- Environmental Sciences - 19:00
Intel invests in UK institute to create Global Centre for Research in Sustainable Connected Cities - Literature - 18:00
Queen Victoria's personal journals put online - Environmental Sciences - 16:30
Road2Science: Researching Stronger, Safer, Smarter Infrastructure - Physics - 16:30
Get ready for the transit of Venus! - Medicine - 16:01
Hormone Plays Surprise Role in Fighting Skin Infections - Business - 16:00
Engineering a better society - Law - 14:01
Latest UT/Texas Tribune Poll: Tax Pledge Issue Reveals Conservative Divide - Medicine - 14:00
Device may inject a variety of drugs without using needles - Medicine - 13:00
Stopping drug- induced liver injury - Medicine - 12:02
Penn Offers Benefits- tax Offset to Same- sex Couples - Environmental Sciences - 12:02
Lighting control system at U-M saves energy and costs - Life Sciences - 12:02
UC San Diego Receives $7 Million from DOD for Innovative Neural Research - Social Sciences - 12:00
Better response plans needed for children exposed to domestic violence - Physics - 11:01
Exotic particles, chilled and trapped, form giant matter wave - Business - 11:00
Holidays inspire disadvantaged children to learn, says study - Life Sciences - 10:00
Think big, think seahorse
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
Environmental Sciences
Earth Sciences
Life Sciences
Medicine
Business
Literature
History
Psychology
Social Sciences
» » more
Schoolroom Science and Other Revolutionary Ideas
Talk by Emily Winterburn on Saturday 1 October 2011
How did you learn science at school‘ Do you think it would have differed very much from a lesson in 1911 or even earlier’ The University of Leeds holds an excellent collection of school science apparatus dating from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day, all once part of the university's former history of education museum.
In connection with the Leeds School Strike 1911 display at the The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery, Emily Winterburn's talk will be using objects from this collection and look at the clues these objects can gives us for understanding how scientists are made and how we have all come to be so technically and scientifically literate.
Emily Winterburn works for the Centre for History and Philosophy of Science. She is the former Curator of Astronomy at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, and has contributed to television and radio broadcasts on the history of science.
Free event, no booking necessary.
The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery
Parkinson Building
Woodhouse Lane
University of Leeds
Leeds
LS2 9JT
Links
University of LeedsLast job offers
- Civil Engineering - 24.5
Wissensch. Assistent/in MINERGIE® Agentur Bau (80–100 %) - Agronomy - 22.5
Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiter/in Koordination Agrar-Umweltindikatoren - Social Sciences - 21.5
wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin/ wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter - Electroengineering - 21.5
Sektionsleiter/in - Electroengineering - 21.5
Elektroingenieur/in FH - Life Sciences - 17.5
Hochschulabsolventen (m/w) Fachrichtungen Biologie, Mikrobiologie, Bio-Informatik... - Computer Science - 23.5
Associate Professor / Senior Lecturer in Human-Computer Interaction with specialization in Visualization... - Physics - 23.5
Professor in experimental materials physics - Literature - 23.5
Professur für italienische und französische Literaturwissenschaft im FB 05 - Romanisches Seminar - Literature - 23.5
Professur für italienische und französische Sprachwissenschaft im Fachbereich Philosophie und Philologie... - Medicine - 24.5
Chair in Bacteriology - YMS360A - Business - 24.5
Associate Professor in Operations Management - Business - 23.5
Full, Assoc, or Asst. Professor in Marketing - Life Sciences - 23.5
Open Rank Professor - Pathology & Lab Med





» Share this page: