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- Link
- https://www.migrationmuseum.org/
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Education, Social Studies
- Medium
- Film/Video, Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Archives/Museums, Information Sources, Streaming/Download
Launched in 2017, the Migration Museum Project is devoted to shining a light on the many ways that the movement of people to and from Britain across the ages has shaped who we are –as individuals, as communities and as a nation. The website offers a Resource Bank section with advice and ideas for teachers on how to explore the subjects of migration, immigration, emigration, multiculturalism and cultural diversity in the classroom. The site also showcases a small collection of videos and audio material, including poets Musa Okwonga and Hollie McNish performing their poems Migrant Manifesto, and Mathematics respectively.
Other Online Moving image Audio
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- Link
- http://www.massobs.org.uk/podcasts
- Category
- Social Sciences
- Subject
- Social Studies
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Podcasting
A collection of lectures and interviews covering the origins of the Mass Observation movement in the 1930s, its goals during the first phase (1937-1949), the ways in which individual stories have been used to capture larger collective stories, the work involved in editing MO diaries, criticism levelled at MO and the different uses of the archive material held by the organisation. Podcasts include: Memories and Reflections: a Conversation with Dorothy Sheridan, the first archivist of the organisation; Mass Observing the First World War: Memory, Gender and War in the 21st Century; Archives of feelings: AIDS in the UK, c.1987; Notes on a Shy Mass Observer and A Broken Silence?: Mass Observation, Armistice Day and Everyday Life in Britain 1937-1941. The Archive, which is in the care of the University of Sussex, can be visited by appointment whilst selected parts of the collection can be accessed online via their website.
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- Link
- https://www.bl.uk/sisterhood
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Politics and Government, Social Studies, Women’s Studies
- Medium
- Film/Video, Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Archives/Museums, Databases, Information Sources, Streaming/Download
What is a feminist? This site presents an extensive response to that question in the form of a well-curated oral history archive of the lives of British feminists. The fruit of a Leverhulme funded research initiative, the project’s researchers interviewed 60 feminists who were active in the Women’s Liberation movement in the UK in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.
The site features interviews with women arranged around a number of themes, including Activism, Equality and Work, Education, Politics and Legislation, Race, Place and Nation, Sex, Love and Friendship, Bodies, minds and spirits, Family and Children, Changing Cultures and the Arts and Who we Were and Who we Are. The audio clips on this site have been extracted from longer interviews which are available in their entirety at the British Library.
Other resources on the site include Biographies page with profiles of prominent members of the British feminist movement, including academics, writers and broadcasters such as Beatrix Campbell, Sheila Rowbotham and Jenni Murray. An interactive Timeline begins in 1961 and charts the significant social and political events (and legislation) of the times alongside landmark episodes in the women’s movement. The material on this site is a fraction of what was recorded for the project: much more is available at the British Library.
Other Online Moving image Audio
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- Link
- https://www.bbc.com/historyofthebbc/100-voices
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Media Studies, Radio Studies
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Producers/Broadcasters, Streaming/Download
Part of Connected Histories of the BBC, 100 Voices reveals the inside story of the BBC and its relationship with the wider world since its inception in 1922. The project, led by the University of Sussex, aims to make accessible the vast collection of interviews the BBC has conducted over the years with its own staff: from senior managers to popular on-screen personalities, pioneering editors of political programmes and influential producers. Material available so far has been curated into several themes including Pioneering Women, People, Nation, Empire, Radio Reinvented, The Birth of TV, Elections and BBC Memories.
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- https://iai.tv/
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Bio-Medical, Science and Technology, Social Sciences
- Medium
- Film/Video, Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Podcasting, Streaming/Download
Founded in 2008, the IAI’s aims- in their own words- ‘to rescue philosophy from technical debates about the meaning of words and returning it to big ideas… Not in aid of a more refined cultural life, but as an urgent call to rethink where we are’. The website offers a wealth of resources including: The Philosophy for Our Times Podcast, a weekly programme tackling current ideas, and IAI Player which contains over a 1000 video debates and talks. Latest additions include: Corruption and Climate Change, The Fascination with Evil, The Limits of Logic, Return to Radical Feminism and Duchamp’s Deception. There is also IAI Education, which provides online courses aimed at pre-university students who have an interest in critical thinking.
Other Online Moving image Audio
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- Link
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qjz5/episodes/downloads
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Current Affairs
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Podcasting, Streaming/Download
From world leaders to business moguls to entertainers, this long running BBC radio programme offers an insight into influential figures making the news headlines. The podcasts, which are available indefinitely, go back to 2010. Some of the personalities featured in early editions include pop icon Lady Gaga, fashion designer John Galliano and artist Ai Weiwei. Recent editions include, founder of Extinction Rebellion Dr Gail Bradbrook, biochemist Jennifer Doudna, and Sonita Alleyne, who is the first black woman to lead an Oxbridge college.
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- Link
- http://www.changingacademiclife.com/start
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Education, Social Studies
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Podcasting, Streaming/Download
Geraldine Fitzpatrick, Professor of Human Computer Interaction at the University of Technology in Vienna, chats to teaching and research academics about the changes academic life is undergoing, from increased workloads and performance ratings to the effects of the corporatisation of academia. Recent editions of the series include Professor Jennifer Mankoff on dealing with disability and chronic disease as an academic, Professor Moshe Vardi on publication pressures, student stress, mid-career mentoring and societal obligations, and Professor Leysia Palen on creating a new research area, the long path to tenure and starting a department.
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- Link
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02nq0lx/episodes/downloads
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Current Affairs
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Podcasting, Streaming/Download
BBC correspondents investigate global events, developments and issues. The collection is updated daily and episodes are available indefinitely. A vast selection of the programmes broadcast between 2007 and 2014 can be accessed via the Podcast Archive section where they are organised by year. More recent episodes are displayed in chronological order by date of transmission. Subject search is not supported, but this drawback is compensated with the guarantee that any time spend browsing will be rewarded with an interesting find. These include: a 50 minute programme on the controversial video This is America by Donald Glover about gun violence, mass shootings, racism and discrimination in the US; an investigation into Burundi-one of the most secretive countries in Africa, an insight into the little known astronomer George Ellery Hale, a look at robot cars filling our roads in the near future, and a report on the Yaba drug which is produced in Myanmar but consumed in Bangladesh.
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- Link
- http://www.healthtalk.org
- Category
- Bio-Medical, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Medicine, Psychiatry, Psychology, Social Studies
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Organisations, Streaming/Download
Created in 2001 by GP Dr Ann McPherson and Dr Andrew Herxheimer after their own experiences of illness, this vast resource is the fruit of a partnership between a charity called DIPEx and The Health Experiences Research Group at The University of Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Primary Healthcare. The Learning & Teaching section offers over 25,000 videos of people talking about their experiences of health and social care. The videos are an excellent teaching and training resource for medicine, nursing, social care, allied health professions, sociology and psychology. The content is protected by copyright and is available for reuse to educational and non-profit organisations for an annual fee.
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- https://www.festivalofdebate.com/animations
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Social Studies
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
A collection of 29 animations created by students at Sheffield Hallam University. The 3-minute videos are all about issues the students are concerned with and so they are likely to be of use to spark debate in the classroom. Some of the themes covered include: AI and Automation, Same Sex Marriage, Employability, Shopping, Asexuality, Refugees, Reasons for Crime, Mental Health, Air Pollution, Homelessness, Global Warming, Transfobia, Homophobia and Trees.
Other Online