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Today's date is Friday, March 29, 2024
Events for the public
 March 2012
Thursday 29
13:10 - PERFORMANCE - Lunchtime Concert : Daniel Masmanian (composition) More Information

18:00 - PRESENTATION - Year 12 Student Information Evening (repeat session) : Prospective student information session for Year 12 students Website | More Information
If you're a Year 12 student or a parent of a Year 12 student, this session will give you information about courses, admission requirements and how to structure TISC preferences to help you make the most of your WACE results and achieve your study and career goals.

Admissions Centre and Prospective Students Office staff will be available to answer questions following the presentation.

18:00 - PERFORMANCE - Winthrop Singers Evensong More Information
The Winthrop Singers, UWA's chamber choir, perform an Evensong service every Thursday this semester at St Thomas More College. This week is a special sung Eucharist service. All are welcome.

Eucharist Victoria: Motet & Mass O Quam Gloriosum est Regnum Reading: Mark 3: 7-19 Motet: Parsons Ave Maria
Friday 30
10:00 - EVENT - �Government�s approach to Settling Refugees in Australia� : The Centre for Muslim States and Societies invites you to attend a public lecture by Mr Jamie Fox on the Governments approach to settling Refugees in Australia More Information
Mr Jamie Fox is the head of the Ministerial Support Division in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, a role he has held since February 2012. Prior to taking up that role, Jamie ran the Citizenship, Settlement and Multicultural Affairs Division in the Department of Immigration and Citizenship. In that role, he was responsible for providing advice to the Government in the development of Australia’s Multicultural Policy, the People of Australia. He was also responsible for the delivery of settlement services to refugees arriving in Australia and the Adult Migration English Program. Jamie’s other roles in the Immigration Department have included responsibility for client services (including the overseas network for immigration) and visa policy

15:00 - Colloquium: Speaker Dr JEFF VANCOUVER (Ohio University) - Dynamics in Motivation and Decision Making: Some Computational Models More Information
Psychology is seeking a comprehensive, integrative approach to understanding motivated human behavior; that is, one that covers action, thinking, feeling, and learning. Preferably that approach would be formal (e.g., mathematical). In this presentation several computational models, all based on a simple information processing structure called the self-regulatory agent, are presented to account for various well-known (e.g., the goal gradient effect [Hull, 1934]) and not so well-known phenomena (e.g., the discontinuous, nonmonotonic expectancy model [Vancouver, More, & Yoder, 2008]; the discrepancy-reversal effect [Schmidt & DeShon, 2007]) in the action and thinking domains. Extensions to learning and feeling are also described.

 April 2012
Sunday 01
9:00 - EVENT - Perth Sun Fair : Discover sustainable living, renewable energy first hand Website | More Information
Its WA's biggest sustainable living event and its free and non-profit - although a donation is appreciated.

With over 15,000 people visiting the Fair on the day and over 90 organisation presenting it includes arts, music and activities, interactive displays for the kids and everyone.

Its about you and living not money, not a trade show althougth there will be alot of gear on show.

15:00 - PERFORMANCE - Teddy Bears Picnic : .....if you go down to the woods today you're sure of a big surprise Website | More Information
The teddies of Perth unite for a festive event in the picturesque setting of the UWA Sunken Gardens. Big Teddies and passionate instrumentalists will laugh, sing, dance and explore the wonder of music.

Bring your bears, your picnic and be prepared for a fun-filled event.
Tuesday 03
16:00 - PUBLIC LECTURE - Via Crucis : A Reflection on the Way of the Cross through Literature, Art & Music More Information
A Reflection on the Way of the Cross through Literature, Art & Music

17:00 - FREE LECTURE - Distinguished International Guest Lecture Series : Practitioner Su Hart Website | More Information
Practitioner Su Hart, is a member of the Afro/Celt music group, Baka Beyond. Her own music is inspired by the music of the pygmy Baka people from the rain forests of Cameroon. In her talk she will discuss her own initiation into the Baka womens' magical singing called "Yelli" (forest yodeling).
Wednesday 04
10:00 - WORKSHOP - Consumer Training workshop on Basic Research Information Website | More Information
We are pleased to announce that we are running a Consumer Training workshop on Basic Research Information on Wednesday April 4th 10am – 2.30pm at the Telethon Institute of Child Health Research in Roberts Road Subiaco.

If you are currently working with consumers and or community groups, they might be interested in attending this workshop. The event is free and lunch will be provided – please tell us of any special needs.

12:30 - EVENT - Raine Lecture: Professor Femi Oyebode : "Humanities in Medical Education: Literature and Medicine" Website | More Information
Femi Oyebode studied medicine at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, graduating with distinction in 1977. He trained in psychiatry in Newcastle-upon-Tyne and has been Consultant Psychiatrist in Birmingham since 1986. He is currently Professor of Psychiatry, The University of Birmingham, Head of Academy (Psychiatry), and Consultant Psychiatrist at the National Centre for Mental Health Birmingham. He is also on the editorial boards of The Psychiatrist, Advances in Psychiatric Treatment and Case Reports in Psychiatry. His research interests include medical humanities, clinical psychopathology, medical ethics, and perinatal psychiatry.

Femi Oyebode is also a poet and critic and has published 7 volumes of poetry. He contributed critical essays to The Oxford Companion to 20th Century Poetry, and has presented at the Hay-on-Wye and Cheltenham festivals. In addition he has contributed to two TV programmes for the BBC.

18:00 - PUBLIC LECTURE - Re-Inventing Ethics Website | More Information
A public lecture by Mary C. Gentile, Director of the ‘Giving Voice to Values’ curriculum, Babson College

Does ethics make us happy? Too often we view our ethical decisions as constraints on action - a set of “thou shalt nots”. What if we instead looked at these choices as the opportunities to be more of who we already are, at our best? Would that approach unleash a new energy, motivation and skillfulness? In this public lecture Mary C. Gentile will share a simple re-framing that has caught the attention and the hearts of people around the world and that is helping business and public practitioners as well as educators to unleash the values-driven energy and creativity that they already possess.

Mary C. Gentile, Ph.D., is Director of Giving Voice to Values (GVV), a business curriculum launched by Aspen Institute and Yale School of Management, now based and funded at Babson College, Wellesley, Massachusetts. GVV is a pioneering approach to values-driven leadership that has been featured in Financial Times, Harvard Business Review, Stanford Social Innovation Review, McKinsey Quarterly and BizEd. GVV has been and piloted in over 150 business schools and organizations globally. She is the author of Giving Voice To Values: How To Speak Your Mind When You Know What’s Right (2010, Yale University Press). Gentile is Senior Research Scholar at Babson College; Senior Advisor, Aspen Institute Business & Society Program; and independent consultant. Previously she was a faculty member and manager of case research at Harvard Business School. While at Harvard Business School (1985-95), Gentile was one of the principal architects of the innovative educational program, Leadership, Ethics and Corporate Responsibility.

This lecture is a part of the Institute of Advanced Studies 2012 lecture series ‘Global Transformation and Public Ethics’. This series of free public lectures aims to stimulate considered debate about urgent issues in public ethics and policy as well as reflecting on ways we can improve public discourse about such issues.

Cost: Free, no RSVP required.
Thursday 05
13:10 - PERFORMANCE - Free UWA Lunchtime Concert : Visiting Artist Matt Styles (saxophone) and Adam Pinto (piano) More Information
Duo Mixt performs an eclectic program of works that includes cross-genre pieces as well as more traditional classical pieces.

17:00 - GUIDED TOUR - UWA Crawley Campus Tour 5 April 2012 : An enjoyable and informative walking tour of UWA's Crawley Campus Website | More Information
The Prospective Students Office runs a series of campus tours throughout the year.

These tours are for prospective students who would like to find out more about studying at UWA whilst taking in the beautiful gardens and buildings at the Crawley campus. The tour will include a stop at the Admissions Centre & Prospective Students Office, where you will be able to collect information and course brochures, and find out more about what life is like for our students. Parents are also welcome to attend.

Tours run for approximately one hour and are run after business hours, in the school holidays, and on public holidays, so there is bound to be a time that suits you and your family!


21:30 - EVENT - Easter at St. George's College : We invite you to celebrate Easter at St. George's College at UWA More Information
Staff, students and extended members of the UWA community are all invited and welcome to join with the Anglican Christian Community at St. George's College to celebrate Easter. Services as follows:

Holy Thursday 5th April at 9.30pm: Reflection and music from the UWA Winthrop Singers (college quad)

Good Friday 6th April at 9.00am: Prayer around the cross (music room - go through the passage way underneath the clock in the Quad)

Easter Day 8th April at 5pm: Eucharist (music room - go through the passage way underneath the clock in the Quad)

Parking is not available on the college grounds - but you can park across the road on the corner of Hackett Dve and Stirling Hwy.
Tuesday 10
0:00 - COURSE - Smoking Cessation Program More Information
Quit Smoking Successfully! The Robin Winkler Clinic at The University of Western Australia will be conducting a smoking cessation treatment program commencing on Tuesday 10 April 2012. The group will meet for ten consecutive weeks, with a follow-up session four weeks after completion. Sessions are run for two hours on Monday evenings, except for the first session which is on a Tuesday. The smoking cessation treatment program combines nicotine replacement therapy with cognitive-behavioural therapy to help people beat the chemical addiction, as well as the addiction to the habit of smoking itself. The majority of people who complete this science-informed group program become non-smokers and are still smoke-free one month after the group ended. For further information or to reserve a place in the next group, email [email protected] or call the clinic on (08) 6488 2644.

20:00 - VISITING SPEAKER - Friends of the Library Speaker : A Tale of Two Theatres More Information
The London season of 1774 with its mounting competition between two Royal theatres: Drury Lane and Haymarket. This presentation looks at how, not only the season, but also the music can impact upon the rivalry.
Wednesday 11
16:00 - SEMINAR - CWR Presents: : Integrated surface water and groundwater modelling to support the Murray Drainage and Water Management Plan, south-west Western Australia Website | More Information
The Murray region in south-west Western Australia is characterised by a high water-table, sandy soils, wetlands of significance, and an extensive agricultural drainage system to relieve water-logging in winter months. Urban growth pressures in the region have led to the requirement of a Drainage and Water Management Plan (DWMP) to guide future water management. A key component of the DWMP involved the development of a regional surface water and groundwater model to determine groundwater levels and flows under various climate, drainage and development scenarios.

The Murray regional model was constructed using the integrated surface water and groundwater model MIKE SHE, and consisted of unsaturated zone, saturated zone, channel flow and overland flow components. It had a constant grid spacing of 200 m, and covered an area of 722 km2. Calibration was from 1985 – 2000 and validation from 2000 – 2009 using 45 groundwater bores and 7 surface water flow gauges. The normalised root mean square error of the calibrated model was 2.02%. Land development, drainage and climate scenarios were simulated and their results are discussed in this paper.

The process of model conceptualisation, construction, calibration and simulation is discussed, and provides an appropriate framework for model evaluation and a high level of confidence in modelling results. The Murray MIKE SHE model provided regional groundwater levels, areas of groundwater inundation, estimated drainage volumes from development areas, effects of sea-level rise, and changes in surface water flows for a variety of climate, drainage and development scenarios. The results were used to determine regional-scale hydrology affects resulting from future urban development.

The model grid size and calibration error may prevent the usage of the model for detailed drainage design; however the model is suitable to act as a basis for developing higher-resolution sub regional and local models that are more appropriate for this type of evaluation. The results of the Murray MIKE SHE modelling exercise were used in the Murray Drainage and Water Management Plan, a key deliverable to the Western Australian Planning Commission, used to guide stakeholders in future urban water management in the Murray region. Keywords: MIKE SHE, integrated modelling, groundwater, urban development, Western Australia

Biography,

Degrees Bachelor of Science (environmental biology), University of Adelaide, SA, 2001 Bachelor of Civil and Environmental Engineering (1st class honours), University of Adelaide, SA, 2003

Joel is an engineer with eight years experience in hydrological, hydrogeological, hydraulic and nutrient modelling. He has experience in applying and calibrating surface water yield and nutrient models including LASCAM, MUSIC and the Source Integrated Modelling System, which have been used to develop various Water Quality Improvement Plans and licensing and allocation tools for the Department of Water.

He has been involved applying the integrated surface and groundwater model MIKE SHE and the hydraulic flood model MIKE Flood to support the Murray and Serpentine Drainage and Water Management Plans. Joel is a member of eWater’s Source technical users group, the Danish Hydrological Institute’s MIKE user council, the NWC national groundwater modelling guidelines technical committee, and the WA Cities as Water Supply Catchment’s modelling group. He has written guidelines for modelling in Western Australian regions of high-water table and sandy soils, and is currently developing guidelines on the application of future climate data to modelling applications in WA.

PS* This seminar is free and open to the public, no RSVP required.

****All Welcome****

18:00 - PUBLIC LECTURE - The Stars are Getting Closer: the European Extremely Large Telescope Website | More Information
A public lecture by Dr Joe Liske, staff astronomer, European Southern Observatory (ESO), Germany.

403 years after Galileo Galilei first pointed a telescope at the night sky European astronomers are set to build the largest optical telescope ever in the Chilean Atacama desert: with a diameter of 40 meters the European Extremely Large Telescope is one of the most ambitious science projects on (and off) the planet - our biggest "eye on the sky".

This unique science machine will literally broaden our horizons by leaps and bounds, and astronomers will use it to probe into the mysteries of the Universe more deeply than ever before. Does life exist beyond planet Earth? What did the first galaxies look like? And what exactly is this mysterious 'Dark Energy' that's been in the news so much lately?

In this talk Dr Joe Liske will provide a preview of the European Extremely Large Telescope, its capabilities and the fascinating questions it will address.

This lecture is co-sponsored with the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) and the Institute of Advanced Studies at UWA.
Thursday 12
18:00 - PUBLIC LECTURE - Social Entrepreneurship: Contexts and Challenges Website | More Information
The Centre for Social Impact (UWA), together with the Department for Communities, is delighted to present a public lecture with Dr Alex Nicholls. Dr Nicholls, one of the world’s leading thinkers in social enterprise and innovation, will share his insights on 'Social Entrepreneurship: Context and Challenges', with the Perth community.

As the Western Australian Government’s reform agenda continues to roll out for the not-for-profit sector, encouraging greater accountability in outcomes, innovation in the delivery of services, and the development of social enterprises, this public lecture will encourage further thinking in this emerging field.

Alex Nicholls currently lectures in Social Entrepreneurship in the Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford. His research interests range across several key areas of social entrepreneurship and social innovation and he has been widely published in these areas.

He is the author of the best-selling Fair Trade: Market Driven Ethical Consumption and joint editor of the widely cited Social Entrepreneurship: New Models of Social Change. His forthcoming books include Social Investment from OUP and Measuring Social Impact from Sage.

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