UWA Logo What's On at UWA
   UWA HomeProspective Students  | Current Students  | Staff  | Alumni  | Visitors  | About  |     Search UWA    for      
 

What's On at UWA

* Login to add events... *
Today's date is Friday, March 29, 2024
Events for the public
 March 2012
Wednesday 21
7:00 - EVENT - Bike Week Breakfast 2012 : Ride your bike to UWA and be rewarded with breakfast More Information
It’s on again, the UWA Bike Breakfast. All UWA cyclists welcome. On Wednesday 21st March ride your bike to Riley Oval and be rewarded with breakfast catered by Uni Club. Breakfast from 7.00am until 9.00am. So cycle down to UWA and help celebrate all things cycling. Great prizes will be on offer.

18:00 - FREE LECTURE - Semipermeable Public Lecture Series : Presented by SymbioticA & Institute of Advanced Studies at UWA Website | More Information
Alien Agencies: Research-Creation and Ethnographies of the Nonhuman

A public lecture by Dr Christopher Salter, Director, Hexagram Concordia Centre for Research-Creation in Media Art and Technology.

What does it mean that nonhuman matter “performs”? How can contemporary techno-scientifically influenced and produced artworks be understood under the term “new materialism”?
Thursday 22
1:00 - EVENT - The Case for an Apology by the Australian Mental Health Professions to Aboriginal and Islander peoples : Close the Gap Event - Seminar Website | More Information
The Centre for Research Excellence in Aboriginal Health and Wellbeing is hosting a Seminar presented by Professor Alan Rosen, Research Psychiatrist, Centre for Rural & Remote Mental Health, University of Newcastle.

Over many years, psychiatric professionals have dominated the lives of people with mental illnesses. We have been responsible for their forced separation and disconnection from their families; incarceration in remote regions; their being humiliated, stigmatised and sequestered as moral lepers; the loss of their identities as people, denying them their human rights, their dignity and entitlement to full membership as citizens. Mental health professionals have become the officially anointed custodians of people with mental illnesses – “for their own good”. We have inadvertently broken their spirits, disempowered them, alienated them from their kin, and in many instances de-skilled them and depleted community knowledge of how to look after their own. The case for regret and apology for the past suffering of Aboriginal Australians with a mental illness is pressing.

12:00 - PUBLIC LECTURE - �Iran�s Nuclear Programme - Regional Perspective� : The Centre for Muslim States and Societies, UWA to attend a public lecture on “Iran’s Nuclear Programme - Regional Perspective” More Information
Iran’s nuclear programme has been a cause of concern for the international community. US and Israel are convinced that Iran is developing nuclear weapons, Iran claims that it has no intention to produce nuclear weapons and its nuclear activities are to sustain a peaceful nuclear power programme. It asserts its right to have access to peaceful nuclear technology. There have been anomalies in Iran’s reports to the IAEA and its ballistic missile programme also causes serious concerns. It is feared that if Iran goes nuclear there will be a ‘nuclear break out’ in Persian Gulf region. Israel’s threats to attack and destroy Iranian nuclear installations and its pressure on the US to take military action against Iran have created a very combustible environment with serious implications for regional as well as global security.

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 our special 5th Anniversary Evensong where we will officially induct new choristers into the choir.

Responses: Rose Psalm 95 Old Testament Reading: Genesis 46:1-7 New Testament Reading: Hebrews 3:12-19 Canticles: Gibbons Short Service Anthem: Harris Faire is the heaven Hymn: Forth in thy name, O Lord
Friday 23
15:00 - Colloquium: Speaker PROF GORDON BROWN (University of Warwick) - Relative rank effects in consumer behaviour and social judgement: From cognitive models to social inequality More Information
Models of judgement and decision-making suggest that the relative ranked positions of options within a context influences judgement and choice. I will summarise evidence for the relative rank principle in a number of different social and applied contexts, ranging from actual product choice through to social and health-related attitudes. I show that wage and life satisfaction are related to relative rank of income; that similar principles predict self-perception of body-image, student satisfaction, and alcohol consumption,and that the effects of societal income inequality can be understood in terms of the same principles that underpin judgement and choice.
Monday 26
12:00 - EVENT - LIWA Medical Research Seminar Series : Prof Anna Nowak presents "Thoracic Cancer Medicine" Website | More Information
LIWA invites you to a free seminar on: "Thoracic Cancer Medicine" by Professor Anna Nowak from School of Medicine and Pharmacology, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital. Time: 12 noon for light lunch with 12.30pm – 1.30pm presentation

18:00 - PUBLIC TALK - Being an ecologist in Western Australia: Life in a biological wonderland caught in a minefield of polarized debates Website | More Information
A public lecture by Professor Richard Hobbs, 2011 WA Scientist of the Year.

Professor Hobbs studies the patterns and processes of life - species and how they interact, ecosystems and how they work - and how humans intersect with and affect these species and ecosystems. Working as an ecologist in Western Australia is at the same time a great privilege and an immense challenge. Quirks of history and geography have rendered WA a unique and diverse place, whose ecology, we are discovering, is sometimes surprisingly different from other parts of the world.

This ecology is now facing rapid directional change as human impact increases through land use changes, urban and resource development, introduced species, exploitation and climate change. Managing these ecosystems in the face of such change seems fraught with contention. Debates are often highly polarised and dominated by claim and counterclaim - only some of which are backed up with solid information.

Professor Hobbs steps into this minefield to try to provide reasoned commentary, backed up with good data wherever possible, that can feed into the decision making process. Sometimes, however, the decision making process ignores the good science already available. Public and media discussion simplifies and further polarises complex phenomena and renders finding effective solutions more difficult. Few attempts are made to de-polarise debates and find common ground from which to work towards useful outcomes.

Navigating this minefield is an ongoing challenge, but one that is essential to continue to pursue while at the same time conducting the normal business of science. In this talk Proferssor Hobbs will discuss these issues from a personal perspective and in the context of current issues in Western Australia.

Richard Hobbs is Professor of Restoration Ecology in the School of Plant Biology at the University of Western Australia, where he holds an ARC Australian Laureate Fellowship, and leads the Ecosystem Restoration and Intervention Ecology Research Group. He was elected to the Australian Academy of Science in 2004, is an ISI Highly Cited Researcher and was awarded the Ecological Society of Australia Gold Medal in 2010. His current research focuses on “Intervention ecology: managing ecosystems in the 21st century”.

Cost: Free, no RSVP required.
Tuesday 27
18:00 - PUBLIC LECTURE - The 2012 Francesco Vanzetti Memorial Lecture : Dante's Purgatorio and Easter: an introduction with a reading of the First Canto More Information

18:05 - FREE LECTURE - Lecture on Dante : Emeritus Professor John Scott will deliver the 2012 Francesco Vanzetti Memorial Lecture on Dante's Purgatorio. Website | More Information
"Dante's Purgatorio and Easter: an introduction with a reading of the First Canto"
Wednesday 28
17:30 - PRESENTATION - MBA and EMBA Information Session Website | More Information
We invite you to attend one of our upcoming information evenings which will give you the opportunity to learn about the programs on offer, to discuss your study options, meet Business School staff and have all your questions answered before applying for your chosen course.


18:00 - PRESENTATION - Year 12 Student Information Evening : 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 - FREE LECTURE - Semipermeable Public Lecture Series : Presented by SymbioticA & Institute of Advanced Studies at UWA Website | More Information
"Artists in the Labs" Speaker: Jill Scott

The artists-in-labs program, based in Zurich Switzerland started as a pilot project in 2003 to place artists into Swiss scientific research environments. The program examines current debates and discourses that can help art and science gain a closer understanding of each other. As well as her projects, “The Electric Retina” and “Dermaland”, Jill will present on the work of artists based in the artists-in-lab program and their collaborating research centres. These projects, research directives and residencies are designed to inspire artists to create new works of complexity and address the relevant issues about scientific discovery for society. She will also discuss the ways in which scientists in the program are exploring more creative contemporary art approaches to the experimentation, interpretation and communication of their research.
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.

Alternative formats: Default | XML


Top of Page
© 2001-2010  The University of Western Australia
Questions? Mail [email protected]