PodParley PodParley

Creative Lives: Lifelong learning

Creative Lives is a podcast which opens provocati…

An episode of the UCL Minds podcast, hosted by UCL, titled "Creative Lives: Lifelong learning" was published on November 15, 2021 and runs 25 minutes.

November 15, 2021 ·25m · UCL Minds

0:00 / 0:00

Creative Lives is a podcast which opens provocative conversations, experimenting with big ideas and local practices. We bring together researchers, experts by experience, artists and performers, approaching issues around community, learning, communication, healthcare, welfare, age and the life course. The possibilities of creativity are endless. Our theme today is “Lifelong learning”, with guests, Emily Bradfield and Deborah Padfield. Emily Bradfield is an independent arts consultant who supports people to reimagine evaluation, and manage projects creatively. She's also charity director of Arts and Minds, which is an arts and mental health charity working across Cambridgeshire and Peterborough. Emily holds a PhD in creative ageing from the University of Darby. She is passionate about bridging the gap between research and practice, advocating arts for social change and weaving creativity throughout research, evaluation and practice. Deborah Padfield is a visual artist and senior lecturer in Arts and Health Humanities at St. George's, University of London, and a teaching lecturer at the Slade School of Fine Art here at UCL. She collaborates with both clinicians and academics and her research explores the potential of photographic images, co-created with people who have pain, to facilitate a patient-clinician communication, so new ways of communicating about pain. Her latest book is Encountering Pain: hearing, seeing, speaking, edited with J. M. Zakrzewska. It can be accessed here: uclpress.co.uk/Pain The presenter is Lorna Collins. The podcast is produced by Grand Challenges and published by UCL Minds. The editing is by Nina Quach, and the music is by Tim Moor. For more information and to access the transcript: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/grand-challenges/creative-lives-episode-6-lifelong-learning

Creative Lives is a podcast which opens provocative conversations, experimenting with big ideas and local practices. We bring together researchers, experts by experience, artists and performers, approaching issues around community, learning, communication, healthcare, welfare, age and the life course. The possibilities of creativity are endless. Our theme today is “Lifelong learning”, with guests, Emily Bradfield and Deborah Padfield. Emily Bradfield is an independent arts consultant who supports people to reimagine evaluation, and manage projects creatively. She's also charity director of Arts and Minds, which is an arts and mental health charity working across Cambridgeshire and Peterborough. Emily holds a PhD in creative ageing from the University of Darby. She is passionate about bridging the gap between research and practice, advocating arts for social change and weaving creativity throughout research, evaluation and practice. Deborah Padfield is a visual artist and senior lecturer in Arts and Health Humanities at St. George's, University of London, and a teaching lecturer at the Slade School of Fine Art here at UCL. She collaborates with both clinicians and academics and her research explores the potential of photographic images, co-created with people who have pain, to facilitate a patient-clinician communication, so new ways of communicating about pain. Her latest book is Encountering Pain: hearing, seeing, speaking, edited with J. M. Zakrzewska. It can be accessed here: uclpress.co.uk/Pain The presenter is Lorna Collins. The podcast is produced by Grand Challenges and published by UCL Minds. The editing is by Nina Quach, and the music is by Tim Moor. For more information and to access the transcript: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/grand-challenges/creative-lives-episode-6-lifelong-learning
9. Jim Onyemenam

Sep 22, 2023 ·1m

8. Lyn Stone

Sep 22, 2023 ·0m

7. Jamie Gardiner

Sep 22, 2023 ·1m

6. Peter Mitchell

Sep 22, 2023 ·1m

5. Toni Griffiths

Sep 22, 2023 ·1m

4. Alwyn Davies

Sep 22, 2023 ·1m

Generation UCL: 200 Years of Student Life in London UCL Minds Generation UCL is a research and engagement project that is collecting the stories of UCL alumni over 200 years. To give an insight into the breadth and diversity of the student experience, this series includes short extracts from these oral history interviews alongside excerpts from written memoirs that have been voiced by actors. Talking To Titans Talking to Titans is a podcast about gender equality in academia.In celebration of International Women’s Day 2020, Cathy Giangrande and Gudrun Moore speak to seven senior women who are the titans of their fields. Together, they discuss sexual harassment, racial inequality, mentorship, mental health, and success - no topic is off the table. They ask some of the big questions about diversity and inclusion, and spotlight the skills needed to fulfil your potential. How do you deal with the challenges women meet in male dominated environments? Is finding a mentor crucial to your well-being and advancement? Is it better to wait till you establish your career before you have children?Dr Gudrun Moore is Professor of Molecular Genetics at UCL, and Cathy Giangrande is a UCL Alumna and Conservation Scientist.This podcast was produced by Whistledown Productions for UCL Minds. Hosted on Acast. See <a sty Know it Wall Know it Wall is a place for inquisitive minds. Let world-class researchers in humanities & sciences excite your curiosity through short audio-documentaries (audiodocs). From Stegosaurus to Shakespeare, protons to pandemics, there’s no limit to what you could encounter! | Based at UCL and Imperial | www.knowitwall.com Breast Screening - some inconvenient truths - Video The pro-screening lobby is locked into a mindset dating back to the late 1980s. Since then our understanding of the biology of breast cancer and its treatment has moved on whilst the screening programme continues without modification based on the results of trials reported in 1987. This lecture will discuss some of the harmful problems of this over-diagnosing system, and will look at the need for radical change to bring the entire programme up to date with modern practice based on risk assessment and risk management.This lecture marks Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
URL copied to clipboard!