Search results
Found 1000 results from blogs.ed.ac.uk.
Upcycling materials at the City Croft community garden – Social Responsibility and Sustainability
We hope the City Croft project will prove to be sustainable through future generations of students and will help build a community within ECA and the wider university of individuals who
Capitalism vs Creativity – Environmental Design: Materials, Ecologies, Futures
Live action has a lot of factors, such as transportation, electricity used for sets and lighting, and physical waste generation that isn’t necessary for animation.
Workshop with National Grid ESO AI Centre of Excellence – School of Mathematics
Generation of student projects suitable for postgraduate students (MSc and PhD students).
Lecture 4- George Eliot: Heroes Without Faith – Edinburgh Gifford Lectures Blog
Neiman also posed that this question of the relationship of beauty, truth and goodness is important today with the newer generation ’s obsession with appearance.
A participatory textile making project by Shirley Mclauchlan. – Lines
I had an enthusiastic audience of over 20 people with varied skill levels and mixed generations ranging from 7 years to 72 years.
To chat or not to chat, this is not the only problem! (Part 1) – Teaching Matters
Starting with the Dall-E platform (good at creating images from text), nowadays we start to see various types of content generation .
How to kick start your career in the environment and sustainability – Inform.ed
voices to be heard and lead change for future generations .
Collegiate commentary: Five pillars of the Edinburgh Futures Institute – Teaching Matters
focusing all of our energies towards disciplinary learning outcomes) to values and to the generation of new knowledge.
Safety in a World of Uncertainty – Some Initial Reflections – Digital Safety, Wellbeing and Citizenship
in the belief that everything will be fine, or that someone else will resolve the issues.” How do you ensure the university community feels safe then, when as a generation and
Mid-Series Reflections by Dr Marc Kissel – Edinburgh Gifford Lectures Blog
Both genetic, fossil, and archaeological data now suggest that they were more human than previous generations of scholars have thought.
