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Research Events

Swinburne Research Events Database


Upcoming Events

Title:
Higher education governance reform across Europe
Presenter:
Jon File, Executive Director - Center for Higher Education Policy Studies (CHEPS), University of Twe
Brief Description:
Seminar Abstract: The European Commission (EC) is actively promoting a “modernisation agenda for higher education” involving three legs: curriculum, funding and governance reform as part of the Lisbon strategy to make Europe the world’s leading knowledge economy. This presentation gives a high-level overview of some of the major outcomes of a 2006 study commissioned by the EC’s Directorate-General for Education and Culture on the extent and impact of higher education governance reform across 32 European countries. The presentation focuses on reform of national governance frameworks (multi-actor, multi-level; competition; funding; quality assurance; and strengthening the strategic capacities of HEIs) and on changes in institutional autonomy across eight dimensions. The presentation also indicates the perceptions of the survey respondents on key characteristics of internal governance structures. Finally, it introduces an analytical device that CHEPS has developed to help interpret changes in higher education governance.
Date:
Wednesday, December 03 2008, 5:30 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Recent Events

Title:
Drinks for Researchers!!!
Presenter:
Professor Andy Flitman will make a short speech
Brief Description:
Swinburne Research would like to invite Swinburne academic staff, research involved staff and postgraduate researchers to this event which is being held to recognize the exceptional efforts of Swinburne's researchers. Swinburne has accomplished a lot in the area of research in the last 12 months and our national and international research profile has rapidly increased. This is largely due to the fantastic efforts of our researchers - how best to say thank you than an afternoon of free drinks and food hosted by us! Please see the poster below. For more information or to rsvp please email research@swin.edu.au.
Date:
Friday, November 28 2008, 3:30 pm
Venue:
Swinburne Staff Club - Lvl. 3 UN Building, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Visiting Professor lecture series - The Evolution of an American Research University
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Robert Wagoner
Brief Description:
Abstract: The Ohio State University, a large land-grant university dating from 1870, has changed greatly over the past 10 years. It has improved its national and international reputation according to available measures, as follows: * Shanghai Jiao Tong Index: 82nd (2003) -> 62nd (2008) * U.S. News & World Report: 62nd (2005) -> 56th (2009) * Times Higher Education World Ranking: 206th (2005) -> 120th (2007) More importantly, and much more objectively, its attractiveness to students and to external research sponsors has increased markedly in measurable ways that will be presented. While such progress is intriguing, it is truly remarkable in view of the steadily declining state support over this period: 20% decline of funding over 20 years. A few of the major programs and drivers of this progression in the 21st century will be reviewed, and conclusions about their effectiveness drawn.
Date:
Wednesday, October 29 2008, 4:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Visiting Professor lecture series - The Formability of Advanced High-Strength Steels
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Robert Wagoner
Brief Description:
Dual-phase steels (DP) are a class of advanced high strength steels (AHSS) in wide, and increasing, use in the automotive industry. Depending on the application and the grade, forming failures occur that are not predicted by forming simulation and the application of forming limit diagrams. These failures typically occur in regions of significant bending. Novel constitutive equations of AHSS relating the plastic flow stress to strain, strain-rate, and temperature were developed and incorporated in a thermo-mechanical finite element model. In parallel, new draw-bend tests were developed and conducted to induce failure transitions between bending regions and stretching regions. Three types of failure pattern were identified and were found to be predictable, both qualitatively and quantitatively, using the new constitutive understanding and thermo-mechanical modeling. It was concluded that deformation-induced heating is a major factor influencing the formability of AHSS, one that is normally ignored.
Date:
Wednesday, October 29 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Major Research Databases
Presenter:
Kim Hodgman and Madeleine Bruwer, Liaison Librarians
Brief Description:
In this workshop we look at the major research databases Journal Citation Reports, Web of Science and Scopus.
Date:
Wednesday, October 22 2008, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Level 1, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Visiting Professor lecture series - Creative Reactions to the End of the World: From Galileo to the 21st Century Universe
Presenter:
Professor Bill Harris, McMaster University, Canada
Brief Description:
The universe beyond the Earth has been an increasingly more astonishing place ever since Galileo\'s first discoveries with the telescope 400 years ago. Now, we are trying to understand a flood of revolutionary concepts such as hundreds of planets discovered around nearby stars and the chance of finding life elsewhere; dark matter around galaxies everywhere; vast amounts of shadowy \"dark energy\" throughout all of space; or giant black holes at the centers of galaxies. How did we get here? What does it mean? People as far back as Galileo\'s time have faced exactly the same questions about the outside world that we do now, and their reactions are as fascinating as the discoveries themselves. Bill Harris is a native of western Canada and did his graduate studies in astronomy at the University of Toronto, finishing in 1974. Since 1976 he has been a faculty member at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada teaching and doing research. He was elected as a Fellow of the the Royal Society of Canada in 2004 and currently holds a Canadian national Killam Research Fellowship. He has spent most of his research career studying the very oldest types of stars in the universe: the globular star clusters and the stars in the outer halos of giant galaxies. He has published more than 160 research papers on these subjects and works with colleagues all over the world, especially Europe, Chile, the USA, and Australia.
Date:
Wednesday, October 15 2008, 6:30 pm
Venue:
AR 104
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Finding Information From Multidisciplinary Sources
Presenter:
Annette Steere, Liaison Librarian
Brief Description:
This session will cover finding information from a variety of sources including journal databases, statistical sources and the internet.
Date:
Monday, October 13 2008, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Level 1, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
ARC Grant Application Workshop
Presenter:
Emeritus Professor Alan Johnson
Brief Description:
Swinburne Research has engaged the services of Emeritus Professor Alan Johnson, a former Executive Director of the ARC and DVC(R) (Adelaide) to assist Swinburne with the preparation of quality ARC applications. Emeritus Professor Alan Johnson AM, has 30 years of research, research management and research training experience in a range of organisations, including universities, Australian Government agencies and international research organisations. He obtained his Bachelors degree in biomedical technology from the South Australian Institute of Technology, followed by a PhD in parasite immunology from Flinders University. During 1985-1986 he was a Fulbright Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the United States Department of Agriculture. He was awarded the Bancroft-Mackerras Medal of the Australian Society for Parasitology for outstanding research in 1989. In 1996 he was awarded a DSc in protozoan biology from the University of Wollongong. Professor Johnson has published over 100 internationally refereed journal articles and received over $3.5 million in competitive grant funding. Professor Johnson has an MA(Hons) in technology and social change from the University of Wollongong and a Masters degree in educational management from Flinders University on the use of citation indexing as a measure of personal and departmental performance in University research. In 2007 he received a distinguished alumnus award from Flinders University. Professor Johnson is a Fellow of the Australian Society for Parasitology, the Australian Institute of Biology and the Australian Society for Microbiology. In recognition of his service to science in the field of molecular parasitology, to scientific research and education, and as Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal for Parasitology, he was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2006.
Date:
Wednesday, October 08 2008, 11:30 am
Venue:
EN515
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Visiting Professor lecture - The Future of Software: Adaptation and Dependability
Presenter:
Professor Paola Inverardi
Brief Description:
Abstract: Software in the near ubiquitous future (Softure) will need to cope with variability, as software systems get deployed on an increasingly large diversity of computing platforms and operate in different execution environments. Heterogeneity of the underlying communication and computing infrastructure, mobility inducing changes to the execution environments and therefore changes to the availability of resources and continuously evolving requirements require software systems to be adaptable according to the context changes. Softure should also be reliable and meet the user's performance requirements and needs. Moreover, due to its pervasiveness, Softure must be dependable, which is made more complex given the highly dynamic nature of service provision. Supporting the development and execution of Softure systems raises numerous challenges that involve languages, methods and tools for the systems' thorough design and validation in order to ensure dependability of the self-adaptive systems that are targeted. However these challenges, taken in isolation are not new in the software domain. In this talk I will discuss some of these challenges making reference to the approach undertaken in the IST PLASTIC project (www.ist-plastic.org) for a specific instance of Softure focused on software services for Beyond 3G (B3G) networks. I will try to highlight what I consider innovative and futurist for software and what I simply consider software for the future.
Date:
Monday, October 06 2008, 12:30 pm
Venue:
Lecture in EN 101, Drinks in EN 612
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Getting started - Information resources for new researchers
Presenter:
Fiona O'Donnell, Project Manager - Customer Services
Brief Description:
An introduction to library resources and services that can make your research processes easier and more effective.
Date:
Tuesday, September 30 2008, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
DVC (R) Visiting Professor Talks - Gravity and Light - Gravitational Lenses and Black Holes
Presenter:
Professor Bob Carswell, Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge
Brief Description:
Gravity and Light - Gravitational Lenses and Black Holes We explore how light behaves near massive objects, and show that for gravitational lenses, gravitational redshifts and black holes, the main concepts can be understood in general terms from Einstein's oft-quoted equation, E=mc^2. Light paths are changed as they pass close to the sun and to massive galaxies, so giving us the idea of gravitational lenses which can change the appearance of distant galaxies and quasars. Some examples of multiply imaged quasars and lensed galaxies are given. Gravitational redshifts of light from compact stars have been measured. In the extreme case of very compact objects - black holes - no light can escape at all. There are compelling reasons for believing that massive black holes reside near the centers of many galaxies, and particularly the center of the Milky Way.
Date:
Wednesday, September 17 2008, 6:30 pm
Venue:
AR 104
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
COS 'Train the Trainer' Seminar
Presenter:
Nicola Giles (COS)
Brief Description:
A representative from COS will be coming out to give a training session on how to effectively use the COS grant search web tool - which Swinburne subscribes to. If you are unfamiliar with COS please take a look at it here: http://www.cos.com/ This event is for Swinburne Research Staff and Faculty Research Administrators.
Date:
Wednesday, September 10 2008, 11:00 am
Venue:
AGSE 210
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
INDUCTION: Policies & Procedures, Roles & Responsibilities
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
The session will provide information about Policy and Procedures; University services; What to expect in terms of a research degree journey; as well as IP and ethics.
Date:
Tuesday, September 09 2008, 1:00 pm
Venue:
Level 3, UN Building, Swinburne Staff Club
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Cross-Cultural Communication
Presenter:
Dr. Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
This dynamic workshop focuses on improving oral and written communication skills and will be of particular interest to international researchers.
Date:
Tuesday, September 02 2008, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Level 3, UN Building, Swinburne Staff Club
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Research Activities of Emerging Devices Group, SUT, Sarawak
Presenter:
Manas K Haldar (Sarawak Academic)
Brief Description:
Synopsis: The Sarawak Campus of the Swinburne University of Technology is very new. Electrical and Electronic Engineering program is even more recent. Despite various handicaps, some staff have taken up the challenge and formed a group - the Emerging Devices Group. The Group composes of researchers whose interests are in the development of devices in general. The purpose of this seminar is to present some of the research activities of the members of the group. The research is outlined with research results and supported, wherever possible, with sample and recent publications. We hope that this seminar will help Hawthorne staff to identify Sarawak staff with similar interest and initiate collaborative research. We hasten to point out that the collaboration need not conform exactly to the activities outlined in this seminar. Brief biography of speaker: Manas obtained his PhD as a Merz Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge University (UK). He worked with the Surface Acoustic Wave Group at the Department of Engineering Science, Oxford University (UK). Subsequently, he joined the Department of Electrical Engineering (renamed Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering), National University of Singapore, where he was an Associate Professor before joining the School of Engineering, Swinburne University of Technology (Sarawak Campus) in July, 2006. Manas has a wide range of research interests spanning Thermionic Valves, RF and Microwave Engineering, Surface Acoustic Waves, Electromagnetic Compatibility, Electromagnetic Field Computation, Electronics and Microprocessors, Optical Fiber Communications and Quantum Electronics. He is keen to learn other areas as well.
Date:
Thursday, August 14 2008, 11:30 am
Venue:
AS 404
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Drinks for researchers
Presenter:
Brief Description:
Come and celebrate Research At Swinburne. As far as research at Swinburne goes, there is much to celebrate: - Swinburne has had fantastic results in the most recent round of ARC grants. - We have had an increase in DEEWR approved research publications for 2007. - Swinburne's total research income for 2007, which has recently been reported to DEEWR, is an improvement on 2006 figures. - Professor Ian Young recently announced that a new Defence Materials Technology Centre is to be based at Swinburne. - SwinPSYCHE was recently awarded a $1.65m grant from the Federal Department of Health and Ageing to enable Swinburne's e-Therapy Unit to establish the National e-Therapy Centre for Anxiety Disorders (NeTCAD). - Dr Jordy Kaufman from BSI was recently awarded a significant grant from Perpetual Trustees to fund research into schizophrenia. - Swinburne has hosted a number of research conferences recently, including the most recent Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute (AMSI) workshop. - Swinburne researchers have been getting a lot of their work published in internationally recognised, highly prestigious journals. For example the Centre for Atom Optics and Ultrafast Spectroscopy has recently had two papers accepted in the esteemed journal - Physical Review Letters. All of this has, and will continue to contribute to a rise in Swinburne's research profile! To recognise the great efforts of all of our postgraduate research students and research-involved staff Swinburne Research is hosting a Drinks night!
Date:
Friday, August 01 2008, 3:30 pm
Venue:
Swinburne Staff Club (Hawthorn Campus)
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
DVC (R) Visiting Professor Talks - Fundamental physics in Space: Was Einstein right?
Presenter:
Professor Michael Kramer
Brief Description:
Nature has provided us with superb cosmic clocks that are observable as pulsating radio sources - pulsars. Discovered in Cambridge more than 40 years ago, about 1800 are known by now, most of them discovered with the Parkes telescope in NSW. Pulsars are useful tools in studying fundamental physics, ranging from the properties of super-dense matter to tests of Einstein's theory of gravity, and from physics under extreme conditions to cosmology. This talk will summarize the most fascinating applications of pulsars and will also cast a look into the future where gigantic telescopes will revolutionize our observations of pulsars and potentially our understanding of physics. As seating is limited, please RSVP to Carolyn Cliff, ccliff@swin.edu.au, ext. 5569.
Date:
Wednesday, July 30 2008, 6:00 pm
Venue:
AR 104
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Examination
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
Topics covered will include the AVCC Code of Practice, Questions in examiners minds when they read a thesis and the implications of this, What do examiners want?, What characterises a poor thesis?
Date:
Tuesday, July 22 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
DVC (R) Visiting Professor Talks - Semantics to Empower Services Science: Using Semantics at Middleware, Web Services and Business Levels
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Amit Sheth
Brief Description:
Swinburne Research, in conjunction with the Faculty of Information and Communication Technologies, has pleasure in inviting you to attend the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Visiting Professor lecture series. Services are pervasive in today's economic landscape, and services-based architectures are rapidly being adopted for enterprises as well as for Web applications. The need for a broad perspective on services that takes in people and organizational descriptions in addition to technical interface descriptions has already been recognized as part of the overall vision of services science. To this mix, we add the middleware (including distributed and cloud computing) that improves the implementation and interoperability of service oriented architecture (SOA). In this context, we present the semantic services science (3S) modeling framework to support service descriptions that capture system/technical, human, organizational, and business value/requirements aspects. We believe that a combination of Web2.0 and semantic technology can be used to energize services across the broad service spectrum. We describe how the 3S approach could be used along four points in this spectrum: (1) semantic descriptions of standard Web services (with the help of SAWSDL and semantic policy descriptions); (2) semantic descriptions of lightweight Web services (with the help of semantic annotation of REST services and WebAPIs-SAREST) and semantic or smart mashups (smashups) using Web 2.0 technologies (e.g., REST, AJAX) and microformats; (3) semantics at the middleware (communication, configuration, and adaptation); and (4) ontology-based profiling of people and organizational aspects of the assets associated with business and knowledge services, as well as semantic analysis of business requirements. Such processes would be critical to the agile businesses and innovative Web applications that are part of our global and networked economy.
Date:
Wednesday, July 16 2008, 11:30 am
Venue:
TD121
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Effective Stress Management
Presenter:
Wayne Jencke
Brief Description:
Stress management is easier when you focus on what works.
Date:
Tuesday, July 08 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Departmental and Conference Presentation
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
The ability to give a successful oral presentation at a seminar, workshop or a conference is of a paramount importance for any researcher.
Date:
Tuesday, June 24 2008, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn UN Building Level 3 Staff Club
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Design Aesthetics: A Neuroevolutionary Perspective
Presenter:
Dr. Allan Whitfield
Brief Description:
You are all welcome to our next forum series session 3. Please RSVP by Monday 23rd of June close of business to silvanaferlazzo@groupwise.swin.edu.au
Date:
Tuesday, June 24 2008, 2:30 pm
Venue:
lecture theatre PA309
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Working With Your Supervisors
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
Working with your supervisors
Date:
Tuesday, June 10 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Incorporating Sources into Your Writing
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
Incorporating Sources into Your Writing: In-text References and Bibliography Critical evaluation of literature requires knowledge of how to include other researchers' words into your writing.
Date:
Tuesday, June 03 2008, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Major Research Databases
Presenter:
Kim Hodgman and Madeleine Bruwer, Liaison Librarians
Brief Description:
In this workshop we look at the major research databases Journal Citation Reports, Web of Science and Scopus.
Date:
Wednesday, May 28 2008, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Lev. 1, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Matching Research Methods to your Research Goals: Quantitative Methods Overview
Presenter:
Dr. Arda Cunningham
Brief Description:
A overview of Quantative Methods
Date:
Tuesday, May 27 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
How to Publish: Some Insights and Suggestions
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Dr Mathew Joseph
Brief Description:
This presentation provides some suggestions on how to begin the process, strategies that would be helpful in getting your manuscript accepted as well as ways to avoid the common pitfalls of publishing.
Date:
Tuesday, May 13 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn Library Conference Room Level 3
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Finding information from multidisciplinary sources
Presenter:
Annette Steere, Liaison Librarian
Brief Description:
This session will cover finding information from a variety of sources including journal databases, statistical sources and the internet.
Date:
Wednesday, May 07 2008, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Writing a Literature Review
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
Literature Review is an essential part of any thesis. This 2-hour workshop will discuss strategies and give recommendations on writing a well-structured analytical literature survey.
Date:
Tuesday, May 06 2008, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Getting started -information resources for new researchers
Presenter:
Fiona O'Donnell, Project Manager - Customer Services
Brief Description:
An introduction to library resources and services that can make your research processes easier and more effective.
Date:
Wednesday, April 30 2008, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Thesis Writing
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
What are the key elements of a thesis? The workshop will enable participants to raise issues and concerns including getting started, procrastination, dealing with feedback and planning.
Date:
Tuesday, April 29 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Effective Reading Comprehension and Note-taking
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
Effective Reading Comprehension and Note-taking of a Conventional Written Text versus Hypertext (Internet-based text).
Date:
Tuesday, April 15 2008, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn UN Building Level 3 - Staff Club
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC(R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Software Engineering in the 21st century
Presenter:
Professor Hans van Vliet, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Brief Description:
The term Software Engineering (SE) was coined at a NATO conference in 1968 in a somewhat provocative sense. Shouldn't it be possible to build software in the way one builds bridges and houses, using sound and proven design and construction techniques as in other engineering fields? By now, after 40 years of development, we can safely say that a lot of progress has been made. Life without well-engineered computer systems is inconceivable. In this lecture, Prof. van Vliet will sketch the developments in the field, and focus on recent developments that are having a huge impact: - the rise of agile methods - the shift from producing software to using software - the success of open source software - the globalization of software development These developments have widened the scope of the field. It is increasingly being recognized that there's more to SE than engineering. In particular, SE has an important human and social dimension as well.
Date:
Tuesday, April 08 2008, 1:30 pm
Venue:
EN103
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
INDUCTION: Policies & Procedures, Roles & Responsibilities
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
The session will provide information about Policy and Procedures; University services; What to expect in terms of a research degree journey; as well as IP and ethics.
Date:
Tuesday, April 08 2008, 1:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC(R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Metabolites - The chemical language of microbes
Presenter:
Professor Hartmut Laatsch, University of Gottingen, Germany
Brief Description:
Natural products are words and messages in a global communication system of species interactions. They have a special meaning and will effect an answer, which is not constant, but depends on the given situation. We are just beginning to understand this language of nature, to compile the vocabulary and to decipher the grammar. Natural products are weapons and defence systems, attractants and repellents, or simply communication signals which are important for the survival of species. Development of bacterial resistance to antibiotics is a logical and unavoidable response to environmental effects, which we can only overcome by a better understanding of the 'microbial conversation'. As a consequence, the investigation of ecological interactions and a continuous and efficient search for new natural products with potential application in medicine is a steady and indispensable task. However, since the number of natural products is limited, every newly isolated product will diminish the chances to find further hits. And every re-isolated known compound is an avoidable loss of time and money. Two techniques are widely applied to overcome these problems. The first one is activity-directed high throughput screening, which is an expensive and fully automated, mainly industrial process; the other one is the so-called chemical screening. We are using a third technique, a type of dragnet search, where we compare easily accessible data of isolated and purified compounds with comprehensive databases of more than 50,000 marine and microbial natural products, AntiBase or MarinLit. Comparison of sub-structures, NMR, MS, and UV data allows a very fast decision as to whether a given natural product is already known or not, which enables us to save time and resources, avoid frustration, and to concentrate on the really new topics. This presentation will explain modern dereplication techniques using MS/MS, 2D NMR and database methods. The procedure will be highlighted by some simple and some very complex examples from our ongoing research on marine bacteria.
Date:
Wednesday, March 19 2008, 1:30 pm
Venue:
EN413
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Cross-Cultural Communication
Presenter:
Dr. Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
This dynamic workshop focuses on improving oral and written communication skills and will be of particular interest to international researchers.
Date:
Tuesday, March 18 2008, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Matching Research Methods to your Research Goals: Qualitative Methods Overview
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
A focus on qualitative research approaches will be taken. An overview of key approaches will be made: naturalistic inquiry, case study, phenomenography and grounded theory.
Date:
Tuesday, March 11 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
What is Research? Designing A Research Project
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green, Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
This practical session will focus on what counts as research and enable students to examine their research questions in terms of currency, relevance and clarity.
Date:
Tuesday, February 26 2008, 2:00 pm
Venue:
Hawthorn TAFE Building TD - Room TD120
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC(R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - New Horizons in Biomagnetics and Bioimaging
Presenter:
Professor Shoogo Ueno, Kyushu University, Japan
Brief Description:
Biomagnetics is an interdiciplrinary field where magnetics, biology and medicine overlap. Recent advances in biomagnetics and bioimaging for medical applications are reviewed and discussed based on the results obtained mainly in Professor Ueno's laboratory. This lecture discusses transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), magnetoencephalography (MEG), imaging of electrical information in the brain based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) such as impedance MRI and current MRI, cancer therapy using magnetizable beads and pulsed magnetic force, and magnetic control of cell orientation and cell growth. These techniques are leading medicine and biology into a new horizon through the novel applications of magnetism.
Date:
Tuesday, February 12 2008, 3:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
PVC(R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Optical Diffraction on nano-dimensioned and biological objects
Presenter:
Professor Yunlong Sheng, University Laval, Canada
Brief Description:
Abstract: Recent progress in the optical trap of biological objects, the plasmonic surface waves and in the complex fiber Bragg gratings raise new challenges to optical near field diffraction theories. In the fabrication of the fiber Bragg gratings, our new understanding of the complex phase masks diffraction founded a new theoretical base of the high channel counts dispersion compensation fiber Bragg gratings, which are now in industrial production. In the plasmonics, we proposed new theories on the optical diffraction of nano-sized structure, the generation of the Surface Plasmon Polariton by the diffraction and the coupling and interference of the surface waves at the nano-slits. A new challenge in the optical trap of biological objects is that the cells are deformable and their visco-elasticity and other mechanical properties are of crucial interest for basic cellular activities like migration, growth, differentiation and lineage development. On the one hand, we re-calculated the local optical radiation pressure on the cell surface in optical stretchers and the cell's deformation in order to match with the experimental results for measuring cell's visco-elasticity. On the other hand, we used optical tweezers and confocal imaging for assessing mechanical response of the cell's cytoskeleton networks modified by keratin microfilements.
Date:
Friday, January 11 2008, 11:30 am
Venue:
EN101
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
PVC(R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - 'Nano-layers, Metallic foams and Emulsions'.
Presenter:
Professor George Kaptay, BAY-NANO Research Institute, University of Miskolc, Hungary
Brief Description:
George Kaptay received his MSc (1984) and PhD (1988) in Metallurgy in Leningrad Polytechnic (Russia). He made his habilitation in 1998 and became full professor of the University of Miskolc (Hungary) in 1999. He obtained the degree of DSc in 2005 from the Academy of Sciences of Hungary. He is teaching physical chemistry for students on materials engineering. In 2006 he established a research institute on nanotechnology BAY-NANO, and he is also head of Department on Nanotechnology at the University of Miskolc. He was a visiting Professor at the University of Alabama (USA) and at the Kyushu Institute of Technology (Japan) for 1-3 months. In the present talk he will be describing different aspects he has been working on during the recent few years. From the field of interfacial phenomena he will be talking on the formation of a nano-layer on the surface of immiscible alloys and on its influence on the Marangoni convection and on technologies like welding. He also will show the reasons why nano-nuclei can be stabilized during nucleation from diluted liquid solutions or vapour. From the field of chemical thermodynamics he will present a new formalism to describe temperature dependence of excess Gibbs energy to avoid calculated artefacts during phase diagram calculations. From the filed of transport properties he will present his recent unified equation for the viscosity and self-diffusion coefficient in liquid metals, and also the equation, connecting the composition dependence of viscosity and heat of mixing in liquid alloys. Finally, the way how metallic foams and emulsions can be stabilized by solid particles will be described.
Date:
Monday, December 10 2007, 3:00 pm
Venue:
Room EN102
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Stepping Stones: a guide for mature-aged students at university
Presenter:
Dr. Rob Cantwell
Brief Description:
Dr. Rob Cantwell speaks to his book, "Stepping Stones: a guide for mature-aged students at university.
Date:
Friday, November 23 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
EN102
Status:
Event Cancelled
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Title:
Copyright and your Thesis
Presenter:
Luke Padgett - Copyright Advisor
Brief Description:
When writing your thesis you may need to use other people's work and other people may want to use YOUR work. This session is designed to give you the tools necessary to manage copyright in your thesis.
Date:
Friday, November 09 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
EN102
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Research Databases - Advanced Searching
Presenter:
Julie Ager, Senior Reference Librarian & Fiona O'Donnell, Engineering Liaison Librarian
Brief Description:
Finding all the most relevant peer-reviewed scholarly literature is a core component of postgraduate research.
Date:
Wednesday, October 31 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Getting Published
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
Do you have a publication plan? What are the central issues around getting published? This workshop will focus on issues such as publishing from your research, DEST publications (what counts?), ethical issues, agreements about authorship, and the practicalities involved in publication.
Date:
Tuesday, October 30 2007, 10:30 am
Venue:
EN214 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Pink Ribbon Breakfast at Swinburne
Presenter:
-
Brief Description:
PINK RIBBON BREAKFAST AT SWINBURNE for Breast Cancer Awareness and Research. Every year around October many Australians gather to host a Pink Ribbon Breakfast in support of the National Breast Cancer Foundation. This year is no different and Swinburne is involved.
Date:
Friday, October 26 2007, 7:45 am
Venue:
The Atrium - Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Improving Performance in UK Public Services
Presenter:
Professor Hal Pawson, Heriot-Watt University
Brief Description:
This lecture discusses approaches to measuring public service performance and investigates whether there is credible trend-over-time evidence of UK public service performance improvement over the past decade. It then goes on to examine the measures adopted by the UK's New Labour administration with the aim of improving local government services, including the roles of external inspection and quasi markets.
Date:
Thursday, October 25 2007, 12:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Supersearch -The Library Research Portal
Presenter:
Julie Ager, Senior Reference Librarian
Brief Description:
Using Supersearch you can search up to 10 databases at the same time and create personal collections of your favourite databases and ejournals.
Date:
Wednesday, October 17 2007, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Thesis Writing
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
What are the key elements of a thesis? The workshop will enable participants to raise issues and concerns including getting started, procrastination, dealing with feedback and planning.
Date:
Tuesday, October 09 2007, 10:30 am
Venue:
EN214 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Getting started - Library workshop for new researchers
Presenter:
Julie Ager, Senior Reference Librarian
Brief Description:
An introduction to library resources and services that can make your research processes easier and more effective.
Date:
Wednesday, October 03 2007, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
INDUCTION: Policies & Procedures, Roles & Responsibilities
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
The session will provide information about Policy and Procedures; University services; What to expect in terms of a research degree journey; as well as IP and ethics.
Date:
Tuesday, September 25 2007, 1:00 pm
Venue:
Library Conference Room, Lev. 3, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Cross-Cultural Communication
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
This dynamic workshop focuses on improving researcher's oral and written communication skills and will be of particular interest to international researchers. All welcome. Booking online! (Afternoon Tea provided)
Date:
Tuesday, September 11 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE 203, Hawthorn campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Leading the Board: International Comparative Survey
Presenter:
Professor Andrew Kakabadse, Cranfield University, UK
Brief Description:
Abstract: Professor Kakabadse has recently completed the world's largest survey on Corporate Boards and their performance. This survey includes a selection of Australian Boards which are ranked in the top 10 on overall performance. Of particular interest will be discussion of the finding that the Board Chairman holds equal if not more importance than the CEO. Professor Kakabadse will discuss the effect of this on company culture and performance. He will also provide an analysis of the Blair Government Ministers performance and effectiveness in the Public Service Sector.
Date:
Tuesday, August 28 2007, 5:30 pm
Venue:
AGSE207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
Examination
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
Topics covered will include the 'AVCC Code of Practice', 'Questions in examiners minds when they read a thesis and the implications of this', 'What do examiners want?', 'What characterises a poor thesis?'
Date:
Tuesday, August 28 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
BA801, BA Building, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - 'Come, Come, my Lords; These Oracles are Hardly Attain'd, And Hardly Understood': Confessions of a Software Tester
Presenter:
Professor T. H. Tse, The University of Hong Kong
Brief Description:
Abstract: In classical literature, an "oracle" is the agent or medium through which the gods prophesy. We use the same word in software testing to mean the mechanism to specify the expected outcome of the software under test, so that testers can check whether the actual result is a success or failure. Most people assume that the expected outcome can be determined independently based on the software specification. In real-life applications, however, if the expected outcome could be determined in advance, why should we run the software in the first place? Shakespeare is therefore right. "These oracles are hardly attain'd". Through various interesting and surprising examples, we shall take a look at the oracle problem in software testing practice and how we can tackle it.
Date:
Wednesday, August 22 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Responsible Conduct of Scientific Research: Why Ethics Matter?
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Barry Masters, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Brief Description:
Scientists must conduct their research in compliance with numerous applicable statutes, regulations, and guidelines. Scientists are subject to a wide variety of laws, rules, and policies. So why is responsible conduct of research (PRC) necessary? I will discuss various modes of scientific misconduct. I will outline my proposal for guidelines of a course that includes explicit instruction on the responsible conduct of research. You will not find an answer to the question: What should I do? However, you will be given the tools and the guidelines to formulate your own answer to this question. This talk will be of interest to everyone involved in the process of science.
Date:
Tuesday, July 17 2007, 3:30 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Maximal Lifetime Scheduling for Wireless Sensor Surveillance Networks
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Xiaohua Jia, City University of Hong Kong
Brief Description:
In this talk, we will first give a brief introduction of our current research work on wireless sensor networks, such as geographical routing and real-time data aggregation. Then, we will focus on a maximal lifetime scheduling problem for sensor surveillance networks. Given a set of sensors (each of which has a limited energy reserve), and a set of targets to be monitored, the problem is to find a schedule for the sensors to watch the targets, such that the lifetime of the system is maximized. The lifetime is up to the time that there exists a target that can no longer be watched by any of its nearby sensors due to the energy depletion. It has been widely accepted that the general problem for maximizing lifetime of sensor networks is NP-hard. However, for this sensor surveillance network, we carefully formulated the problem for maximizing the lifetime and found the optimal solution.
Date:
Friday, July 13 2007, 12:30 pm
Venue:
EN101
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Collaborative Computing on the Internet: Opportunities and Challenges
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Chengzheng Sun from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Brief Description:
Internet is at the core of information revolution which changes the way we communicate, work, learn, do business, and play. A major trend is to use the Internet to enhance human-to-human communication, interaction, and collaboration. In over 10 years, we have been researching and developing technologies and applications that allow multiple users to edit shared text/graphics/image/multimedia/CAD/CASE documents at the same time over the Internet. These systems are not only useful applications in their own right, but also serve as research vehicles for exploring a range of challenging issues in building advanced collaborative applications. One such issue is consistency maintenance of shared documents under the constraints of high responsiveness, high concurrency, and high communication latency in the Internet environment.
Date:
Monday, July 09 2007, 12:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Thesis Writing Getting Published
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
TBA
Date:
Tuesday, June 26 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE202 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Effective Stress Management
Presenter:
Wayne Jencke
Brief Description:
Stress management is easier when you focus on what works This seminar will discuss the underlying principle of effective stress management. By focusing on this principle you can learn to quickly and easily manage stress.
Date:
Thursday, June 21 2007, 3:00 pm
Venue:
BA608, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
NEW Research Workshop: Effective Written and Oral Communication Skills for International Researchers
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
The aim of the workshop is to enhance the ability of international students to interact effectively within academic discussions, seminars, meetings with supervisors, colleagues. Issues related to managing the writing environment, including dealing with multiple communication tasks; being realistic about the demands of writing; handling critical feedback will be addressed. Strategies for effective cross-cultural writing and communication will also be considered.
Date:
Tuesday, June 19 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
BA408, Hawthorn campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Oral Presentation Hints
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
The ability to give a successful oral presentation at a seminar, workshop or a conference is of a paramount importance for any researcher. This 2 hour workshop will provide some helpful hints for preparing and delivering oral presentations in a professional and confident manner.
Date:
Tuesday, June 12 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE211 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Research Databases Advanced Searching
Presenter:
Julie Ager, Senior Reference Librarian & Fiona ODonnell, Engineering Liaison Librarian
Brief Description:
Finding all the most relevant peer-reviewed scholarly literature is a core component of postgraduate research. This workshop will explore Swinburnes two major research databases, Web of Knowledge and Scopus whats in them, searching options and special features. Its also vital to keep updating your lit search, throughout your research project, so well look at automated alerting services that make this easier.
Date:
Wednesday, May 30 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Lev. 1, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Incorporating Sources into Your Writing
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
Incorporating Sources into Your Writing: In-text References and Bibliography Critical evaluation of literature requires knowledge of how to include other researchers words into your writing. This could be done either by quoting or paraphrasing information. The aim of this 2 hour workshop is to examine examples as well as practise acknowledging various sources of information using the Harvard system of referencing.
Date:
Tuesday, May 29 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE211 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Matching Research Methods to your Research Goals: Quantitative Methods Overview
Presenter:
Dr. Arda Cunningham
Brief Description:
TBA
Date:
Tuesday, May 22 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE202 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Matching Research Methods to your Research Goals: Qualitative Methods Overview
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
A focus on qualitative research approaches will be taken. An overview of key approaches will be made: naturalistic inquiry, case study, phenomenography and grounded theory. The facilitators will share their experiences of, and writings about, such approaches and encourage students to consider questions of theoretical perspective, methodology or approach, as well as methods.
Date:
Tuesday, May 15 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE202 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Supersearch The Library Research Portal
Presenter:
Julie Ager, Senior Reference Librarian
Brief Description:
Using Supersearch you can search up to 10 databases at the same time and create personal collections of your favourite databases and ejournals. This workshop will look at: What Supersearch is and how it works, what it can and cant do. How to choose databases in Supersearch Searching across multiple databases, tips & tricks Managing what you find, in MySpace and exporting to EndNote
Date:
Wednesday, May 09 2007, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Lev. 1, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Effective Written and Oral Communication Skills for International Researchers
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
The aim of this seminar is to enhance the ability of international students to interact effectively within academic discussions, seminars, meetings with supervisors/colleagues. Also, issues related to managing the writing environment will be addressed.
Date:
Tuesday, May 08 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
EN411, Hawthorn campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Writing a Literature Review
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
Literature Review is an essential part of any thesis. This 2-hour workshop will discuss strategies and give recommendations on writing a well-structured analytical literature survey.
Date:
Wednesday, May 02 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
BA608, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
What is Research? Designing A Research Project, Ethics & IP
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green, Prof. John Bowden & Keith Wilkins
Brief Description:
This practical session will focus on what counts as research and enable students to examine their research questions in terms of currency, relevance and clarity. The session will move from topic selection (where relevant), refinement of questions, proposal writing, through to consideration of the relation between the topic or question and the research approach.
Date:
Tuesday, May 01 2007, 2:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE202 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Library Workshop for New Researchers
Presenter:
Julie Ager, Senior Reference Librarian
Brief Description:
An introduction to library resources and services that can make your research processes easier and more effective. The main focus will be on identifying relevant resources, finding journals and articles, resources to use at different stages of your research, managing the information you find, and sources of research literature outside Swinburne library.
Date:
Wednesday, April 18 2007, 4:30 pm
Venue:
Library Training Room, Lev. 3, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
Effective Reading Comprehension and Note-taking
Presenter:
Dr Elena Verezub
Brief Description:
Effective Reading Comprehension and Note-taking of a Conventional Written Text versus Hypertext (Internet-based text). The aim of this 2 hour workshop is to examine a series of reading comprehension strategies when reading in the two contexts. Also note-taking tips will help achieve active and effective engagement with literature.
Date:
Tuesday, April 17 2007, 4:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE203 Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
INDUCTION: Policies & Procedures, Roles & Responsibilities
Presenter:
Assoc. Prof. Pam Green & Prof. John Bowden
Brief Description:
.
Date:
Tuesday, April 03 2007, 1:00 pm
Venue:
Library Conference Room, Lev. 3, Hawthorn Campus
Status:
Places Available
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series - Living with Software Evolution
Presenter:
Prof. Dr. Oscar Nierstrasz
Brief Description:
Real software systems inevitably change to keep up with new requirements. Strangely, this fact is largely ignored by software development methods, tools and languages. In this talk we review the inevitable nature of software change, we examine a software lifecycle in which introspection and rejuvenation play as important a role as initial growth, and we look at some tools and techniques that can help us to deal with the incredible complexity of large, evolving software systems. We conclude by posing a few of the key open research problems that we must solve if we are to survive the ever-increasing pace of software evolution.
Date:
Friday, March 23 2007, 6:00 pm
Venue:
AGSE 207
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
The Vic Fellowships information session
Presenter:
Penny Underwood - MediaWise Pty Ltd
Brief Description:
The Victorian Government annually awards up to six Victoria Fellowships to emerging leaders in engineering, science or technology. Each Fellow receives a travel grant of up to $18,000 to undertake a short-term overseas study mission to assist in developing a commercial idea, undertaking specialist training or career development. Study missions offer Victoria Fellows the opportunity to broaden their experience, develop networks and better understand where their activities fit into the local and international scene. The Fellowship also provides an opportunity for recipients to develop commercial ideas Attend the information session to hear directly from past Victoria Fellows and to hear how the initiative works. For more information please contact Ryan Wendt on ext. 5552.
Date:
Tuesday, March 20 2007, 11:00 am
Venue:
BA912
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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Title:
PVC (R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series
Presenter:
Visiting Professor Pavel Kroupa
Brief Description:
We have the pleasure of inviting you to attend a PVC(R) Open Talk by Visiting Professor Pavel Kroupa from Bonn University. The title of the talk is - "From Extra-solar Planets to Dark Matter". The talk will be followed by a wine and cheese reception on the 4th floor of the Applied Sciences building. The talk is open to all University staff and students.
Date:
Friday, March 02 2007, 3:00 pm
Venue:
EN101
Status:
Refer to contact person.
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