New University Chancellor, Jocelyn Bell Burnell. Turn

New University Chancellor, Jocelyn Bell Burnell. Turn

TURN TO PAGE 8 TO READ ABOUT OUR NEW UNIVERSITY CHANCELLOR, JOCELYN BELL BURNELL. Contents Alumni Magazine 2019 University of Dundee 05 Welcome from the Principal 06 Our University in numbers 08 Introducing our Chancellor: Jocelyn Bell Burnell 11 Graduation is icing on the cake 12 Transforming the lives of children in Indonesia 14 At the movies Hello from Alumni Relations 16 Degree Show 2019 The 2019 edition of The Bridge is a mixture of fantastic stories about you, our alumni, and the excellent research that is taking 18 Building a screen against cancer place here in Dundee. As a graduate we hope you take real pride in your University and our work which is changing lives 20 Communicating science to business around the world. If you haven’t done so already, please do sign up to Dundee 22 DUSA celebrates 50 years! Connect, our exclusive mentoring and networking platform for alumni and students. From offering CV advice, to providing 24 Dundee... the best place to live, work and study information about your company, Dundee Connect is a great way to share your expertise and experience with others. We 26 By royal appointment have recently upgraded the platform and there are plans to launch a Dundee Connect app so please do watch this space. 27 Doing doctoral studies differently Like last year, we are delighted to offer you the opportunity to return to Dundee to walk down memory lane and witness all 28 Journey to success the changes that have taken place in the city in recent years. Please find more details in the centre of the magazine. 29 Friends of the show 2019 Finally, we very much hope you enjoy reading the 2019 edition of The Bridge. 30 Helping to create a better everyday life Pam, Cara and Beth 32 Two weddings and a baby Alumni Relations Team 34 Protecting rugby players of the future 36 Improving dental care in prisons The Bridge is produced by the Department of External Relations at the University of Dundee, who include some of our own alumni! 38 Family Paynes Editors Roddy Isles – [email protected] Pamela Lawrence (History, Class of 2006), Cara Longmuir 40 Law and order in the Glasgow Drug Court Contributors Dominic Glasgow (Philosophy–Politics, Class of 2011), Grant Hill (English, Class of 2001), Bethany Johnstone, 42 Working for a tech giant Siobhan Lynagh, Hilary McNally (Psychology – Politics, Class of 1989), Mairi Morrison, Amy Pass, Gail Robertson, Ailsa Wallace 44 Reunions and events (Psychology, Class of 2010), Jonathan Watson (English-History, Class of 2005), Yasmin Worrall 45 Taking Dundee to the world Design Creative Services – [email protected] 46 Book in brief – The Unmaking of Ellie Rook 4 THE BRIDGE ALUMNI MAGAZINE 5 Welcome from the Principal “We all need to shout a bit I am still in the relatively early stages That partnership with students is part of my relationship with the University, of what really sets Dundee apart. The louder and farther about all having taken on my role as Principal and students here were another of the very that is great about Dundee.” Vice-Chancellor at the beginning of 2019, strong factors that persuaded me to come but I have been finding something which I here. They are articulate, bright, engaged am sure many of you will remember from and positive. They are a fantastic asset to your early days at Dundee. When I came this university. A consistent message from here, from Lancaster University where I my visits to Schools across the University was Deputy Vice-Chancellor, I thought that has been our students telling me that our Dundee was a good university. Now that I staff are excellent. A common sentiment is have been here for a few months I find it is ‘they have our back’. That is a great thing even better than I had expected. to hear, and something I am sure will be On one of my initial visits to the familiar to you from your time here. University I was shown around the School My story of finding out that Dundee is of Life Sciences and in quick succession I even better than I expected does point to was taken to a laboratory where they were something I think you can help us with. It working on new breakthroughs relating shouldn’t be a surprise that so many great to cancer, then another where they are things are happening here, but the fact doing amazing work that is increasing is our reputation doesn’t quite match our our understanding of Parkinson’s Disease, performance. We all need to shout a bit and then the Drug Discovery Unit where louder and farther about all that is great they developed a compound that has the about Dundee. potential both to cure and prevent malaria. I already know you, our alumni, are I found a similar story at our School of doing this. Last year I hosted an alumni Medicine, one of the very best in the UK dinner for my previous university. This and conducting research that is among was in the Hong Kong Club. When I the most cited around the world, helping introduced myself and mentioned that I change lives locally and globally. was soon to be joining the University of I said to a friend soon after, ‘Imagine Dundee they immediately started telling being able to lead a University where they me how good Dundee was and what a great are helping to cure malaria, to beat cancer, reputation it had in Hong Kong. They told to unlock the secrets that might make an me all of the best doctors and dentists in incurable disease like Parkinson’s curable?’ Hong Kong came from Dundee! Then I went to our Duncan of That was a great thing to hear, how the Jordanstone College of Art & Design, reputation of Dundee was so strong in a where close together we have leading place as far from here as Hong Kong. We work in Product Design that is helping need to spread that message even wider people with physical disabilities and and you can help us do that. So please do researchers developing new methods of show your pride in Dundee and spread underwater imaging, in the midst of a the message ever wider, of a University creative hub packed with young artists, that is extraordinary, and that is changing designers and craftspeople. and saving lives. We are a university that undertakes world-changing research, works in partnership with our students to offer an outstanding student experience, and makes Professor Andrew Atherton a difference by transforming lives. Principal and Vice Chancellor 6 THE BRIDGE Our university in numbers We are one of the UK’s top 30 in The Times & Sunday Times Good University Guide 2019 – the Guide named us Scottish University of the Year in both 2016 and 2017 Top 10 in the UK for student experience for the third successive year (National Student Survey 2018) The University is home to more than We contribute more than 16000 £740 million students, helping to make Dundee every year to the Scottish economy, according Scotland’s most student-friendly city to our most recent economic impact report ALUMNI MAGAZINE 7 Our university in numbers As of September 2019 we will be made up of 10 academic schools with the establishment of the School of Business of the students we are engaged nationalities representated 25% with are from outside the UK 150+ on our campus The results of the International Student Barometer Autumn 2018 survey show We are one of the largest employers overall average satisfaction of in the east of Scotland, with more than 89.6% 3000 staff among Dundee students, the second highest score in the UK and 6th globally 8 THE BRIDGE Introducing our Chancellor: Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell was appointed our Chancellor, the most senior position of the University, in 2018. Here she tells us about her love of science, fighting for fairness, and giving away $3million. The two passions which have crafted the use it to fund women, under-represented career of Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell were ethnic minority and refugee students to sparked at an early age. Her deep love of become physics researchers. science developed when she was a child in “I didn’t want or need the money and I Northern Ireland. The fight for equality and thought this was the best way to use it,” she fairness began soon after. said. “We still have work to do to encourage “I knew as soon as we started to study it women in science, but there is also a at school that I was good at science, and diversity and ethnicity issue. In particular we especially physics,” said Jocelyn. “But when do not have enough people of black origin in I went to start secondary school, this was physics. That is something I hope the prize the mid-1950s, we were told that girls could money can help change. I am hoping we can only study domestic science. So the issues do something for refugee PhDs. I am a great of being a woman in science were made very believer that people from minority groups obvious to me very early on. can bring a fresh angle to things, different “We fought that one and won and I got to approaches that can bring great results.” study science. But then I felt much the same again as an undergraduate student when I The `No-Bell’ prize? got to university, where there were 49 men For many the award of the Breakthrough in my class and I was the only woman.

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