Public lecture

Seminar: Michael Breadmore - Introduction to gratitude training

Next week Michael Breadmore, Professor of Analytical Chemistry at the University of Tasmania, will be visiting the School of Natural Sciences and Health. During his visit he will give a public seminar on November 22 to everyone interested.

11/22/2018 - 12:00 - 15:00

Michael Breadmore - Introduction to gratitude training

 

Registreeri end Michael Breadmore'i Introduction to gratitude training seminarile/töötuppa. Seminar/töötuba toimub 22. novembril kell 12.00-15.00, ruumis M342. Lisainfo: https://www.tlu.ee/Breadmore


Register to Michael Breadmore's "Introduction to gratitude training" seminar. The seminar will be held on 22 November 12PM to 3PM, room M342. More info: https://www.tlu.ee/Breadmore


Selleks, et sündmusele registreerida töötleb Tallinna Ülikooli (vastutav töötleja) järgmisi isikuandmeid:

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Today, we increasingly attach importance to our social and emotional wellbeing. On November 22, at 12:00 to 15:00 (room M342), professor Michael Breadmore (University of Tasmania) will give a public seminar/workshop on "Introduction to gratitude training". Seminar/workshop is in English.

REGISTER HERE!

About the seminar/workshop:

Introduction to gratitude - The importance of gratitude to enhance our social and emotional wellbeing has gained momentum in the past decade, and has been used by businesses, sports associations, and other professional organisations as a way to improve and enhance their offerings. So, what is gratitude and how might it assist you? Come along and hear from my experiences with gratitude in helping higher degree research students.

About professor Michael Breadmore:

Professor Breadmore received his PhD in 2001 from the University of Tasmania before undertaking his first postdoctoral position at the University of Virginia, USA to work on portable analytical technology for genetic diagnostics. He then moved to the Institute of Clinical Pharmacology at the University of Bern, Switzerland, where he developed electrophoretic methods for therapeutic drug monitoring of anti-fungal and retroviral drugs, with the methods implemented routinely in the adjacent hospital service lab. He then spent eight months working with deltaDOT, a small biotechnology instrumentation company, and helped design their commercial capillary electrophoresis instrument. In 2004, Professor Breadmore returned to Australia as an ARC postdoctoral fellow, in 2009 was awarded an ARC QEII Fellowship and in 2014 began an ARC Future Fellowship.

Foto: Michael Breadmore (erakogu)
FOTO: Michael Breadmore (erakogu)

Professor Breadmore has taught at the interface of chemistry and engineering for over 10 years, and in pure and applied analytical chemistry with a focus on electrophoresis and microfluidics. He has a keen interest in inter-disciplinary teaching, particularly assessment and how this is influenced by discipline conventions, as well as exploiting these conventions in unconventional disciplines.

More info about Michael Breadmore HERE!