are also supporting students financially through business plan competitions and pre-seed funding. London South Bank University (LSBU) offers eight awards of £4,000 to help students develop their business ideas while studying. Students also have access to office space and a network of mentors to help make their ideas a success.

David Kyekiikyo Semakula, MSc Building Services Engineering student at LSBU, recently established a 3D Architectural Visualisation company. “The scheme has provided me with a platform to secure seed capital for software and start-up expenses,” David says. “I’ve also been able to create a business strategy through access to workshops and events.”

At University College London (UCL) students can access the technical and business expertise needed to transfer an idea or business plan into a start-up company. UCL Advances already supports 34 spin-out companies and is helping them to develop their intellectual property and grow their business.

London is bursting with talent. It’s the city where big brains and even bigger ideas begin life. With the help of your university you can develop your products and services into a successful business.

How London’s universities can turn your ideas into a world-beating business.

Source: London Metropolitan U

niversityMayor of London at the opening

Tech City in east London is home to one of the largest concentrations of small, fast-growing digital technology companies in Europe.

Only in London

(Source: London & Partners)

Course highlightsLOnDOn sOuTH bAnK uniVeRsiTYEnterprise and Small Business Development FdA Foundation Degree

LOnDOn MeTROPOLiTAn uniVeRsiTY Small Business Enterprise and Entrepreneurship BA

uniVeRsiTY OF GReenWiCH Business Entrepreneurship and Innovation BA

uniVeRsiTY OF WesTMinsTeRBusiness Management - Entrepreneurship BA

GOLDsMiTHs, uniVeRsiTY OF LOnDOnCreative and Cultural Entrepreneurship MA

iMPeRiAL COLLeGe LOnDOn Innovation and Entrepreneurship MSc

KinGsTOn uniVeRsiTY LOnDOn International Business Management with Entrepreneurship MA

uniVeRsiTY COLLeGe LOnDOn Technology Entrepreneurship MSc

Find more courses at www.studylondon.ac.uk

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business & FinAnCe

to subscribe for free visit www.studylondon.ac.uk 7

President of Lebanon inviteA TEAM of MBA students from

Imperial College London has won £10,000 for its business plan. Their idea could help retailers in the developing world generate an income by selling a solar mobile phone charging service.

They are developing a device that can charge several mobile phones at the same time and can function continuously on a sunny day. The idea

Solar mobile business was inspired by MBA student Siten Mandalia’s trip through South Asia, East and Central Africa.

The students developed the plan as part of their Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Design course. They are now planning to put their prize money towards developing their phone charger prototype and moving it towards manufacture.

SIX London students have been identified as future leaders as part of a campaign to encourage young people from African and Caribbean backgrounds to go to university.

At Kingston University, Businesswith Law students Namitasha Muunganirwa and David Olusegun (pictured) both featured in Future Leaders magazine, which showcases

Future leaders

TWENTY London Business School students recently enjoyed a trip to Lebanon that included a visit to the Presidential Palace. The group met President Michel Suleiman and discussed Lebanon’s key economic and political role in the region and international arena.

The President addressed current internal security and stability issues, as well as policies to strengthen Lebanon’s economic role in the Middle East.

The discussion focussed on the government’s role of leveraging Lebanon’s key economic strengths in the banking sector, the country’s biggest GDP contributor.

The group included MBA students from 12 different countries who also visited historical monuments, world heritage sites and some of Lebanon’s beaches.

Source: London Business School

Top rankedFIVE London universities have been named in the latest Financial Times (FT) Master’s in Management rankings.

Imperial College London, Cass Business School, London School of Economics and Brunel University are all listed in the top 60, as is ESCP Europe which also has a campus in London. Master’s in Management courses are becoming increasingly popular with students throughout the world. The course is ideal for students who don’t have the minimum work experience requirements to study an MBA.the top-performing black students

in the UK. Four students from the School of

Oriental and African Studies were also selected. The four students are Joshua Price (BA History), Toib Olomowewe (BA Economics and History), Olamide Bada (LLB School of Law) and Kanika Mayi (BA African Studies and Politics).

Source: Imperial C

ollege London

Students collect their prize

Source: Kingston U

niversity London

Did you know?

(Source: www.studylondon.ac.uk)

1,300management courses to choose from in London

There are over

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8 www.studylondon.ac.uk

CReATiVe ARTs neWs AnD COuRses

When dreams become films

H istory can be seen in every street in London yet it is the city’s modern and contemporary life that

inspires some filmmakers. Ana Atanesyan, a Russian MSc Banking and International Finance alumna from Cass Business School, recently produced a film set on a south London housing estate. Ana found it challenging to study whilst also producing her film Zebra Crossing.

“The workload and the intensity of the course has made me into what I am today both professionally and mentally,” she says. “It took me a few intense months to learn enough, before embarking on budgeting, casting, hiring crew, choosing locations and equipment.”

While it is rare for new filmmakers to go straight into making a full length movie, the gamble paid off for Ana when Zebra Crossing was included in the Raindance Film

London life inspires and supports the city’s student filmmakers.

Festival, the biggest and most prestigious festival in the UK for independent films.

After a screening at the Southern Californian Film Festival, the film won the Best Film in the Festival award and further awards followed. “Our proudest moment was when we were nominated for the British Independent Film Award,” Ana says. “We were suddenly rubbing shoulders with many of the top industry professionals.”

At London Metropolitan University students can discover how technology is becoming increasingly important in filmmaking. The Digital Film and Animation Masters focuses on digital moving image and animation technologies and offers students the experience of managing a small desktop digital studio that is ideal for independent filmmakers.

Being a filmmaker in London is easier than ever before. We’ve got the expertise, amazing locations, funding opportunities and fully equipped studios. All that’s missing are your ideas.

Course highlightsReGenT’s COLLeGe LOnDOnFilm, Television and Digital Media Production BA

ROeHAMPTOn uniVeRsiTY Film Studies and Creative Writing BA

sT MARY’s uniVeRsiTY COLLeGe, TWiCKenHAM Film and Popular Culture and Creative and Professional Writing BA

uniVeRsiTY OF WesTMinsTeRFilm and Television Production BA

bRuneL uniVeRsiTY Cult Film and Television MA

GOLDsMiTHs, uniVeRsiTY OF LOnDOn Screen and Film Studies MA

LOnDOn MeTROPOLiTAn uniVeRsiTY Digital Film and Animation MA

LOnDOn COLLeGe OF COMMuniCATiOn Documentary Film MA

Find more courses at www.studylondon.ac.uk

(Source: Film London)

In 2010 UK film production spend hit a record level of

£1.1billion

Did you know?

Love From London is an online map from Film London highlighting key film locations in the capital for movies such as the Harry Potter and Sherlock Holmes.

Only in London

(Source: Film London)

Source: Warner Brothers

Clint Eastwood filming in London

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to subscribe for free visit www.studylondon.ac.uk 9

CREATIVE ARTS

UNIVERSITY of East London has teamed up with FashionCapital to open a new fashion design and manufacturing facility. Educational workshops and seminars are available for students together with a new manufacturing centre that is capable of producing up to 5,000 items each week.

FashionCapital is an industry-based specialist that provides mentoring, professional advice and retail space for designers and fashion students.

EARLIER this year Chelsea College of Art & Design students were invited to take part in an exciting competition to produce a large scale piece of art to be displayed on Tate Britain’s historic building.

The winning design by BA Graphic Design Communication student Jessie May Peters has now been printed on a giant 20 x 16 metre screen installed on the front of the building (pictured). Jessie May’s piece, ‘This is Britain’, uses words to symbolise the Union Jack and describe the design of the UK flag.

The work is designed to show that Tate Britain is not only the home of historically important British art but also of contemporary British art.

Tate honour

Fashion partnership

TWO London graduates have won acting prizes at this year’s Spotlight Prize. Kurt Egyiawan from Guildhall School of Music and Drama won the overall prize while Kirsty Oswald from Rose Bruford College won the Highly Commended award.

Kurt and Kirsty beat the very best actors graduating from the UK’s most prestigious drama schools this year. They had just three minutes each to impress an industry audience at the Spotlight Showcase. The judging panel included illustrious actors from television, film and theatre.

Spotlight was founded in 1927 and has since become world-famous as the place for actors, agents and casting directors to meet and work on new projects. Over 40,000 performers appear on the Spotlight website including actors and actresses, presenters, dancers and stunt artists.

Acting spotlight

Jessie with her design

Source: University of A

rts London

Fashion student at University of East London

Source: University of East London

LONDON singing students and graduates have been celebrating recently. At the Royal College of Music (RCM) countertenor Rupert Enticknap was awarded a special prize at the International Singing Competition for Baroque Opera, one of Europe’s most prestigious singing competitions.

Soprano Robyn Parton, who graduated from the RCM in July 2011, won the Haidee Saretzky Prize at the Les Azuriales Ozone Young Artists’ Competition. Current student Alexey Chernov won Second Prize at the Cleveland International Piano Competition in the USA.

At the Royal Academy of Music, graduates Jonathan McGovern and Timothy End won the Jean Meikle Duo Prize at the Wigmore Hall/Kohn Foundation International Song Competition. These great achievements are an excellent way for these talented singers and musicians to begin their careers.

Singing winnersUNIVERSITY of Westminster’s music business network, MusicTank, has launched an online music business website to help over 30,000 music graduates start their careers.

The Institutional Partnership Programme (IPP) will give graduates access to up-to-date intelligence from the music industry and academic world, helping them to stay

Online music businessahead of the curve in this notoriously competitive industry.

The site also offers free access to MusicTank’s music industry reports. Industry leaders from Columbia records and BPI have contributed to the discussions, along with government ministers and the managers of pop artists such as Robbie Williams.

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sCienCe & TeCHnOLOGY neWs AnD COuRses

Robotic surgeons

T he development of robotics for use in medical surgery is changing the way surgeons operate. The need to

perform delicate and safe surgical procedures in inaccessible parts of the human body has created demand for robots that act as extensions to a surgeon’s eyes and hands.

The Hamlyn Centre for Robotic Surgery at Imperial College London is at the forefront of medical robotic research. The Centre is led by Professor Guang-Zhong Yang and Professor Lord Ara Darzi, both eminent in the subjects of computing and surgery.

The latest robot being developed by the Centre is the i-Snake, which is set to revolutionise keyhole surgery. The i-Snake will be self-propelled and directed through the body by a surgeon controlling the robot by remote control.

Researchers in the city are leading the development of the latest medical robots.

“The instrument will enhance vision, dexterity, and the precision of the surgical procedures,” says Professor Yang. “It will result in less pain and better recovery and also better outcomes for the patient.”

The Centre offers PhD and MRes programmes for students with a strong technical or clinical background. The MRes is taught by a team of academics from computing, engineering and surgery, demonstrating the need for a multidisciplinary understanding when working with surgical robotics.

In addition to enjoying a visit from HRH The Queen (pictured), Professor Yang was nominated as a Fellow to the Royal Academy of Engineering for his pioneering work in imaging, sensing and robotics for healthcare.

The city is also home to the Centre for Robotics Research at King’s College London, which undertakes multi-disciplinary research in robotic surgery and medical robotic devices. The Centre conducts collaborative research with Imperial, other universities and

businesses such as Unilever Research and the Ford Motor Company.

The inventive tools designed and made by London’s robot researchers are becoming increasingly important to a surgeon’s daily job of improving and saving lives.

Source: Neville M

iles

Robotics funding worth over

€2 million

Did you know?

(Source: King’s College London)

Imperial is home to the Hamlyn Symposium on Medical Robotics hosted in association with the Royal Society. The Symposium creates a regular forum for surgeons, engineers and researchers to exchange ideas and explore new challenges and opportunities for robotic surgery.

Only in London

(Source: www.imperial.ac.uk)

Course highlightsCiTY uniVeRsiTY LOnDOnBiomedical Engineering BEng

KinG’s COLLeGe LOnDOn Biomedical Engineering BEng

bRuneL uniVeRsiTY Biomedical Engineering MSc

iMPeRiAL COLLeGe LOnDOnMedical Robotics and Image Guided Intervention MRes

Queen MARY, uniVeRsiTY OF LOnDOn Medical Engineering MEng

uniVeRsiTY COLLeGe LOnDOn Physics and Engineering in Medicine MSc

Find more courses at www.studylondon.ac.uk

has been won or applied for by King’s College London

The Queen at the opening of the Hamlyn Centre for Robotic Surgery at Imperial College

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sCienCe & TeCHnOLOGY

Fighting acne

A MOBILE phone application designed to help fight acne and developed by London students has won £10,000 at an entrepreneurial competition.

Students from Imperial College London and UCL developed the I.am.spotless phone application. It allows users to take a photograph of their skin to track the spread or retreat of acne. This provides doctors with a record of how the acne responds to different treatments over time.

The concept was chosen by a panel of judges and investors at Startup Summer, a pilot programme organised by the public research company YouGov, together with Imperial and UCL. The scheme gives students vital project funding and access to market research. The winning students will now use the prize money to develop their ideas into a business.

KING’S College London has introduced a new undergraduate chemistry degree. The MSci Chemistry with Biomedicine is designed to train the next generation of chemists interested in applying their science in biomedicine and healthcare research.

The course is the only programme of its kind in the UK and it will cover a mixture of subjects related to

Chemistry with biomedicineindustry, academia and the health services. Students can enrol on the four-year programme now to begin in September 2012.

Fully accredited to Royal Society of Chemistry standards, the course will give students an understanding of materials science, nanotechnology, and drug discovery, delivery, analysis and detection.

COMPUTER Games Technology students at City have won the Teams’ Choice award at Dare to be Digital, the UK’s premier video games competition.

The MSc team were recognised for developing PaperQuest, a 3D adventure game for the Microsoft Xbox games console. The game

Computer games

SupercomputerRESEARCHERS at the Centre for Particle Physics at Royal Holloway, University of London are using a vast network of lightning-fast computers to analyse information from the world’s biggest scientific experiment at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC).

Physicists at Royal Holloway are one of the many specialist teams around the globe analysing the huge quantities of data produced at LHC in search of the elusive Higgs particle. In one month alone Royal Holloway’s supercomputer analysed 200 million proton-proton collision events.

The LHC recreates in miniature the conditions that existed within a billionth of a second after the ‘big bang’ at the birth of the universe. Physicists are searching through the LHC data for signs of the Higgs particle, which is believed to be the missing piece of the puzzle that explains the early evolution of the universe.

Chemistry student at King’s

challenges players to fly a paper airship through a 3D-origami world, gathering prizes as they progress.

City’s team was among 16 teams from universities across the UK, Europe, India and China competing and taking part in workshops with leading computer games industry professionals.

Source: King’s C

ollege London

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HeALTH & PubLiC POLiCY neWs AnD COuRses

international student support

Students’ unions provide a vital service on campus. They help students with many of the day-to-day issues such

as finding accommodation, opening a bank account and getting a part-time job. They also provide advice for students who may need moral support when moving to a new city or country.

Arun Thakral is the new President of the students’ union at the University of Greenwich. An Indian student from New Delhi, Arun is familiar with the emotions of arriving in a new country to live and study.

“The students’ union at Greenwich acts as a support and advice centre for international students,” Arun explains. “Those who are new to the country need our help and advice

Students’ unions are changing and they are supporting the city’s students more than ever before.

Source: Arun Thakral

Brunel University’s students’ union supports

Did you know?

50sports clubs and counts famous Olympic Gold medalist rower James Cracknell as an alumnus

in lots of areas.” Students’ unions also provide a

wide choice of sporting and social activities during the academic year. Put simply, the unions aim to make a student’s experience at university the best it possibily can be.

Arun recently completed his MA in International Business. “I wanted to take a course in business and London is the city with the most diverse group of students, drawn from all over the world,” he says on his choice of London as a place to study.

He also enjoyed a number of internships during his studies, one of them in Dubai, as well spending time learning new skills as a volunteer with charities such as the British Red Cross.

When asked what he most enjoys about living in London, his response is instant, “It’s a beautiful city. I enjoy the diverse cultures and the new experiences on offer. Every day seems new and fresh to me.”

Arun dreams of setting up his own company. Until then he is very happy being the president of his student union and he looks forward to welcoming and meeting this year’s new international students.

University of London Union (ULU) is a students’ union for all 19 colleges of the University of London. It is the largest students’ union in Europe with over 120,000 students.

Only in London

Arun Thakral

(Source: www.studylondon.ac.uk)

(Source: www.studylondon.ac.uk)

Arun’s advice to new students:

“Be passionate about the goals you want to achieve in life, and use your precious time at university in the best possible way.”

“Don’t hesitate to seek advice from your students’ union.”

“And, lastly, get involved in the Union to make sure your voice is heard.”

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HeALTH & PubLiC POLiCY

Cancer and dementia fundingLONDON’S nine leading medical institutions have been given a record £423.8 million for research. The hospitals and universities are working on illnesses such as cancer, dementia and heart disease. The biggest award was £112 million to Imperial College London for pioneering work in genetics, bioengineering and cancer.

Moorfield’s Eye Hospital and University College London will share £26 million to develop revolutionary techniques to grow transparent eye tissue in the laboratory. King’s College London will share £46 million for new biomedical research units specialising in dementia.

NISHALI Patel from the School of Pharmacy has won a 2011 Undergraduate Prize for Physiology for the best lab-based project in Pharmacology. The undergraduate’s project investigated the role of drugs for treating stomach disorders.

The award is from the Physiological

Physiology prize Health partnership

CITY University London has joined UCLPartners, one of the five accredited academic health science groups in the UK. City was invited to join the partnership in recognition of its expertise in nursing and health services.

UCLPartners focuses on turning health research and innovation into health gains for patients and their families in London, across the UK and globally. The partnership’s current research portfolio includes over 50 initiatives to improve health and healthcare.

Projects include creating an integrated healthcare system for cancer patients; increasing value for money in mental health; and improving the quality of stroke care.

The two universities will work together with UCL Hospital, The Royal Free Hospital, Moorfields Eye Hospital and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children.

A MIDWIFERY student at the University of West London has won the 2011 Claude Osborn Award. Evon Tengende won the annual award for demonstrating excellence during her studies and work placement.

Evon completed a work placement at Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea Hospital. Her mentors praised the student’s excellent communication and organisational skills as well as the ‘kind and considerate’ manner in which she worked with patients.

Midwife honour

Source: University of W

est London

Evon Tengende collects her prize

Source: Nishali Patel

Nishali Patel

Society. Founded in 1876, the Society has almost 3,000 members including 21 Nobel Laureates. The Society promotes the advancement of physiology to help our understanding of biomedical sciences and the detection, prevention and treatment of disease.

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EVENTS

14 www.studylondon.ac.uk

jaNuaryNew Year’s Day Parade

International Mime Festival

London Art Fair

FEBruaryChinese New Year Celebrations

London Fashion Week

Six Nations Rugby at Twickenham

marchSt Patrick’s Day Parade

Affordable Art Fair

aprilLondon Marathon

London Book Fair

The Camden Crawl

Vaisakhi Celebrations

The Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race

mayAfrica Day Celebrations

FA Cup Final

Chelsea Flower Show

Student Final Year Shows across London

juNETrooping the Colour

City of London Festival

London Literature Festival

Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships

The Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition

London Festival of Architecture

Universities Week

Camden Green Fair

A selection of London’s festivals and celebrationscalENdar oF EVENTS

NoVEmBErLondon Jazz FestivalJazz enthusiasts and newcomers come together for an inspiring ten days of jazz, packed with everything from be-bop to beat-box. Take your pick of hundreds of concerts at over 50 venues and listen to some of the world’s best jazz music.

Source: Dam

ian Searles

Source: Clive Totm

an

NoVEmBErLord Mayor’s Show

Join the Lord Mayor’s procession, winding through 800 years of London history, when the newly elected Lord Mayor makes his way to the Royal Courts of Justice to pledge allegiance to the Crown. Enjoy the Show with 6,000 performers, 220 vehicles, 70 floats and 13 marching bands.

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to subscribe for free visit www.studylondon.ac.uk 15

EVENTS

jaNuary 2012International Mime Festival Challenge your expectations of mime with London’s guide to the best in contemporary, international visual theatre. Quietly enjoy performances at some of London’s most prestigious venues.

dEcEmBErNew Year’s Eve FireworksCountdown to the New Year with 250,000 people and enjoy a spectacular fireworks display against the backdrop of the London Eye and Houses of Parliament. Big Ben’s famous chimes start the celebrations at midnight making this free event a night to remember.

Source: Mat H

ennem

Source: Visit London

dEcEmBErChristmas Carols in Trafalgar SquareListen to school and charity choirs as they help raise money for good causes each December. Carols are sung beneath the 20 metre tall Christmas tree donated by Norway every year since 1947 as a token of Norwegian and British friendship.

Source: Visit London

july

Wireless Music Festival

BBC Proms Classical Music Festival

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games

Pride London

auguST

Trafalgar Square Festival

Carnaval del Pueblo

Notting Hill Carnival

London Triathlon

London Mela

SEpTEmBEr

Regent Street Festival

Open House London

London Design Festival

Thames Festival

London Fashion Week

The Great River Race

Brick Lane Festival

ocToBEr

London Film Festival

Eid Celebrations

Frieze Art Fair

Bloomsbury Festival

Diwali Celebrations

London Games Festival

NoVEmBEr

Lord Mayor’s Show

London Jazz Festival

State Opening of Parliament

dEcEmBEr

Carols in Trafalgar Square

New Year’s Eve Fireworks

Royal Institution Christmas Lectures

Go online to read more about events taking place in London www.studylondon.ac.uk

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16 www.studylondon.ac.uk

loNdoN’S hiddEN gEmS

ThE maKiNg oF a World ciTy

In eAch edItIon we expLore London’s unIque treAsures, specIALIst coLLectIons And resources. In thIs edItIon we focus on the MuseuM of London.

the Museum of London has recently undergone a £20 million transformation with the introduction

of amazing new galleries. The Museum tells the story of

London from prehistoric times to the present day. Its new galleries add to this story and even predict the future of this great city.

A new World City gallery portrays contemporary London. It examines how fashion and London’s multicultural population have changed over the last 50 years.

An interactive river runs through architectural landmarks such as St Paul’s, the Gherkin and the new 2012 Olympic stadiums. The showpiece of the gallery is an enormous projection that looks to the future and visualizes how London’s ever-changing skyline might look with the addition of planned skyscrapers.

The new galleries have increased the Museum’s space by 25 percent.

You can enjoy a stroll through a reconstructed Victorian pleasure garden or even experience the inside of a debtor’s prison cell.

In 2012 the Museum will lead the celebrations of Charles Dickens’s 200th birthday by recreating the atmosphere of Victorian London. Visitors will be able to listen to a haunting journey of sounds and see visual projections of London inspired by Dickens’s writing.

Paintings, photographs and costumes will illustrate the themes Dickens wove into his works, while rarely seen manuscripts including Bleak House and David Copperfield, written in the author’s own hand, will offer clues to his creative genius.

During your visit you’ll discover how Dickens’s childhood experience of working in a factory while his father was locked away in a debtor’s prison were introduced into the stories he wrote. The great social questions of the 19th century, including wealth,

poverty, and philanthropy will also be examined, all of which set the scene for Dickens’s greatest works.

Whether it’s the past or future, the Museum of London houses this great city’s history under one roof.

Source: Public domain

Lord Mayor’s State Coach at the Museum of London

Source: Museum

of London

Charles Dickens (1850)

Page 19: Insight Magazine (16) - London's university courses and news
Page 20: Insight Magazine (16) - London's university courses and news

Find your university course in London at: www.studylondon.ac.uk

Alborz Hashemieh BUSINESS STUDIES STUDENT FROM IRAN

“London is an historical-

modern city, where you

can find both past and

future. London to me is

like my dream land where

you can study at the

highest education level.”

“I am deeply in love

with London because

of its loveliness. Its

historical grandness and

dynamic modernity give

me refreshment every

day. I rarely feel like I

am a stranger here. I

love the parks, cinemas,

streets, Art Deco

buildings, book stores,

Sunday mornings... I

enjoy everything here.”

Guo Cheng MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION

STUDENT FROM CHINA