New OpportunitiesFlinders access now granted for European datasets

SHAPE program

Flinders has recently signed an agreement with the Statistical Office of the European Union (Eurostat) to allow our researchers to access 12 new datasets. This agreement now joins our existing arrangements with the Australian Bureau of Statistics and the Department of Social Services.

Many of these datasets are longitudinal. Futhermore, they are collected in the majority of European countries. Access to the data is free of charge for Flinders' researchers, but this access requires the researcher/s to sign the Deed of Confidentiality, and for the researcher/s to provide to Eurostat a very detailed description of the research project, variables to be used, etc.

The datasets now available are:

  • European Community Household Panel
  • European Union Labour Force Survey
  • Community Innovation Survey
  • European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions
  • Structure of Earnings Survey
  • Adult Education Survey
  • European Road Freight Transport Survey
  • European Health Interview Survey
  • Continuing Vocational Training Survey
  • Community Statistics on information Society
  • Micro-Moments Dataset
  • Household Budget Survey

Researchers who wish to apply for the data, need to contact pawel.skuza@flinders.edu.au in the first instance.

Further details about the data sets can be found on Eurostat Microdata website. Additional information about access to ABS, DSS or Eurostat data can be found at the Flinders Restricted Access Data webpage.


New OpportunitiesAMSI Scientific Workshop Funding Round

AMSI Logo

The Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute (AMSI) has made changes to their Scientific Workshop Funding processes. Events will now be classified in one of three ways:

  • Round - for Australian workshops that funded during one of the biannual rounds
  • Out of Round - for small, short-notice, Australian workshops funded outside one of the biannual rounds
  • Major Conference - for major international conferences that come to Australia

In Round Workshop funding applications are accepted from 1 June to 19 June 2017. Funding is available for up to $16,000. Out of Round Workshop funding applications are accepted between 1 August & 1 October, and 1 December and 1 May. Funding is available for up to $5,000. Major Conference applications are accepted at anytime, with funding available for up to $5,000.

Each classification has its own requirements so be sure to check out the AMSI website to find out what sort of funding you can apply for and ensure you can meet all the criteria.

Flinders is a member of AMSI.

Research Engagement and ImpactBe Your Best for Impact

SHAPE program

Research can not only engage directly with a community, but can then impact beyond the immediate academic research outputs to society in general. The Australian Research Council (ARC) defines Impact as: ‘research impact is the contribution that research makes to economy, society and environment, beyond the contribution to academic research’ in their guidelines for the ARC Pilot Engagement Study.(1) In our continuing series on the upcoming Excellence in Research Australia round, we now look at what impact research at Flinders has had, starting with the Flinders-Panthers Be Your Best Program.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) lists a lack of physical activity as one of the 10 leading risk factors for premature death worldwide. Figures presented in January 2015 by the WHO provide the frightening statistic that one in four adults is not active enough. The effects of insufficient physical activity include heightening the risk of cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.

To further compound the problem, epidemiological research in Australia shows insufficient physical activity is often found in communities in low-socioeconomic areas where its effects are heightened by poor nutrition. Both physical activity and poor nutrition are major modifiable risk factors in the reduction of a number of chronic lifestyle diseases such as obesity and diabetes. Research conducted by Professor Murray Drummond and the SHAPE (Sport, Health and Physical Education) team at Flinders University in partnership with a popular local sporting club, has designed and tested an innovative health project with schools in the local area to assist in modifying behaviours in young Australians and thereby promoting healthier choices.

The effects of engaging in increased physical activity for children go beyond the health outcomes listed for adults. Children and adolescents who undertake regular physical activity and enjoy good nutrition show greater personal responsibility and improved group cooperation than those who did not. Research conducted by Flinders SHAPE Centre showed child-focussed programs to enhance physical activity and improved nutrition were more successful when these activities were associated with inspirational individuals within a child’s community. So they set out to use this research to improve lives.

Flinders-Panthers: Be Your Best

The Flinders – Panthers Be Your Best program was designed to build on healthy living messages already in place at schools by regularly bringing fruit and vegetables, fun activities and local sports heroes (Panthers footballers) into the children’s school environment to promote physical activity and good nutrition as positive lifestyle choices. Run by University students together with Panthers footballers, the program enjoyed phenomenal success with the children and their communities. School principals hosting the initiative were excited by the response it received from both the students themselves and the parents and teachers supporting them. Working with the footballers gave the program a degree of ‘cool’ that working with teachers and parents did not have. The Flinders – Panthers Be Your Best program had a different role from regular school lessons, namely the promotion of key lifestyle concepts with positive reinforcement. In that way the children could engage with role models on a peer-to-peer basis rather than in a teacher-student way. These interactions inspired the children to a healthier lifestyle because it was something they had seen someone they admired doing, and that being healthy was ‘cool’.

"In terms of academic impact this research has resulted in a number of important research papers and international book chapters that will be accessed by scholars around the world to emulate the program in their own unique settings. From a practical and ‘real life' perspective we have impacted the lives of several hundred children by changing attitudes and behaviours associated with physical activity and nutrition in regions where these aspects of health are poorest. Through sport, and by utilising sport and PE students as agents of change, we have also played a role in promoting children's awareness in these low socioeconomic localities that university is a ‘cool’ place to be. The potential to be interrupt the cycle of education attrition is a real prospect for families where higher education is not a high priority," said Murray.

In addition to the predicted outcomes of the program, working with University students had unforeseen positive consequences for the children involved. All schools involved in the initiative are located in low socio-economic areas with few positive career and educational opportunities. By giving the children regular and positive contact with University students from similar backgrounds, the idea that there was more to life than school and possible unemployment was invigorating to the participants. Teachers reported that students engaged with the program expressed significantly increased interest in attending high school and seeking tertiary education as a direct result of engaging with the Flinders students in the Flinders – Panthers Be Your Best program.

By connecting children with accessible sporting role models in an environment focused on healthy lifestyle choices, the Flinders – Panthers Be Your Best program has been a great success. SHAPE director, Murray, is working with the South Australian National Football League to expand the program into additional schools and working with additional football clubs in the future to bring the impact of the program to a greater part of the society.

 

For further Flinders Research Impact stories, see the Research Impact section. For assistance in creating a Flinders Research Impact case study, contact Dr Brodie Beales.

(1) ARC Pilot Study overview information - http://www.arc.gov.au/ei-pilot-overview

Seminars Conferences and WorkshopsLooking behind the Iron Curtain - Communist? Yes. Spy? Maybe.

Fred Rose - meteorologist, anthropologist, almost cattle farmer, stevedore on the Sydney wharves, to anthropology Professor in East Berlin, and dedicated communist for the majority of his adult life. Accused of spying but never really proven in Australia, he still tried to continue to work in his field but, in his own words, it was "a bit of a bugger living behind the iron curtain".

Where: Flinders University Victoria Square, Level 1, Room 1, 182 Victoria Square
When: Wednesday 21 June 2017
Time: 5:30 PM – 6:30 PM
RSVP: Register

Peter Monteath

This public lecture by Peter Monteath, as part of the Flinders Investigators series, reflects on the process of writing the biography of a man who had disappeared into almost total obscurity in Australia, and yet whose life conveyed so much about the history of the century in which he lived. It looks at the dilemmas posed by digging into the records of intelligence services on both sides of the Iron Curtain, and into the challenges of writing about a man whose actions were driven by an extraordinary combination of altruism, ideology, love, hate and paranoia.

In their book Red Professor: The Cold War Life of Fred Rose, Flinders historians Peter Monteath and Valerie Munt tell the extraordinary life story of Fred Rose, an anthropologist who spent much of his life studying and writing about the Indigenous people of northern Australia. As an anthropologist Rose courted a good deal of controversy, but it was his politics that got him into very deep water in Australia. A communist and alleged spy, he was implicated in the Petrov Affair and appeared twice before the Royal Commission into Espionage before departing Australia and building a career as Professor of Anthropology at the Humboldt University in East Berlin.


Research Engagement and ImpactAiming to catch criminals as never before

fingerprint

New technology being developed at Flinders is aiming to help identify suspects from a simple touch on items that have rarely been used for DNA testing before.

Identification of criminals and terrorists from traces of material that they leave behind at crime scenes and on items that they touch is a cornerstone of forensic science. Typically, fingerprints and DNA in body fluids such as blood yield the most valuable crime-solving leads. Flinders, through the leadership of Professor Adrian Linacre, Chair in Forensic DNA Technology, is at the cutting-edge of DNA analysis where invisible traces containing just a few cells deposited by criminals as a result of a single and brief touch can yield valuable evidence.

With $205,193 in funding from the Defence Science and Technology Group (DST) – Defence Science Partnership program, the School of Biological Sciences’ Professor Adrian Linacre and Professor Paul Kirkbride will initially aim to gain useful DNA profiles from items such as cartridge cases, timing devices, circuit boards, tapes and wires. These crucial pieces of evidence are especially relevant to investigation of terrorist bombings and other serious crimes yet it has been notoriously difficult to obtain DNA from these objects in the past. The innovative method uses a specifically devised micro-swab combined with a process that greatly enhances the sensitivity of the genetic testing. The outcome is that DNA profiles are generated from items of forensic interest where it has not been possible using standard methods.

A further aim of the project, Informative genetic data from trace material collected from a range of forensically informative substrates, is to include genetic testing that examines areas of the genome that determine certain physical features such as eye and hair colour as well as where in the world the person leaving the DNA may have come from. The ultimate goal of that work is to provide law enforcement agencies with a new type of intelligence that can help them identify unknown criminals and terrorists. Combining all the DNA testing will ultimate provide highly informative genetic data if persons touch any of a wide range of surfaces during a criminal and terrorist action.

Flinders Research NewsEngagement and Impact at Flinders

Flinders Logo

Engagement and Impact are more than just new buzz words around research. They are key for the future of Australian Research. With the Federal Government implementing an Engagement and Impact Assessment alongside the next Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA) round in 2018, now is when universities and researchers should be preparing for this new type of research outcome measurement.

The Research Services Office has been working with a number of disciplines across Flinders to develop responses to the Australian Research Council's Engagement and Impact pilot assessment. Developing an understanding of the diverse types of engagements and impacts made by our research community is critical to the way we develop our overarching responses to these types of assessment processes.

Professor Claire Smith and Associate Professor Heather Burke, from the Department of Archaeology, have kicked off a series of articles that will discuss the types of engagement that Flinders researchers have undertaken and the impacts of these and other research projects.

Susan Arthure, Doctoral candidate in the Department of Archaeology, provides a personal account of her experience in building relationships with community members and highlights the importance of allowing time for relationships to develop.

We are encouraging comments on these posts as a way to open dialogue on this new form of measurement and we encourage you to contribute your own articles and examples of engagement and impact within your disciplines.

 

Seminars Conferences and WorkshopsResearch Data & Systems Drop-in Session - June 2017

Where: Research Services Office - Room B2, Basement, Union Building
When: Tuesday 20 June 2017
Time: 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM

Research Data and Reporting

The next Research Data and Reporting Team’s monthly drop-in session for interested academic and professional staff will be held on Tuesday 20 June 2017.

The aim of the session is to provide one-on-one assistance to staff who want either a refresh on the research data systems used at Flinders or to learn some new skills.

Research Data and Reporting staff will be available from 12 PM to 1 PM on Tuesday 20 June 2017. Participants are encouraged to register at ienrol if they are interested in attending.

New OpportunitiesResearch in the MD program – support our students and the School of Medicine

Flinders Logo

The School of Medicine is calling for projects and potential supervisors for the Doctor of Medicine (MD) Advanced Studies students.

Advanced Studies (AS) is a compulsory research and scholarship theme integrated across all four years of the Flinders MD program as required by the Australian Medical Council for our students to graduate.

The AS students’ progress heavily depends on the Flinders research community to offer research projects. As part of a team with a well-defined research question, Flinders MD students have demonstrated the ability to substantially aid in the progress of many projects, including quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods research.

There are many tasks that are appropriate for students to undertake as part of a research team and these include, but not limited to:

  • Literature critiques/ meta studies/ systematic reviews;
  • Adding a longitudinal or a parallel component to your project;
  • Wet lab bench work (restricted to time commitments);
  • Collaborative or single data collection;
  • Data analysis and interpretation;
  • Undertaking a survey;
  • A group of students running a small clinical trial under the umbrella of your supervision.

We are now calling for projects and potential supervisors to be part of Advanced Studies.

Projects broadly related to Medicine from all areas of the University are welcome.

Detailed information can be found here - 2017 Advanced Studies Information for Staff.

Contact Dr Hakan Muyderman for further information (e-mail: hakan.muyderman@flinders.edu.au or phone: 0452199965

Applications close June 15, 2017.

Seminars Conferences and WorkshopsARC Rejoinders and NHMRC Rebuttals - ‘the Good, the Bad and the Ugly’

Regardless if it is ARC or NHMRC, there are still the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly in the comments from assessors that have to be dealt with.

Where: The Studio, Ground Level, Professional Services Building (behind Grind & Press Cafe)
When: Thursday 25 May 2017
Time: 9:00 AM – 10:30 AM
RSVP: via iEnrol

RSO Rejoinder and Rebuttal seminar

The Research Services Office (RSO) aims to help researchers in the ARC Rejoinder and NHMRC Rebuttal process by providing a upcoming comprehensive workshop, with plenty of opportunities for Q&A.

The workshop will be split into three sections.
Preparing your Rebuttal or Rejoinder
will be presented by Eva Kemps, Professor, School of Psychology, and Associate Dean (Research), Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences.
ARC Rejoinders
will be presented by Maya Roberts, Senior Grants Officer, RSO.
NHMRC Rebuttals will be presented by Gareth Rees, Senior Grants Officer, RSO.

New OpportunitiesGSK Award for Research Excellence

GSK logo

The 37th GSK Award for Research Excellence are now open. The award acknowledges outstanding Australian researchers and their work and provides an $80,000 (tax free) independent research grant to the award recipient’s employing organisation to further the recipient’s work and knowledge.

The award targets high calibre mid-career clinicians and researchers undertaking human medical health research predominately in Australia.

The judging criteria are weighted as follows:

  • 40% - potential for the researcher’s contribution to science to directly or indirectly lead to improvement in human health
  • 30% - potential for the nominee to continue to make research contributions in the field of human health; and
  • 30% - nominee’s accomplishments based on academic and employment record, research grants and awards received, cited publications and other examples of research productivity.

Further information about the award and the online nomination form are available at GSK Award for Research Excellence website

Nominations close at midnight on Friday 10 July 2017. The award will be presented at the Research Australia Awards Night,Thursday 12 October 2017.

Please direct any queries regarding the award to are.arenominations@gsk.com

Application support is provided by the Research Services Office. Please contact Brodie Beales in the Research Services Office on extn12275 or via email (brodie.beales@flinders.edu.au) to discuss your application support needs.

Flinders Research NewsAustralia to drive forward on research infrastructure

National Research Infrastructure Roadmap cover

The 2016 National Research Infrastructure Roadmap has now been released. As part of the National Innovation and Science Agenda, the Roadmap outlines what support and infrastructure is required over the next decade to ensure that Australia remains or improves on our current research expertise. Chaired by Australia's Chief Scientist, Dr Alan Finkel AO, the Expert Working Group undertook extensive consultation with relevant stakeholders across Australia before delivering the Roadmap to the Federal Government in February 2017.

The Roadmap identifies nine focus areas that will require support over the coming decade. They are:

  • Digital Data and eResearch Platforms
  • Platforms for Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
  • Characterisation
  • Advanced Fabrication and Manufacturing
  • Advanced Physics and Astronomy
  • Earth and Environmental Systems
  • Biosecurity
  • Complex Biology
  • Therapeutic Development

The Roadmap can be accessed from the Department of Education and Training website.

Seminars Conferences and WorkshopsConstructing your research grant budget - ‘the Nuts and Bolts’

Do you spend too long worrying about getting the budget right for your grant application? Not sure what help there is for you and how to construct the best budget for your application?

Where: Rm 152, Social Sciences South Building
When: Thursday 1 June 2017
Time: 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
RSVP: via iEnrol

RSO workshop Budgets

The Research Services Office (RSO) invites you to attend a workshop on constructing a research grant budget as part of a applying to a research funding body. The workshop is intended to introduce the basics of budget construction, grant funding rules and Flinders budget requirements.

The nuts and bolts of research grant budgets will be presented by Gareth Rees, Senior Grants Officer, RSO
Constructing your budget – a worked example will be presented by Mary Lyons, Senior Grants Officer, RSO

There will be plenty of opportunity for Q & A.

New OpportunitiesCall for Papers-International Conference on RDI for Sustainable Energy

INER confernce logo

The 3rd International Conference on Research + Development + Innovation for Sustainable Energy is calling for extended abstracts on any of the following areas of study - Habitat: Sustainable Intermediate Cities, Mobility: Efficient urban and intercity transportation, Industries: Energy optimization, and Energy Production: Use of non-conventional energy sources. The conference will be held in Quito, Ecuador from 20-22 September 2017.

Further details on the past conferences and the call for papers can be accessed via the documents below or the conference website - http://www.iner.ec/idi_2017/.

International Conference on RDI for Sustainable Energy information

Call for papers - International Conference on RDI for Sustainable Energy

New OpportunitiesThe Antarctic Frontier - developing research in an extreme environment

Antarctic Frontier banner

Does your research push the boundaries? Do you want an opportunity to learn about and form cross-disciplinary collaborations? Would you like an opportunity to network with the nation’s next generation of science leaders? Then apply to take part in the 2017 Theo Murphy Australian Frontiers of Science – The Antarctic Frontier: developing research in an extreme environment to be held in Hobart 13 —15 September by the Australian Academy of Science.

Antarctica represents a unique and powerful natural laboratory for science and international collaboration. This symposium will bring together Australasian early- and mid-career researchers (EMCRs) from all fields relevant to Antarctic and Southern Ocean science.

Over two days, EMCRs will share their latest research findings, build networks and create pathways for future interdisciplinary research. This symposium is an outstanding opportunity for EMCRs to take part in shaping the future of Antarctic science.

Approximately 70 EMCRs (up to 15 years post-PhD, excluding career interruptions) will be chosen to attend the conference. The Theo Murphy (Australia) Fund will support the attendance costs of all successful applicants.

Find out more and apply to attend this year’s Frontiers of Science by Thursday 25 May and take part in this unique event which will enhance your career development. Applicants will be notified of the selection outcomes by 30 June. If you require any further information please contact Dr Sandra Gardam on 02 6201 9426 or via email emcr@science.org.au.

 

Seminars Conferences and WorkshopsScience at the Shine Dome - Tickets still available!

Science at the Shine Dome banner

Tickets are still available for the Australian Academy of Science's (AAS) annual flagship event - Science at the Shine Dome to be held in Canberra from 23 - 25 May 2017.

As part of this three day celebration of Australian science, scientific networking and professional development opportunity a symposium on the theme of Life on the Loose: species invasion and control will bring together a diverse set of players in the fight to understand, eradicate or control invasive species in Australia and what the world has to learn from the giant ecological experiment taking place on our shores in real-time.

The symposium will feature prominent speakers Professor David Richardson, Professor Rick Shine, Professor Emma Johnston and others who will take the audience on a journey of why or how species were introduced, the point they became invasive, impacts they are having and the management controls being implemented.

The three day program includes:

  • An opportunity to hear inspiring research from 21 of our nation’s best scientists, inducted as New Fellows into the Academy, and 15 recipients of the prestigious Academy awards
  • An early- to mid- career researcher professional development program
  • A one-day symposium on invasive species, with talks from leading Australian scientists including Professor Emma Johnston, Associate Professor Kerrie Wilson and winner of the 2016 Prime Minister’s Prize for Science, Professor Rick Shine
  • A gala dinner attended by senior policymakers, politicians, heads of scientific agencies, fellows and other luminaries of science (almost sold-out)

For more information or to register for the event, see the AAS event website.

Research Engagement and ImpactExcavating with and in a Community

Article by Susan Arthure
Doctoral Candidate, Archaeology Department
Flinders University
www.dontforgetyourshovel.com

Even the young can excavate a straight trench wall!

I’ve just returned from leading an archaeological excavation at Baker’s Flat near Kapunda, South Australia, as part of the research for my PhD in archaeology. 

Today, it’s a wheat paddock on private land, but in the nineteenth century Baker’s Flat was a vibrant Irish community. Although its residents made up a large proportion of the broader Kapunda community, they weren’t very popular locally. In the recorded histories, where Baker’s Flat gets mentioned at all, the predominant message is of fights and hovels, animals running wild, drunkenness, lawlessness, and dirt. The Baker’s Flat community was first written off, and then written out of the histories.

Which is where community comes in. The story of Baker’s Flat was remembered by just a few local historians, who shared it with me. And in the 'heel of the hunt', as we say in Ireland, those historians and I embarked on an historical and archaeological journey of exploration about this site. A journey that has now encompassed old and young, academics and community members, archaeologists and artists.


Volunteer crew hard at work in the trench.

When I first looked at the site, I was told that there had been dugouts, but I couldn’t see it. I was thinking of dugouts like those at Burra, very defined and easy to see the remains of in the creek bed. However, a geophysical survey of part of the site showed anomalies consistent with the size of houses, and when we excavated one of these, it turned out to be a dugout. Not the same as at Burra, but one that was dug lightly into the side of the hill to form shelter walls, which were then used as the foundation for other walls made of flattened tin and hessian. And all consistent with oral histories collected in the 1970s and folklore passed down by the Kapunda historians.

Talking to the landowner, he remembered his father telling him how he was able to buy the land cheap after the last war because it was so full of junk and big holes that it was impossible to work. He covered the land with 10cms of top soil, but where there were large holes from the dugouts, he pushed in the "junk" (wheelbarrows, bedsteads, bathtubs) and added up to a metre of top soil to level the land. These memories helped explain the stratigraphy of the site, and helped me to determine where to work.

And the important thing here is time. The landowner and I have spent a lot of time standing and thinking, looking at holes in the ground. If you don’t allow the time to build trust with people, then you really miss out.

It shows the importance of communication and collaboration, and the fact that effective public engagement demands time and the ability to wait, generosity of spirit, trust, and the ability to ask good questions and listen well to the answers. 

Historical archaeologists are in the fortunate position of working in a truly multidisciplinary field. I would argue that because we can combine texts and archaeology, oral histories and public involvement, we are really able to help archaeology to live in the public arena, and allow different stories and voices to be heard. One of the most enjoyable research outputs so far has been a series of 12 oil paintings by artist Lynn Mack, which is based on ceramic and glass artefacts excavated at Baker’s Flat. The exhibition, Unearthed, is currently on display in the Flinders University Central Library.


Unearthed: an exhibition of paintings by Lynn Mack based on artefacts excavated at Baker’s Flat.

New OpportunitiesResearch Week call for abstracts

The upcoming Research Week at Flinders Medical Centre (FMC) is designed to showcase research already occurring in the southern health region, to enhance collaborations between researchers here at Flinders University, SALHN, and the FMC Flinders Foundation, and to promote engagement with the broader community about research at the FMC.

Abstracts for poster and/or oral presentations are being sought, with the deadline for submissions being 5 pm Friday 19 May 2017. Further details, including the guidelines, can be found on the SALHN website.

Share your success

Share research news and opportunities, including information regarding upcoming research related events in your area.
Contact inspiring.research@flinders.edu.au for article submissions or further information.

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