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Jackie Chapman-Gray

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Katrin Böhme

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Biodiversity on the rocks: joining the dots between animate and inanimate

Series
Biodiverse Objects
Embed
This podcast explores some of the countless relationships between biology, biodiversity, and geology, past and present.
The third and final podcast in our Biodiverse Objects series explores some of the countless relationships between biology, biodiversity, and geology, past and present. How have geological processes on a large and small scale influenced life from the beginnings and how are they continuing to affect biodiversity today? We are also looking into - and listening into! - the physics of patterns. From black smokers to music chiming with a nautilus shell, from obsessions with basalt to deep-sea ooze and the beginning of life on Earth. Finally, a look at the coevolution of life and landscapes will conclude our meander to join the dots between animate and (so-called!) inanimate matter.

About Biodiverse Objects
This series of three epic (length-wise ;-)) podcasts takes a close look at some fascinating and surprising objects in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History. It is a kind of fringe-event to go hand in hand with the major redisplay happening at the Museum in 2022. Each podcast is a journey of discovery through the nooks and crannies of the Museum, talking to researchers and experts on the way.

We will seek out the rarely seen or heard-about enigmatic objects in the Museum and their stories – scientific, historical and personal. These objects can be specimens, natural objects, artefacts, tools, or even museum interna such as conservation fluids. What they all have in common is that they speak to us about ecology and biodiversity. Both terms are linked – without constantly evolving ecological relationships there is no biodiversity. Is there such a thing as “biodiverse objects”?

Episode Information

Series
Biodiverse Objects
People
Elaine Charwat
Esteban Acevedo Trejos
Mark Carnall
Lita Manners
Duncan Murdock
Susan Newell
Keywords
museum
collections
biodiversity
Physics
evolution
geology
biology
Department: Museum of Natural History
Date Added: 31/08/2022
Duration: 01:03:08

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Extinction and the Museum: skeletons and other remains in our cupboards

Series
Biodiverse Objects
Embed
In this podcast, we look at extinction and the role of collections and museums.
The second podcast in our Biodiverse Objects series is about extinction and the role of collections and museums. This ranges from the good - researching causes for extinction and preserving evidence, to the bad – contributing to extinction or damaging populations and environments through over-collecting, to the ugly – the legacy of regarding and displaying extinction as “deserved” in the “survival of the fittest. We will also explore “the spirit of conservation” – methods of preserving animal remains.

About Biodiverse Objects
This series of three epic (length-wise ;-)) podcasts takes a close look at some fascinating and surprising objects in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History. It is a kind of fringe-event to go hand in hand with the major redisplay happening at the Museum in 2022. Each podcast is a journey of discovery through the nooks and crannies of the Museum, talking to researchers and experts on the way.

We will seek out the rarely seen or heard-about enigmatic objects in the Museum and their stories – scientific, historical and personal. These objects can be specimens, natural objects, artefacts, tools, or even museum interna such as conservation fluids. What they all have in common is that they speak to us about ecology and biodiversity. Both terms are linked – without constantly evolving ecological relationships there is no biodiversity. Is there such a thing as “biodiverse objects”?

Episode Information

Series
Biodiverse Objects
People
Elaine Charwat
Mark Carnall
Jackie Chapman-Gray
Robert Douglas
Jonathan Ford
Keywords
museum
extinction
dodo
collections
biodiversity
Department: Museum of Natural History
Date Added: 31/08/2022
Duration: 01:11:40

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Ricardo Perez-De-La Fuente

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

On display: nature’s dramas, nature’s dioramas

Series
Biodiverse Objects
Embed
A journey from 3D dioramas from the 19th century that contain taxidermy animals to today’s virtual reality reconstructions of ancient or hidden worlds.
In the first podcast in our Biodiverse Objects series, we take a close look at stunning 2D depictions of insect and plant ecosystems from the early 18th century and embark on some early 19th century time-travelling through fossils - forensic fossils that bear the marks of their ecosystems which are there for us to decode. A personal highlight is exploring miniature dramas captured in many million-year-old amber.

About Biodiverse Objects
This series of three epic (length-wise ;-)) podcasts takes a close look at some fascinating and surprising objects in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History. It is a kind of fringe-event to go hand in hand with the major redisplay happening at the Museum in 2022. Each podcast is a journey of discovery through the nooks and crannies of the Museum, talking to researchers and experts on the way.

We will seek out the rarely seen or heard-about enigmatic objects in the Museum and their stories – scientific, historical and personal. These objects can be specimens, natural objects, artefacts, tools, or even museum interna such as conservation fluids. What they all have in common is that they speak to us about ecology and biodiversity. Both terms are linked – without constantly evolving ecological relationships there is no biodiversity. Is there such a thing as “biodiverse objects”?

Episode Information

Series
Biodiverse Objects
People
Elaine Charwat
Ricardo Perez-De-La Fuente
Katrin Böhme
Keywords
museum
biodiversity
diorama
fossils
amber
ecosystems
Department: Museum of Natural History
Date Added: 26/08/2022
Duration: 00:50:48

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Sandra Milligan

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

OUCEA Annual Lecture 2022: The Future of Assessment

Series
Department of Education Research Seminars
Embed
Oxford University Centre for Educational Assessment (OUCEA) presents a look into the future of assessment featuring guest speakers.
The guest speakers this year include Professor Art Graesser, a long-standing visiting professor and champion of OUCEA. Art Graesser is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Psychology and the Institute of Intelligent Systems at the University of Memphis, and Honorary Research Fellow at The University of Oxford. His talk will be followed by reflections from two guest speakers, Enterprise Professor Sandra Milligan, Director of the Assessment Research Centre at the Melbourne Graduate School of Education, University of Melbourne, and our own Deputy Director of OUCEA, Associate Professor Joshua McGrane.

Professor Therese N. Hopfenbeck, Director of OUCEA, will convene the seminar.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Department of Education Research Seminars
People
Art Graesser
Sandra Milligan
Joshua McGrane
Therese N. Hopfenbeck
Keywords
education
OUCEA
assessment
future
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 24/08/2022
Duration: 01:39:28

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Amy Kavanagh

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

2022 Disability Lecture: Hands Off - navigating unwanted touch, consent and disability

Series
The Disability Lectures
Embed
Dr Amy Kavanagh delivers the 2022 Annual Disability Lecture

2022 Disability Lecture
Dr Amy Kavanagh - Hands Off: Navigating unwanted touch, consent and disability

From Dr Kavanagh's introduction:
"So this lecture today is going to be an exploration of the disabled experience of unwanted touch, forced help and consent. I'm drawing on my lived experience as a blind activist, but I am also grateful to the hundreds of disabled people who have shared their stories, reflections and thoughts about their own experiences with me over the years. This lecture draws on the themes and consistent tropes surrounding unwanted touch and forced help. In doing so, I'd hope to draw some parallels between some of the wider challenges of also navigating cultural, social and economic disableism."

To download a transcript of the 2022 Disability Lecture, use the following link(s):

Transcript - PDF version (download)

Transcript - Microsoft Word version (download)

Episode Information

Series
The Disability Lectures
People
Amy Kavanagh
Keywords
consent
disability
disabilities
disabled persons
accessibility
Department: University Administration and Services (UAS)
Date Added: 23/08/2022
Duration: 01:18:05

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