The Projects
We want the Knowledge Centre to be a place where knowledge is shared, ideas are discussed and graduates can continue to take an active role in the Warwick community. We have a number of projects for you to listen, watch, read and think.
Current Projects
The Knowledge Centre brings you interactive events from around campus. Whether it's a live chat with the Knowledge Centre team; a discussion with academics on a particular topic; a Q&A with a Warwick academic; or even a live event, we hope this will be an opportunity for you to continue your engagement with Warwick in a way that you can't elsewhere.
If you have any comments on the Knowledge Centre projects or ideas for future projects, please do share your thoughts below or email us at knowledge at warwick dot ac dot uk
Past Projects
The Knowledge Centre asked Warwick academics - scientists, inventors, and thinkers - one simple question: If there weren't any practical limitations, what would you do to improve the way we live? Find out what they think in this podcast series.
Every Tuesday in this series we published an extract from a book by a Warwick author for your enjoyment. We would love to hear your thoughts on the ideas contained within these passages and if you have a suggestion for The Book Club, please contact us by emailing knowledge at warwick dot ac dot uk
Each week in this series we published an article from Reinvention: A Journal for Undergraduate Research. Reinvention is an online, peer-reviewed journal, dedicated to the publication of high-quality undergraduate student research. The journal is produced, edited and managed by students and staff at the University of Warwick and was founded through the Reinvention Centre jointly by Warwick and Oxford Brookes University.
Warwick academics from across the University often bring different perspectives on the same subjects. We have brought those academics together for "Tête-à-Tête" - a video series tackling cross-disciplinary ideas.
In collaboration with Warwick Careers and Skills, the Knowledge Centre featured a series of sessions offering careers help, guidance and resources. The series ran for ten weeks with sessions covering topics such as how to prepare for interviews, work experience and internships, working abroad, and business etiquette.
The WRAP Unwrapped series was a feed of the most recent additions to the Warwick Research Archive Project. The project aimed to establish, populate and promote an institutional repository to house and provide access to University of Warwick authors' journal articles as well as e-theses.
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