Explore Intriguing Science Week Events at Birkbeck
Discover how and why we explore the Moon, our closest planetary neighbour; find out more about the strange science of presences that we cannot see or hear; and understand how data cultures are created within organisations, all at this year’s Birkbeck Science Week.
The engaging and interactive evenings are for anyone interested in science and those who are considering studying science at university. Attendees can join in-person at Birkbeck’s campus located in Bloomsbury, Central London, or online.
Professor Emily Jones, Head of Research, Innovation and Knowledge Exchange for Birkbeck’s Faculty of Science, said: “This exciting programme of events celebrates the diverse range of world-leading science at Birkbeck. Join us for a week of enlightening discoveries that will expand your horizons and ignite your curiosity.”
Birkbeck’s Science Week shares internationally recognised research from Birkbeck’s Faculty of Science which encompasses three Schools: Psychological Sciences, Natural Sciences and Computing and Mathematical Sciences. All events will include question and answer sessions, and attendees will be able to meet the speakers as well as current faculty researchers and students. There will be an opportunity to take a tour of the Natural Sciences laboratories on 29 May and Psychological Sciences laboratories on 31 May. Poster exhibitions demonstrating key research will be available to view at each Faculty event.
This year’s schedule is as follows:
- Wednesday 29 May, 6-9pm: Natural Sciences presents the Rosalind Franklin Lecture entitled Back to the Moon: How and why we explore our closest planetary neighbour? with speaker Professor Katherine Joy, who worked as a postdoctoral fellow at Birkbeck.
- Thursday 30 May, 6-9pm: Computing and Mathematical Sciences presents the Andrew and Kathleen Booth Memorial Lecture, Data literacy for all: creating a data culture within an organisation, with speaker Chris Webb, a Birkbeck alumnus, now working at Microsoft.
- Friday 31 May, 6-9pm: Psychological Sciences presents Presence: The Strange Science and True Stories of the Unseen Other, in which the speaker Dr Benjamin Alderson-Day, Associate Professor of Psychology at Durham University, will explore the uncanny truth behind felt presence of all kinds.
- Monday 3 June, 6-9pm – the annual Birkbeck Gender and Sexuality (BiGS) lecture will be delivered by Ann Phoenix, Professor of Psychosocial Studies at UCL, with a talk entitled, Intersectionality Matters: The centrality of social positioning to understanding everyday life and social relations.