Open science opens minds
Wednesday, July 22, 2009

This job ad is reproduced by permission of Ian Lister of NMIT:

Teaching Commerce and IT in China

Expressions of Interest

Opportunities exist for people with a zest for experiencing working in China to teach on our approved Dipoma programmes in China on a contract or part time basis in the following areas:
  • Business Marketing, communications, ethics, commercial law, accounting and business finance
  • Information Technology Web technology, database design and systems development
Courses are to be delivered in the period from September 2009 to December 2009 with other opportunities available from March to June 2010.

Courses are delivered in English in a block format over three or four weeks plus travel time. Tutorial assistance is provided by our partner Chinese universities. All travel and accommodation is provided and a generous renumeration package will be negotiated.

You must have a tertiary qualification or experience in the relevant field and experience teaching at a tertiary level or proven presentation and communication skills.

If you are keen to explore these opportunities please email and expression of interest and CV to the Head of School, Business and Computer technology ian.lister@nmit.ac.nz or telephone 03 546 9175 ext 845 by Friday 24 July 2009

Wednesday, July 22, 2009 6:58:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) | Comments [0] | Announcements | China 2009#
Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Today is the 40th anniversary of the moon landing, and it seemed appropriate to remember what this meant to me as a young child watching this live back in 1969 on a grainy black and white TV

At the time, the kids of my generation were transfixed my the Apollo programme and by the moon landing. We had been brought up on a diet of "Dr Who" and "Thunderbirds", and to have a real life space adventure in front of our eyes was truly very exciting.

In some ways, the fate of the NASA programme seemed a microcosm of life itself, from child-like optimism to adult reality and perhaps, ultimately, disappointment.

I still remember the TV programmes on BBC with the ebullient James Burke and Patrick Moore. I had all the Saturn rockets, lunar modules etc as Airfix models.

I recently saw the Lunar module and astronaut gear at London's science museum. It is staggering that those guys got to the moon and back in such primitive gear.

My generation, that of Barack Obama too, sits uncomfortably between Baby Boomers and Gen X. The phrase "Generation Jones" has been coined for us, but for me, I prefer "Generation Apollo".

It was just such a defining era of my life.
Monday, July 20, 2009 11:11:28 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) | Comments [0] | Personal Thoughts#
Sunday, July 05, 2009

Well, it's great to be back home, but what a flight..
After the London - Hong Kong sector the last thing you want to do is spend 6.5 hours on the tarmac at HK airport. There was an engine fault that required a replacement part, followed by an "incident" that closed a runway that delayed us for yet another hour. For some reason the AirNZ management deemed that we should stay on the plane the whole time.
Then we needed to divert via Brisbane becuase the crew had run out of hours. Meanwhile I am throwing up and back on the oxygen.
Finally made it home at 11.30pm on Sunday (left heathrow 9pm Friday)
Half the family has got the flu too. Welcome to NZ!

Sunday, July 05, 2009 7:46:29 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) | Comments [0] | Announcements | China 2009#
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