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Systematic review of English Medium Instruction

Series
Department of Education Research Seminars
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Ernesto Macaro (with Samantha Seiter, Jiangshan An, Jack Pun, Julie Dearden), Centre for Research and Development in English Medium Instruction, University of Oxford, gives a talk for the EMI Symposium.
The exponential growth of English Medium Instruction (EMI) in Higher Education (HE) globally has driven a similar growth of empirical research on the subject. Of necessity this research to date has been exploratory, single institution-oriented and lacking a clear research agenda that a more established community of practice could have ensured. Moreover, HE research appears to be almost completely isolated, in its conceptualization, from EMI research in earlier phases of education despite the challenges that students might face as they transition from one phase to another.
At EMI Oxford, we have carried out an extensive systematic review of EMI research worldwide. I will begin by presenting an overview of this research by brie y comparing the eld in the different phases of education. I will then focus on a synthesis of 83 studies undertaken in the HE sector before outlining what kind of research still needs to be undertaken in order to better inform EMI teachers, students and policy makers.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Education Research Seminars
People
Ernesto Macaro
Keywords
education
teaching
EMI
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 05/07/2017
Duration: 00:48:33

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The Quill Project: Modelling and Visualizing the Creation of the American Constitution

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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Dr Nicholas Cole and Dr Alfie Abdul-Rahman discuss the Quill Project, a software platform developed to aid research and teaching of the history of Parliamentary-style negotiations, and particularuarly the creation of the Constitution of the United States.
They will discuss the research problems that the platform was created to address, and the process of building the tools for both data-entry and a diverse readership. We will address the design-choices that we have adopted to encourage a consistent use of the model, and the features that we have built into the platform to facilitate a cooperative relationship with other digital projects.

They will discuss the problems of user-interface design for a potential readership that includes high-school students through to subject-domain experts through an analysis of the user requirements and specifications. This talk is aimed at a non-expert audience.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
Nicholas Cole
Alfie Abdul-Rahman
Keywords
history
politics
American Politics
parliamentary politics
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 05/07/2017
Duration: 00:48:14

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Seeing is Believing: Computer vision and machine learning for image collections

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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Giles Bergel gives a talk on using new technologies to understand the history of books and printing.
The first point of access for image collections has traditionally been the catalogue. Recent advances in computer vision and machine learning have opened up new ways of describing, searching and researching the visual record. This talk will outline the state of the art in the field, demonstrate some recent applications, and provide pathways for participants who wish to apply these techniques to their own materials.
Giles Bergel is Digital Humanities Research Fellow for the Seebibyte project in the Department of Engineering Sciences at the University of Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
Giles Bergel
Keywords
history
books
Libraries
digital
humanities
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 05/07/2017
Duration: 00:51:21

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Double Seminar on Biomedical Technology and Moral Bioenhancement

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
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In this double seminar, Erasmus visitors Laurentiu Staicu and Emanuel-Mihail Socaciua discuss the rise of biomedical technology and some of the legal issues of moral bioenhancement
'The rise of postmedicine: some ethical concerns regarding biomedical technology'. Traditional medicine is bound by a moral duty to treat patients with compassion and to combine all medical interventions and treatments with caring as a fundamental attitude toward the patient. That's because the patient is seen as a person who needs help in recovering his or hers well-being, and any person should be treated with care and respect. However, what happens when patients are seen as medical puzzles which need to be solved rather than people in need? Can we treat a puzzle with care and compassion? The use of biomedical technology in medical treatments brought a spectacular increase in efficiency, but what are the moral costs of this increased efficiency? (Speaker: Laurentiu Staicu)

'How Drug Patents Might Lead to Disincentives for Moral Bioenhancement'. Biological moral enhancement (BME) and intellectual property (IP) might seem two entirely distinct areas. While BME refers to moral enhancement techniques which presuppose the use of biological means, the moral and legal debate surrounding IP tries to tackle the issue of whether ideas could/should be appropriated. In our paper we wish to link the two debates by exploring the consequences of the current IP and patent system in relation to the propensity of individuals to become morally enhanced through drugs or other pharmaceutical compounds. If artificial scarcity is one of the intended consequences of patents, we argue in favor of the following (weak) thesis: intellectual property rights provide noticeable disincentives for individual and voluntary moral bioenhancement.(Speaker: Emanuel-Mihail Socaciua)

Episode Information

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Laurentiu Staicu
Emanuel-Mihail Socaciua
Keywords
bioenhancement
bioengineering
biotechnology
moral enhancement
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 05/07/2017
Duration: 00:49:52

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Disability Narratives and Histories

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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Launch event for the TORCH Disability and Curriculum Diversity series.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Marie Tidball
Helen Hillman
Richard Sandell
Elleke Boehmer
Keywords
disability
narratives
histories
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 04/07/2017
Duration: 00:43:07

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Music, Empathy and Cultural Understanding

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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In this TORCH Talk, Professor Eric Clarke talks about 'Music, Empathy and Cultural Understanding' at the Ashmolean Museum's Supersonic LiveFriday.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Eric Clarke
Keywords
music
torch
Ashmolean
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 04/07/2017
Duration: 00:18:00

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Orchestral Musicians' Experiences: Inside Out

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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In this TORCH Talk, Dr Cayenna Ponchione-Bailey presents on 'Orchestral Musicians' Experiences: Inside Out' at the Ashmolean Museum's Supersonic LiveFriday.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Cayenna Ponchione-Bailey
Keywords
torch
Ashmolean
music
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 04/07/2017
Duration: 00:28:53

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15cBOOKTRADE: The visualization of the circulation of books over time and space and image-searching tool: how we got there

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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Cristina Dondi and Matilde Malaspina of the 15C BOOKTRADE project, give a talk for the 2017 DHOXSS.
Cristina will present 15cV, a powerful tool for the visualization of the movement of fifteenth-century printed books, from the time and place where they were printed to where they are today, via the many places and people who distributed, purchased, owned, and annotated them during the intervening 500-year period. This tool enables unanswered historical queries on the impact of printing on early modern society to be addressed for the first time. Cristina will illustrate how the project is making its visualization possible, and outlines how the project, one of the largest collaborative enterprises in the humanities, was set up and continues to grow.

Matilde will present the 15cBOOKTRADE project, a collaboration with the Visual Geometry Group (Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford). This project is testing the application of a series of digital cataloguing and searching methods on fifteenth-century printed images. The work is based on the integrated application of instance-based (i.e. image) and class-based (i.e. text) retrieval. The objective of the collaboration is the creation of a new tool capable of systematically tracking and investigating the production, use, circulation, and copy of woodblocks, iconographic subjects, artistic styles, etc. within fifteenth-century printed illustrated editions.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
Cristina Dondi
Matilde Malaspina
Keywords
digital
books
renaissance
book trade
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 04/07/2017
Duration: 01:00:30

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Bringing order to chaos: Using Face and Pattern Recognition on Photo Archives

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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This talk explains how David has been using Face and Pattern Recognition on an otherwise undocumented photographic archive from Cameroon to identify patterns and connections between images. Similar approaches are possible online.
Although far from perfect they can help putting some order onto chaos. This is not the end of the research but an initial step: the real work is still ahead and that depends on the questions, the research topics one brings to the archive.
David Zeitlyn is Professor of Social Anthropology for the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Wolfson College
​
His research interests are anthropology of religion, especially divination, visual anthropology (photography), West/Central Africa (especially Cameroon); life writing; uses of technology, decision making processes and futurology, visualisation, archives, archiveology, anthropological studies of ICT and research methods.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
David Zeitlyn
Keywords
digital
humanities
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 04/07/2017
Duration: 00:48:13

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Encoding and Encoded Texts

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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Panel chaired by Pip Wilcox, with Barbara McGillivray, Megan Senseney and Nicholas Cole.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
Pip Wilcox
Barbara McGillivray
Megan Senseney
Nicholas Cole.
Keywords
digital
Libraries
text encoding
technology
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 04/07/2017
Duration: 00:58:56

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