Yet Another Cycling Forum

Off Topic => The Pub => Arts and Entertainment => Topic started by: Charlotte on 24 February, 2009, 01:30:20 pm

Title: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Charlotte on 24 February, 2009, 01:30:20 pm
I don't know if anyone's been following University Challenge recently?  If you'll recall, our very own intellectual powerhouse, Liverpool Norman gave a very good account of himself on there last year.  Last night was the final, with Manchester lining up against Corpus Christi, Oxford and loosing quite comprehensively.

There's been an unusual amount of media attention for Corpus Christi's team captain, Gail Trimble.  When I first saw her, a few rounds back I thought she was pretty damned good.  Looking at the stats (yes, some people follow University Challenge that closely) she's the greatest University Challenge contestant ever.

In Corpus Christi's run up to the final, she scored more points than her three team-mates combined. In their semi-final, Corpus Christi defeated St John's College, Cambridge, 260-150. Trimble's personal haul was 185. In the quarter-finals, Trimble racked up a record 15 starters-for-10 as Corpus Christi raced to 350 points. Opponents Exeter University limped to 15 points, the equivalent of one correct starter and bonus. It was the lowest score since 1971 and only five points more than the worst of all time.

She slaughtered the opposition and just for once, left Paxo almost speechless.  Oh - and she's hawt.

(http://women.timesonline.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00492/Gail-Trimble_492179a.jpg)

This last fact has ensured that the daily papers, as well as the blogosphere, have been full of opinions about her.  The Sun hated her and tried to smear her by pointing at her "condescending manner" towards her team mates in congratulating them when they got one right.  They even got her to agree to answering their pop quiz and surprise, surprise, she didn't get any right.  What would she know about Big Brother, FFS?  She got a first in Latin and is studying for her PhD in Latin Literature!

She gets a mention in all sorts of places on the web - from The Times Online to a Long Hair Fetish forum. (http://forums.longhaircommunity.com/showthread.php?p=366710)

What tickled me pink is that a men's magazine approached her brother via Facebook to ask if they could arrange a "tasteful" photo session with her.  Apparently, he sent them an answer saying, 'seriously mate would you give your sister's contact details to Nuts?'

;D

Following in the University Challenge footsteps of past contestants like Clive James, Stephen Fry and Miriam Margolyes, I reckon we're going to see more of Corpus Christi Trimble.

Which is nice  :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Mr Larrington on 24 February, 2009, 01:33:39 pm
I was a bit worried when Manchester Yeo decided to do his own Corpus Christi Trimble impression at the beginning of the final.

And yes, I would.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: cc93 on 24 February, 2009, 01:36:39 pm
/Beano mode

Girly swot!

/end
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Andrij on 24 February, 2009, 01:37:59 pm
Today's Metro has a picture of her in front of a bike.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Phil on 24 February, 2009, 01:40:49 pm
Seriously impressive! And I speak as a friend of Liverpool Ling :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Bledlow on 24 February, 2009, 01:45:07 pm
A bluestocking in the best sense. Damn, I love intelligent women!

It is obvious that Mr. Yeo also has a bright future, but after a slow start, which gave her team mates a chance to show that they, too, could answer questions, Ms. Trimble finished in her usual awe-inspiring style.

She's quite tall, isn't she? And has a bicycle, of course. She has been photographed with a classic traditional Oxford student upright roadster, which is, I think, entirely appropriate. I can imagine her spending the rest of her life at Corpus Christi, tutoring in Latin & singing in the choir of Corpus Christi chapel, of which she is Precentrix. I must resist the urge to go up there, now I have all this free time . . .
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Charlotte on 24 February, 2009, 01:54:29 pm
Here's something to carry in your wallet then Bledlow...

(http://img523.imageshack.us/img523/7391/corpuschristitrimble.jpg)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 02:00:15 pm
I'd like to see how she'd fair if they asked questions on useful stuff, like science, mathematics and engineering.
Grumble grumble, Uni Challenge is geared towards public school educated, future politician types.
Although I might offer to buy Ms Trimble a drink if I see her in a college bar.  And then ask her about baroclinic instability. + :demon:
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 24 February, 2009, 02:01:18 pm
Quite impressive indeed...

PhD in Latin?!  ::-)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: andyoxon on 24 February, 2009, 02:03:23 pm
She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Eccentrica Gallumbits on 24 February, 2009, 02:12:31 pm
She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.

I think she's right.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wascally Weasel on 24 February, 2009, 02:14:35 pm
She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.

I think she's right.
I'm certain she's right.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 24 February, 2009, 02:15:05 pm
Quite impressive indeed...

PhD in Latin?!  ::-)

Is there anything wrong with studying Latin to PhD level?

She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.

I think she's right.
I'm certain she's right.

Of course she's right.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: ScumOfTheRoad on 24 February, 2009, 02:16:06 pm
I don't as a rule by Nuts magazine. But they would have boosted their circulation many times over that week!
And... blue stockings.... oohhh.... (has a little moment)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: HTFB on 24 February, 2009, 02:20:33 pm
It is obvious that Mr. Yeo also has a bright future, but after a slow start, which gave her team mates a chance to show that they, too, could answer questions, Ms. Trimble finished in her usual awe-inspiring style.
The difference between the teams wasn't their captains, I thought, but their teamwork. Corpus backed their captain much more effectively than Manchester. Conversely the Mancun. captain interrupted a medical question ahead of the two medics on his team, and got it wrong. Schoolboy stuff.
Quote
She's quite tall, isn't she? [...] I can imagine her spending the rest of her life at Corpus Christi,
Tall and Corpus don't really go together. It's like a real college, but at 3/4 scale.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: LEE on 24 February, 2009, 02:28:34 pm
Quite impressive indeed...

PhD in Latin?!  ::-)

About as useful as Media Studies I'd have thought.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Jon P on 24 February, 2009, 02:33:08 pm
When you look around it's actually quite surprising how many (attractive) men have settled down to have kids with reliable, down-to-earth "plain Janes" like Gail rather than the glamour pusses that everyone lusts after.  I can't see her staying in the media eye for long, to be honest.

On a more frivolous note, if she doesn't want to portray herself as "sexy" it's a bit unfortunate that the photo was taken on such a windy day - or did they hire a wind machine to get the effect?  ;)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 02:34:35 pm
Is there anything wrong with studying Latin to PhD level?

Mr Bagger, you continually make the point that we are a nation that doesn't make anything anymore, and all our wealth is based on pushing electrons around.
Studying Latin is the educational equivalent of this.  It is studying for studying sake.  There's nothing wrong with this, of course, but should it be funded by the state, when it ultimately leads to nothing of any worth?  Both in monetary terms and social terms: her DPhil will sit on a shelf never to be read again.
I also see it as a brilliant mind wasted: if she had applied herself to the sciences, or engineering, then she may have been the person to have a breakthrough in clean energy, or curing AIDS or feeding the world's population.

Disclaimer: I'm a DPhil student in Atmospheric Physics and don't have a brilliant mind, by any stretch.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: andyoxon on 24 February, 2009, 02:37:13 pm
Quite impressive indeed...

PhD in Latin?!  ::-)

About as useful as Media Studies I'd have thought.

Two years-ish post graduate at the College of law (if she’s so inclined), Oxbridge background – she’ll go far.  Latin will come in handy...
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wascally Weasel on 24 February, 2009, 02:39:46 pm
Is there anything wrong with studying Latin to PhD level?

Mr Bagger, you continually make the point that we are a nation that doesn't make anything anymore, and all our wealth is based on pushing electrons around.
Studying Latin is the educational equivalent of this.  It is studying for studying sake.  There's nothing wrong with this, of course, but should it be funded by the state, when it ultimately leads to nothing of any worth?  Both in monetary terms and social terms: her DPhil will sit on a shelf never to be read again.
I also see it as a brilliant mind wasted: if she had applied herself to the sciences, or engineering, then she may have been the person to have a breakthrough in clean energy, or curing AIDS or feeding the world's population.

Disclaimer: I'm a DPhil student in Atmospheric Physics and don't have a brilliant mind, by any stretch.

I can understand why you say that to an extent, but would like to believe that there should be room for both.

(I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Pingu on 24 February, 2009, 02:41:48 pm
Following in the University Challenge footsteps of past contestants like Clive James, Stephen Fry and Miriam Margolyes, I reckon we're going to see more of Corpus Christi Trimble.

Which is nice  :)


Oh feck, I hope not. She came across as intolerably smug to me.

Of course, that could just be her university quiz persona.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 24 February, 2009, 02:43:25 pm
Is there anything wrong with studying Latin to PhD level?

Mr Bagger, you continually make the point that we are a nation that doesn't make anything anymore, and all our wealth is based on pushing electrons around.
Studying Latin is the educational equivalent of this.  It is studying for studying sake.  There's nothing wrong with this, of course, but should it be funded by the state, when it ultimately leads to nothing of any worth?  Both in monetary terms and social terms: her DPhil will sit on a shelf never to be read again.
I also see it as a brilliant mind wasted: if she had applied herself to the sciences, or engineering, then she may have been the person to have a breakthrough in clean energy, or curing AIDS or feeding the world's population.

Disclaimer: I'm a DPhil student in Atmospheric Physics and don't have a brilliant mind, by any stretch.

Studying for studying's sake is absolutely fine: you can never be sure how the human race might benefit when top brains are given a free rein. You'll be telling me next that scientists are of greater value to society than historians.

Drudgery for drudgery's sake, which is what much of the "work" currently done actually amounts to, is in my view totally pointless. It would be much more worthwhile to educate our "workforce" just for the sake of it.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: ScumOfTheRoad on 24 February, 2009, 02:43:45 pm
I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced

So what is it good for?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 24 February, 2009, 02:43:54 pm
If she feels like she wants to stay in academia, then good for her.

That final last night was the best one I have ever seen. That Mr Yeo bitch-slapped CCC for a good few minutes, CCC kept themselves in as sheer background, and then wow-bazam, in Ms Trimble comes with some heavy blows. The show was a joy to watch.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 24 February, 2009, 02:45:13 pm
(I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced)

War Studies, which presumably is a branch of history, is well worth studying. If a few more historians had been consulted in 2003, then we might not have invaded Iraq.

There seems to be a dangerous mindset which assumes that all education should be geared to make itself useful in some way to "business".
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 24 February, 2009, 02:47:41 pm
I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced

So what is it good for?

Umm..I know people who have been on this programme and have gone on to work for various government (i.e. MOD, DERA etc) departments. Good luck Wascally Weasel, the Kings department in war studies is meant to be very good  :thumbsup:
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Julian on 24 February, 2009, 02:48:31 pm
Pingu, I think she's entitled to be smug, given that she's apparently the brainiest person evah on university challenge.  I'd be smug, too.

She didn't seem particularly smug to me.  But then it was so nice to see a woman on TV being clever rather than as bimbo eye-candy simpering pinkly.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 02:49:09 pm
You'll be telling me next that scientists are of greater value to society than historians.

There's a world of difference between history and Latin literature.
Books that haven't been read for hundreds of years being analysed for what purpose?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 24 February, 2009, 02:51:21 pm
You'll be telling me next that scientists are of greater value to society than historians.

There's a world of difference between history and Latin literature.
Books that haven't been read for hundreds of years being analysed for what purpose?

I don't know. I haven't read them. Perhaps in some way that study will increase the overall knowledge available, and that's what education's for.

Edit: I think a fair chunk of our historical knowledge is based upon texts which were written in Latin.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 02:52:29 pm
There seems to be a dangerous mindset which assumes that all education should be geared to make itself useful in some way to "business".

My research could be considered useful for business, especially the insurance industry, but I'm not interested in going in that direction.  So, I'll either end up working for a government funded body or in academia, much the same as Ms Trimble.  However, I hope that my work will be useful for climate change mitigation and government policy making.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: ScumOfTheRoad on 24 February, 2009, 02:52:56 pm
I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced

So what is it good for?

Umm..I know people who have been on this programme and have gone on to work for various government (i.e. MOD, DERA etc) departments. Good luck Wascally Weasel, the Kings department in war studies is meant to be very good  :thumbsup:

WAR! What is it good for?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Ian H on 24 February, 2009, 02:56:14 pm
You'll be telling me next that scientists are of greater value to society than historians.

There's a world of difference between history and Latin literature.
Books that haven't been read for hundreds of years being analysed for what purpose?

I think I'd far prefer a conversation with a latin scholar than yer average scientist.



 ;) - somewhat.

Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 02:59:15 pm
I think I'd far prefer a conversation with a latin scholar than yer average scientist.

Yeah, we're all nerdy and wear funny specs and love Star Trek, don't have girlfriends and have bad breath.  ::-)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: LEE on 24 February, 2009, 03:00:00 pm
(I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced)

War Studies, which presumably is a branch of history, is well worth studying. If a few more historians had been consulted in 2003, then we might not have invaded Iraq.

There seems to be a dangerous mindset which assumes that all education should be geared to make itself useful in some way to "business".

But there's also a lot of snobbery about which 'useless' degrees are better than other 'useless' ones.

Media Studies is always used as an example in such discussions but I suggest it's every bit as 'worthy' as Classical History, Art History & Latin (amongst others).

Nothing at all wrong with studying for studying's sake but, when it all goes tits-up you may find Latin becomes the native Language on the B-Ark

Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: LEE on 24 February, 2009, 03:02:56 pm
I think I'd far prefer a conversation with a latin scholar than yer average scientist.

Yeah, we're all nerdy and wear funny specs and love Star Trek, don't have girlfriends and have bad breath.  ::-)

Latin scholars are good conversationalists and so are yer average scientists, but which ones are best?   

There's only one way to find out.....
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Ian H on 24 February, 2009, 03:06:28 pm
I think I'd far prefer a conversation with a latin scholar than yer average scientist.

Yeah, we're all nerdy and wear funny specs and love Star Trek, don't have girlfriends and have bad breath.  ::-)

It's not the oral hygiene, ocular impairment, or a solitary sex-life that makes a conversationalist tedious. A conversation that was solely about tv sci-fi might become so.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Julian on 24 February, 2009, 03:08:19 pm
Bikenerd, you're a hopeless Philistine.  :D
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Mr Larrington on 24 February, 2009, 03:09:56 pm
Media Studies is always used as an example in such discussions but I suggest it's every bit as 'worthy' as Classical History, Art History & Latin (amongst others).

Here is how to get a degree in Media Studies:


 ;)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: hellymedic on 24 February, 2009, 03:13:26 pm
That presupposes leaving Stockwell alive...
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 03:14:40 pm
A conversation that was solely about tv sci-fi might become so.

As opposed to a conversation entirely about bicycles?  ;)

Bikenerd, you're a hopeless Philistine.  :D

Probably, but I can answer most of the questions on Uni Challenge about relatively modern literature (post 1850), geography, renaissance paintings, classical music and physical sciences.  It's the Latin, Greek and biology stuff I can't do! :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: TimO on 24 February, 2009, 03:15:16 pm
Out of an office of seven people in a University Physics Department, only three have girlfriends, but of the remainder, three are married, and one of those also prefers her husband to a girlfriend. ;D

The other one is me.  Bugger.  Ah well, there's always Star Trek. :-[
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Ian H on 24 February, 2009, 03:23:24 pm
A conversation that was solely about tv sci-fi might become so.

As opposed to a conversation entirely about bicycles?  ;)


You mentioned them first.  ;)

I'll confess to mostly avoiding my fellow artists at uni and consorting mostly with engineers and scientists.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wascally Weasel on 24 February, 2009, 03:29:38 pm
I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced

So what is it good for?

Umm..I know people who have been on this programme and have gone on to work for various government (i.e. MOD, DERA etc) departments. Good luck Wascally Weasel, the Kings department in war studies is meant to be very good  :thumbsup:

Thanks! - if I get a place I will be self funded (I will be dong it as a part time course over two years unless my circumstances change drastically).  There’s a possible alternate source of funds but I have to get a place first.

I was lucky enough to study History at the University of London when it was taught on a collegiate basis,  so as part of my degree I did a few courses at the War Studies dept (Military History from 1800 to present day and a final year course on Diplomacy and Military Operations in WWII from 1936 to the fall of France in 1940). I was also lucky enough to study a course at SOAS on The Eastern Mediterranean Lands at the time of the Crusades (taught from the Latin/Frankish, Byzantine/Greek and Muslim/Turkish/Arabic perspectives). The collegiate system  made it very open, you could go and pick course units that interested you rather than just what was available at your own college. 

Not being a reader of Latin prevented me from studying quite a few other interesting topics though, just to get even vaguely back OT.

Edited to add:  I’m reliably informed by some Quaker relatives of Ms Weasel that the Peace Studies dept at Bradford and the War Studies dept at Kings have an annual football match – Peace vs War!  Little things like that make my day.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Tom B on 24 February, 2009, 03:37:35 pm
Said Liz:
Quote
Bikenerd, you're a hopeless Philistine

How can he be, he's got a Hill Special?!?

Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: David Martin on 24 February, 2009, 03:41:26 pm
I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced

So what is it good for?

Absolutely nothing!

IGMC

..d (The only O'level I failed was latin)


(pace beastie boys mid '80s)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 24 February, 2009, 03:55:28 pm
<quote>I was lucky enough to study History at the University of London when it was taught on a collegiate basis,  so as part of my degree I did a few courses at the War Studies dept (Military History from 1800 to present day and a final year course on Diplomacy and Military Operations in WWII from 1936 to the fall of France in 1940). I was also lucky enough to study a course at SOAS on The Eastern Mediterranean Lands at the time of the Crusades (taught from the Latin/Frankish, Byzantine/Greek and Muslim/Turkish/Arabic perspectives). The collegiate system  made it very open, you could go and pick course units that interested you rather than just what was available at your own college. </quote>

Your courses sounded fantastic! I did Egyptian archaeology at UCL. It's funny how Mr Welshness goes on about 'bloody art degrees' when he has got 3 unfinished degrees and I've just finished my MSc in Library and Information Science!
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: ScumOfTheRoad on 24 February, 2009, 04:04:47 pm
Oh be still my beating heart...
a thread about intelligent women with glasses and bicycles, and now librarians.

I'm going for a short lie down in a darkened room.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 24 February, 2009, 04:14:36 pm
(I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced)

War Studies, which presumably is a branch of history, is well worth studying. If a few more historians had been consulted in 2003, then we might not have invaded Iraq.

There seems to be a dangerous mindset which assumes that all education should be geared to make itself useful in some way to "business".

Nothing dangerous Wow; don't exagerate please! As there's nothing wrong with applying *things* to Olympic performance on the side, while taking a break from big gas turbines... I just wished we had a broader range of questions in such show and that knowledge in science and engineering was also recognised and valued maybe? More math and science questions please!  And the same wow (no pun) factor for the good scientists... ;D
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Tiger on 24 February, 2009, 05:46:59 pm
Latin is very misunderstood. It is not the study of a language, like French or German. It is the definitive grammar and logic of thought that underpins most European languages - certainly English.  It is Latin that is also teh accepted language of the scientific definition or the law court - because its meanings and roots are so precise. Unlike the vernacular.
The fact that this precociously intelligent person chooses to study latin might suggest that there is clearly more to it than might appear.
Dismissing latin is a bit like dismissing maths because nowadays we all have calculators.
This girl will go on to achieve greatness.
Bit of a minger tho. 
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Noodley on 24 February, 2009, 05:49:44 pm
Latin is very misunderstood.

Well, she should stop using it then!
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Jezza on 24 February, 2009, 05:52:08 pm
Quote from: LEE
Media Studies is always used as an example in such discussions but I suggest it's every bit as 'worthy' as Classical History, Art History & Latin (amongst others).

I did media studies.  ;)

I quite enjoyed it really, and it's certainly allowed me to professionally pursue various interests. My dissertation was on Manufacturing News and Self-censorship in the Media. Quite a topical subject, I felt.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Tom B on 24 February, 2009, 06:05:26 pm
Frenchie wrote:
Quote
I just wished we had a broader range of questions in such show and that knowledge in science and engineering was also recognised and valued maybe?

I've been working on the show now for seven years. You're not the only one I've heard say this, Frenchie. Sadly, for each person like you there are five or six who say there are too many science Qs or that they find the science Qs off-putting. Unable to please everyone, we can but please ourselves: the proportion of science Qs has increased slightly on the show in recent years and is now around one in four.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 24 February, 2009, 06:17:41 pm
Frenchie wrote:
Quote
I just wished we had a broader range of questions in such show and that knowledge in science and engineering was also recognised and valued maybe?

I've been working on the show now for seven years. You're not the only one I've heard say this, Frenchie. Sadly, for each person like you there are five or six who say there are too many science Qs or that they find the science Qs off-putting. Unable to please everyone, we can but please ourselves: the proportion of science Qs has increased slightly on the show in recent years and is now around one in four.

Cheers. I guess it's because those are the Qs I can or could answer. Seriously though I was wondering whether it wouldn't broaden the audience/appeal; the comment you make may reveal a bias in the audience background?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 24 February, 2009, 06:24:47 pm
(I confess I am currently applying for an MA in the War Studies dept at Kings so perhaps I’m prejudiced)

War Studies, which presumably is a branch of history, is well worth studying. If a few more historians had been consulted in 2003, then we might not have invaded Iraq.

There seems to be a dangerous mindset which assumes that all education should be geared to make itself useful in some way to "business".

Nothing dangerous Wow; don't exagerate please! As there's nothing wrong with applying *things* to Olympic performance on the side, while taking a break from big gas turbines... I just wished we had a broader range of questions in such show and that knowledge in science and engineering was also recognised and valued maybe? More math and science questions please!  And the same wow (no pun) factor for the good scientists... ;D

Actually, I think it is dangerous. "Business" has a greater say in academia than it ever used to, and has a strong influence on funding. It's far easier for a scientist with a 2:1 to get funding for a Masters from arms companies and GM food companies than it is for arts students with an equivalent degree, who have to rely far more heavily on Government bodies to fund their work.

This goes further than University level too: we have a couple of secondary schools in this area which call themselves "Business and Enterprise Colleges", whatever that means.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: matthew on 24 February, 2009, 06:33:04 pm
Frenchie wrote:
Quote
I just wished we had a broader range of questions in such show and that knowledge in science and engineering was also recognised and valued maybe?

I've been working on the show now for seven years. You're not the only one I've heard say this, Frenchie. Sadly, for each person like you there are five or six who say there are too many science Qs or that they find the science Qs off-putting. Unable to please everyone, we can but please ourselves: the proportion of science Qs has increased slightly on the show in recent years and is now around one in four.

Cheers. I guess it's because those are the Qs I can or could answer. Seriously though I was wondering whether it wouldn't broaden the audience/appeal; the comment you make may reveal a bias in the audience background?

And equally possibly the British population in gerneral.

Most people will not admit being unable to read or spell but are happy to admit that they "don't do maths"

As an engineer I find the maths/ science questions the ones I am most capable of answering and I struggle with the language/ literature / grammer questions. Therefore I prefer the science/ maths questions as it is always nice to be able to answer the questions.  

As an aside the science/ maths question tends to be one where the answer is either known or not and can be highly specialised. A literature question may just find a scientist who has read the right book. Hence the teams consist of four people so that the teams can spread their knowledge base.

Matthew
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Really Ancien on 24 February, 2009, 06:36:09 pm
I find University Challenge a bit slow. 15 to 1 was more my style. There's been a tendency to skimp on questions and push up the jeopardy on quiz shows. Shows like Millionaire are like watching paint dry.

Damon.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: frankly frankie on 24 February, 2009, 06:42:04 pm
I'm amazed nobody's mentioned the Miss Piggy-esque mannerisms ...
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: hubner on 24 February, 2009, 06:59:40 pm
Latin is very misunderstood. It is not the study of a language, like French or German. It is the definitive grammar and logic of thought that underpins most European languages - certainly English.  It is Latin that is also teh accepted language of the scientific definition or the law court - because its meanings and roots are so precise. Unlike the vernacular.
[snip]

Latin is no more precise than any other language. Legal and scientific terms in Latin are just names, the concepts have no connection with Latin itself. And Latin is not the definitive grammar and logic of thought that underpins most European languages, certainly not English. English is a Germanic language, although a large part of its vocabulary has Latin origins via French.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 07:40:38 pm
Actually, I think it is dangerous. "Business" has a greater say in academia than it ever used to, and has a strong influence on funding. It's far easier for a scientist with a 2:1 to get funding for a Masters from arms companies and GM food companies than it is for arts students with an equivalent degree, who have to rely far more heavily on Government bodies to fund their work.

This goes further than University level too: we have a couple of secondary schools in this area which call themselves "Business and Enterprise Colleges", whatever that means.

Balderdash.  The majority PhDs and MScs are funded by the research councils.  However, the science and engineering research councils receive more funding than the arts research councils hence there are more science PhDs and MScs available.
Of the 7 research students in my year, only 1 receives extra funding and that is from the Met Office!
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 24 February, 2009, 07:52:50 pm
I'm speaking from my daughter's experience, where she, with a 1st in History, couldn't get funding whereas several of her friends with science 2:1s, could. Warwick Uni, 2004.

But you contradict yourself anyway:-

The majority PhDs and MScs are funded by the research councils.  However, the science and engineering research councils receive more funding than the arts research councils hence there are more science PhDs and MScs available.

There's already a built-in majority for science, and there were, from memory, two specific 2:1 science students in her year who received funding from in one case an arms manufacturer and in another a GM food company. I believe this to be fairly typical.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: andygates on 24 February, 2009, 08:31:33 pm
Swots are hot.  :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 24 February, 2009, 08:32:31 pm
I agree that there are more science and engineering PhDs available, but these are funded by the research councils, government bodies that are funded from general taxation, not from contributions from industry.
It is the government's choice of which research councils they fund.  I'm sure they have some algorithm that measures the contribution to the taxation coffers that science and art graduates make and fund the research councils accordingly.

PhDs funded by industry are the exception, not the norm.  I think you should look into this further, rather than just going by your rather small sample size.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Bluebottle on 24 February, 2009, 08:36:56 pm
While I agree with most of the above, we should be careful about sample size.  There are a good few science PhDs around my institution.  I cannot think of any of them who are funded by the research councils.  Industry has a vital role to play at the smaller universities who find it difficult to compete with the big boys for RC grants.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: TimO on 24 February, 2009, 09:00:26 pm
Out of all our PhDs, and that's something like 20 or 30 people, I think there is one who is funded jointly by EPSRC (Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council) and the Met Office.  All the remainder are funding purely from EPSRC or STFC (Science and Technology Facilities Council).  As far as I know none of our PhDs are funded by industry, nor can I remember any of them being funded in that way for the eight years I've been here.  At least as far as Space Physics and Atmospheric Physics goes, there is little to no direct industrial involvement in our funding.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: hairyhippy on 24 February, 2009, 09:05:36 pm
Foundations of pyramids.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Charlotte on 24 February, 2009, 09:07:58 pm
Bit of a minger tho. 

I'm sorry, Tiger.  But I'm going to have to beat you to a bloody pulp and set fire to your bicycle.

:)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: spesh on 24 February, 2009, 09:49:41 pm
She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.

Fair comment, though I think some of the media coverage is the manifestation of what I would call a culture of anti-intellectualism.

What this culture entails is a dislike of anyone who is perceived as being too clever by half. If you're clever (or at least know the answers), you're expected to keep damn well quiet about it, so as not to give anyone else an inferiority complex.  ::-)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Adrian on 24 February, 2009, 09:55:23 pm
Bit of a minger tho. 

I'm sorry, Tiger.  But I'm going to have to beat you to a bloody pulp and set fire to your bicycle.

:)

But why? He has already ruled himself out as competition.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Bledlow on 24 February, 2009, 10:17:48 pm
Oh be still my beating heart...
a thread about intelligent women with glasses and bicycles, and now librarians.

I'm going for a short lie down in a darkened room.
With a packet of tissues?  ;D
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikesdontfloat on 25 February, 2009, 02:11:56 am
As an engineer I find the maths/ science questions the ones I am most capable of answering and I struggle with the language/ literature / grammer questions. Therefore I prefer the science/ maths questions as it is always nice to be able to answer the questions.  

As an aside the science/ maths question tends to be one where the answer is either known or not and can be highly specialised. A literature question may just find a scientist who has read the right book. Hence the teams consist of four people so that the teams can spread their knowledge base.

Matthew

Here we come back to the issue of the 2 cultures and the problem that only one side wants to bridge the gap.

You will find no end of sciencey, technical bods who are au fait with literature, art of all desdriptons, classical music, can play instruments to an incredibly high standard and have a generally well rounded education.  Nobody thinks this is abnormal, it's part of their being a rounded individual.

Coming from the opposite direcition there are far fewer artsy folk who claim to have a detailed knowledge of cosmology, to find maths fascinating and practice genetics in their spare time.  And yet no one will think any worse of a mixed media artist who disdains any knowldedge of science or maths, after all, they are an artist.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: GruB on 25 February, 2009, 06:13:10 am
She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.

I saw that too.  We need to encourage smart women, to get them out of the kitchen and into the boardroom.  They are better managers in many ways IMO.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 25 February, 2009, 08:35:44 am
While I agree with most of the above, we should be careful about sample size.  There are a good few science PhDs around my institution.  I cannot think of any of them who are funded by the research councils.  Industry has a vital role to play at the smaller universities who find it difficult to compete with the big boys for RC grants.

Indeed. I am involved in a number of industry supported projects; thinking of it most of them are in fact, even if long term sometimes. Blue sky research is far more difficult to justify at present; at least in engineering. Industry has a big role to play, including in the big universities.

Wow, you should however know that anecdoctal evidence is not proof. Far from it. My partner works in classics/social and she did get full funding for a PhD, and she isn't even British (opens can of worms); what should I conclude?!  ::-)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 25 February, 2009, 09:01:18 am
I'm not quite sure what you are saying here, Frenchie: Bikenerd has already pointed out that government puts more money into science students' further degrees than it does for arts students; and Bluebottle, whom you quote, has stated that of the "good few" science PhDs at his place, he "can't think of any of them who are funded by the research councils" i.e. they are presumably funded by industry.

In what way are these statements contradicting my assertion that it's easier for science students to obtain funding for further study than it is for arts students? Given that a quick Google has indicated that £2.8bn of Govt money goes to the 7 research councils, of which £100m goes to the Arts (5 of the others are pure science, the 7th is Economic) I can't see that there's any question about it.

And, having demonstrated that there is more funding going to science research, why should someone like Gail Trimble, who clearly has a first-class brain, not be supported for the sort of research that she wants to do?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Phil on 25 February, 2009, 09:17:04 am
You'll be telling me next that scientists are of greater value to society than historians.

There's a world of difference between history and Latin literature.
Books that haven't been read for hundreds of years being analysed for what purpose?

What's the point in reading books at all? What's your opinion on people who study English?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 09:46:39 am
What's the point in reading books at all? What's your opinion on people who study English?

Reading is a hobby.  If you have a naturally inquisitive mind then it can be interesting to read up on a subject that is outside your sphere of knowledge or just a good yarn.  In the past year I've read a book on how the metre was developed and measured, a history of the Napoleonic wars, Moby Dick and some Philip K. Dick novels.  However, I don't think I'd be happy if all I did was read these books and then write an essay on it, for someone to mark and say "well done".  I'd rather be testing hypotheses on how the climate system works, writing peer reviewed papers and feeling that I'm advancing human knowledge.

Some of my best friends studied English at university.  It's a soft course, I'm afraid.  The workload was minimal, one essay per module per term.  This was at Newcastle, supposedly a decent university.
English may teach you analytical skills, but the background knowledge is in something that has no application outside academia.  A science degree would also teach you analytical skills but give you background knowledge is something that might actually get you a job at the end of your course.

I know I'm sounding like a condescending prick.  I'm not the most eloquent of people (typical scientist, you might say).  Studying an arts subject doesn't make you any less intelligent, or have any less worth as a person, just don't be surprised when you can't find a job at the end, or funding for a PhD, or that you have to do a law or journalism conversion course.  Or like two of my aforementioned friends who studied English, go back to Uni as an undergrad to study medicine and psychology.  The one who studied psychology said "this is so hard, I can't believe the work load!".

Wowbagger: do you think that arts subject PhDs should be funded to the same level as science and engineering PhDs?  Surely it should be relative to the number of jobs available after the course has finished.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 25 February, 2009, 10:06:45 am
In answer to your first bit, the whole of the recording of human history and knowledge is contained within books, apart from the last few years, which is recorded digitally, and it's therefore harder to ind the good bits amongst the trash.

And of course I didn't say any such thing as you are suggesting in your last sentence. I observed that the funding levels were different, and until I googled I didn't realise how vastly different.

In my daughter's case, although her degree was in history, her special studies overlapped very considerably with social anthropology, which is definitely a science (she was studying the effect of conquistadors' religion on the Peruvian tribes, something which has considerable parallels in modern middle-eastern politics). I'd suggest that, at risk of going wildly off topic, that we distinguish too rigidly between science and arts subjects. There's an awful lot of book reading in degrees like that.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: αdαmsκι on 25 February, 2009, 10:17:09 am
Bluebottle, whom you quote, has stated that of the "good few" science PhDs at his place, he "can't think of any of them who are funded by the research councils" i.e. they are presumably funded by industry

Sorry, but no. Just because someone doing a science PhD isn't funded by a research council, doesn't automatically mean they are funded by big industry. Case in point, I wasn't funded by a research council & instead my money came from the Dept. as I was a teaching assiant. At any one time the Dept. has have four TAs, two of whom are doing human geography stuff & two of whom are doing physical / science type geography & that seems pretty fair. The guy I did fieldwork with in China was funded by the British Council. One of the Chinese students in our research group is funded by a Dorothy Hodgkins award. OK, so one of the PhD students in our group is funded by the consultancy arm of our research group, but it's hardly big business & is basically a spin off for the research group to make some cash. Elsewhere, I know people who are funded by EU projects, the Wellcome Trust, various research councils but no one I can think of is funded by so-called big business.  People do have CASE studentship (http://www.nerc.ac.uk/using/schemes/case.asp). For the people from my research group that means they are linked to the labs at the British Geological Survey in Keyworth, Notts. This is basically a research lab, so it's an outside group but it's certainly not industry.   

I guess people are funded by big businesses, but I don't know anyone for who that's the case.

*Goes back to editing his thesis*

PS: To be clear, I don't have an issues with people doing history etc., but I think the idea that anyone in science who isn't research council funded is therefore getting more from industry is incorrect.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Jaded on 25 February, 2009, 11:14:42 am
She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.

I saw that too.  We need to encourage smart women, to get them out of the kitchen and into the bedroom.

You Australians!
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 25 February, 2009, 02:41:00 pm
You'll be telling me next that scientists are of greater value to society than historians.

There's a world of difference between history and Latin literature.
Books that haven't been read for hundreds of years being analysed for what purpose?

What's the point in reading books at all? What's your opinion on people who study English?

 :thumbsup: Reading is not a hobby, it has its place in all aspect of lives. I manage a small library in an engineering firm but we also have books on conservation and urban design. All of these books inform on our projects at work. We read these books to make the projects go forward. You have to be careful about how you describe 'reading' as it features in all aspects of our lives.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 02:53:39 pm
Erm, I have to read a lot.  Mainly textbooks and fairly dry academic papers.
Reading literature novels and history, for me, is a hobby.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 25 February, 2009, 02:57:59 pm
You'll be telling me next that scientists are of greater value to society than historians.

There's a world of difference between history and Latin literature.
Books that haven't been read for hundreds of years being analysed for what purpose?

Erm, I have to read a lot.  Mainly textbooks and fairly dry academic papers.
Reading literature novels and history, for me, is a hobby.

 :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 25 February, 2009, 03:08:09 pm
Erm, I have to read a lot.  Mainly textbooks and fairly dry academic papers.
Reading literature novels and history, for me, is a hobby.

Umm..so have I, having just handed in my Masters. Reading history, for us at our workplace, is part of what drives our projects. Same with trade literature, where our engineers have to consult products and quote them in their specifications. It's not leisure. You may see it as leisure in your own personal capacity, for us its part of our real working lives.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 03:10:22 pm
Okay, okay, I shouldn't have picked history :).  I don't analyse history books.  For me, it fits into the "hobby" classification but you can analyse history in a way that is useful for the current time.

Still, I don't see the point in analysing Bronte, Austin, Dickens or Latin literature, which is where we started.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Riggers on 25 February, 2009, 03:20:43 pm
My mate works with her Dad, and he's a very nice chap. Do I get any points for that?

Or the very least… a starter for 10?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Manotea on 25 February, 2009, 03:20:51 pm
Okay, okay, I shouldn't have picked history :).  I don't analyse history books.  For me, it fits into the "hobby" classification but you can analyse history in a way that is useful for the current time.

Still, I don't see the point in analysing Bronte, Austin, Dickens or Latin literature, which is where we started.

You'd get on well with Ms Manotea the elder. She's taking a mock A level English paper this afternoon on Jane Austen, and if all goes well she'll be reading Classics in September. It may be that a couple of years hence you'll be discussing Murrey Edwards Manotea!
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Phil on 25 February, 2009, 03:21:30 pm
If history is important, why is what historical figures wrote unimportant?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Riggers on 25 February, 2009, 03:22:54 pm
Look, am I getting points or what!!!  >:(
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 03:25:06 pm
If history is important, why is what historical figures wrote unimportant?
Are Bronte(s), Dickens and Austen historical figures?  They're no more important than any novelist working today, really.

And, Phil, have you read anything by Einstein, James Clerk Maxwell, Niels Bohr, or even Stephen Hawking?  And if not, why not?  What they wrote has proved to be far more important than anything the Bronte sisters wrote.

[edit] I'm adding Darwin and Dawkins (pre his anti-religion campaigning) to the list.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 25 February, 2009, 03:32:44 pm
Of course they are historical figures. Let's pick Dickens for example. As well as being a novelist, he was a keen diarist of the day (probably comparable to Samuel Pepys) and was seen as a very public figure, supporting many different causes. He was extremely influential in Victorian society.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Phil on 25 February, 2009, 03:44:00 pm
If history is important, why is what historical figures wrote unimportant?
Are Bronte(s), Dickens and Austen historical figures?  They're no more important than any novelist working today, really.

And, Phil, have you read anything by Einstein, James Clerk Maxwell, Niels Bohr, or even Stephen Hawking?  And if not, why not?  What they wrote has proved to be far more important than anything the Bronte sisters wrote.

Yes, I've read some Einstein, a little Maxwell, and quite a lot of Hawking - and as it happens, I've read nothing by the Brontes.  But that's irrelevant really, I'm not a physicist and scholarly articles on physics pass way over my head.  Simplified explanations of their work are plenty for me. 

Have you ever read any Homer? Or Herodotus? Euripides? The impact they had on later generations, and the information they contain, is hugely valuable.  You can't really write them off as a waste of time. 
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 03:52:44 pm
Read a reasonable chunk of the Iliad.  Got a little bored, especially with the language.  A simplified explanation would have been enough for me  ;)  I read a lot of Plato and Aristotle when I did a Philosophy module during my Masters.

In what way is the information contained "hugely valuable"?  The information contained in the writings of the above scientists has shaped our world, for better or worse.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: eck on 25 February, 2009, 03:56:44 pm
In what way is the information contained "hugely valuable"?  The information contained in the writings of the above scientists has shaped our world, for better or worse.
Information? Does it have to be all about "information".
Does knowledge not count? What about wisdom?  :-\
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Ian H on 25 February, 2009, 03:59:34 pm
In what way is the information contained "hugely valuable"?  The information contained in the writings of the above scientists has shaped our world, for better or worse.
Information? Does it have to be all about "information".
Does knowledge not count? What about wisdom?  :-\

I'm dying to ask him his views on the visual arts and music...but I shall refrain.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 25 February, 2009, 04:02:06 pm
And the knowledge from these novelists, historians and philosophers has helped shape society, as much as scientists have helped us develop technologically and culturally.

Yes, what are you talking about when it comes to information - data, technology, knowledge, wisdom?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 25 February, 2009, 04:02:57 pm
In what way is the information contained "hugely valuable"?  The information contained in the writings of the above scientists has shaped our world, for better or worse.
Information? Does it have to be all about "information".
Does knowledge not count? What about wisdom?  :-\

I'm dying to ask him his views on the visual arts and music...but I shall refrain.

 :-*
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 04:05:06 pm
Hey, I didn't introduce the word "information" into this, ask Phil what he means!
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: PaulR on 25 February, 2009, 04:05:44 pm
Has Riggers got his points yet?

(I might want to claim some as well...)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: David Martin on 25 February, 2009, 04:10:25 pm
The scientific literature is historical. It crystalises understanding at a precise point in time. Following the development of an idea through it's historical context is in many ways key to understanding where the limitations are.

I find the division between the arts and the sciences to be in many ways a division between being and doing.

A scientist does. An artist is.  

What really, really, really annoys me is those who describe the division as being between the 'creatives' and the rest, implying that science is not creative. Designing a satellite is no less creative than designing a dress, or painting a picture. Learning more about the world is as creative a thing as I know. It is no more purely technical than painting is putting paint on a brush and then onto canvas.

..d





Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 04:11:47 pm
I'm dying to ask him his views on the visual arts and music...but I shall refrain.

Music I "get", from classical all the way to noisy metal.  I've even read a few musicology books, and it makes sense.  Visual arts: there's stuff I like, and stuff I don't like, pretty much like everyone else.

There you go, very potted.

her_welshness: have novelists shaped society, or are they just a reflection on it?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 04:13:43 pm
Thanks David.  You've said in a more eloquent and less confrontational manner what I've been trying to for the past n pages.

All of the above is my pent up frustration at the lack of respect shown to science and scientists by the arts students I've met in my time.  ::-)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Ian H on 25 February, 2009, 04:19:29 pm

A scientist does. An artist is.  



That makes as much sense the other way round. If I claim to be an artist in a very small way, it's cos of what I does - in my case making marks on canvas that other people may or may not be able to invest with some kind of meaning. The frustration is never knowing whether I've got it right.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 25 February, 2009, 04:27:19 pm
I'm dying to ask him his views on the visual arts and music...but I shall refrain.

Music I "get", from classical all the way to noisy metal.  I've even read a few musicology books, and it makes sense.  Visual arts: there's stuff I like, and stuff I don't like, pretty much like everyone else.

There you go, very potted.

her_welshness: have novelists shaped society, or are they just a reflection on it?

Both, and scientists have also shaped society. Take Thomas Carlyle - a man very much of his time yet his writing was hugely influential, it kicked off the Transcendental Movement in the United States and his ideas were said to have influenced people like Goebbels and Hitler. He was also a novelist!
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Really Ancien on 25 February, 2009, 04:35:04 pm
I hadn't appreciated that she was a 26 year old postgraduate, people have been University Professors at a younger age than that. I'd restrict the show to undergraduates, preferably 21 and younger.

Damon.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 25 February, 2009, 04:45:22 pm

A scientist does. An artist is. 


That makes as much sense the other way round. If I claim to be an artist in a very small way, it's cos of what I does - in my case making marks on canvas that other people may or may not be able to invest with some kind of meaning. The frustration is never knowing whether I've got it right.

Modern science is a bit like that, especially when dealing with chaotic non-linear systems, like the Earth's atmosphere.
Have I got it right?  Have I accounted for every case, every trajectory springing from a bifurcation?
Creativity and doubt is what science is all about, really.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: David Martin on 25 February, 2009, 04:51:58 pm

A scientist does. An artist is.  



That makes as much sense the other way round. If I claim to be an artist in a very small way, it's cos of what I does - in my case making marks on canvas that other people may or may not be able to invest with some kind of meaning. The frustration is never knowing whether I've got it right.

Right is a difficult word. Consistent is testable.

You are right about the converse being true. There are many artificial distinctions that seem fine in the fleeting moment of inception but are then washed away by reality. (A scientist asks how, an artist why?)

Ultimately art is about representation and science about knowledge. Representing knowledge, now that is a challenge. Representing emotion? Wow that is hard.

..d
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 25 February, 2009, 04:54:05 pm
Thanks David.  You've said in a more eloquent and less confrontational manner what I've been trying to for the past n pages.

All of the above is my pent up frustration at the lack of respect shown to science and scientists by the arts students I've met in my time.  ::-)

+n

...and the fact that there's anything wrong with being industry funded. If there's a use for "it", "it" will get (more) funding, more students will get opportunities etc., but this does not mean it is "easy" or less "creative" etc.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Really Ancien on 25 February, 2009, 04:56:25 pm
I'd have questions from the real world. Building Regs, Recipes, Garden plants,  that sort of thing.

Damon.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 25 February, 2009, 04:58:23 pm
I'd have questions from the real world. Building Regs, Recipes, Garden plants,  that sort of thing.

One of my mathematician friends used to say his world was very "real" and would get crossed at this expression...  ;)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 25 February, 2009, 05:14:29 pm
As I said before, I thoroughly dislike the starkness of the division between the "arts" and the "sciences". Everything is connected to everything else.

Is philosophy an art or a science? Or does it transcend the two? Where does morality stand here?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Bluebottle on 25 February, 2009, 07:29:12 pm
I am genuinely not wishing to be flippant.  For "morality" read "ethics" and ask the same question.

I don't have an answer to it but science should be facing up to the question more and more these days.

Why does more money go into the science research councils compared to the arts and humanities: because the government has taken the decision that the U.K. p.l.c. gets more return on its investment that way.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 25 February, 2009, 08:03:51 pm
Why does more money go into the science research councils compared to the arts and humanities: because the government has taken the decision that the U.K. p.l.c. gets more return on its investment that way.

Quite. Maybe it is justifiable that more is spent on science subjects than arts, but the figures I found indicated a level of science spending an order of magnitude 27 times that of the arts. That seems rather one-sided to me.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wascally Weasel on 25 February, 2009, 08:13:42 pm
While I don't think that there should be 'sides', through life I've found open minded individuals with interests in both the arts and the sciences.  Some of them started out studying the sciences, some the arts (some neither) but still ended up with a balance of interests (I can't believe no one has mentioned Da Vinci yet).

If anything is to blame it's the forced early specialisation in our further education system.

I've found intolerant people on both sides of the arts/sciences debate too.  What we need to do is settle our differences and then gang up on the drama students, what have they ever done for us eh?

Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Bluebottle on 25 February, 2009, 08:21:32 pm
Er, Roman battle re-enactment?

[HMHB] Battle re-enactment, lets see you tackle this one.  Luton Town-Millwall, 1985[/HMHB]

Less prosaically (although worthy arts all the same), Wowbagger, I agree it is one-sided.  I do not know if it is "fair" reflection.  As a chemist, obviously I'd rather there was more funding for chemical research...
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 25 February, 2009, 09:13:01 pm
Da Vinci is a towering polymath. From more recent times, I'd nominate Bertrand Russell as a strong candidate for Top Brain from the 20th Century.

There's no reason why these great thinkers should be channelled purely down the "scientific" or the "artistic" corridor.  I think that great minds should be encouraged to investigate anything they see fit.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: GruB on 25 February, 2009, 10:35:39 pm
She was saying on the radio this am. that all the attention she's getting from the media etc is essentially because she’s female, the implication being AFAICS that ‘fuss’ especially from some quarters is sexist, and if she was male it would not have been the same.

I saw that too.  We need to encourage smart women, to get them out of the kitchen and into the bedroom.

You Australians!

FTFM  ;D
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: geoff on 25 February, 2009, 11:53:05 pm
Why does more money go into the science research councils compared to the arts and humanities: because the government has taken the decision that the U.K. p.l.c. gets more return on its investment that way.

Quite. Maybe it is justifiable that more is spent on science subjects than arts, but the figures I found indicated a level of science spending an order of magnitude 27 times that of the arts. That seems rather one-sided to me.

I'm wrestling with this question every day of my working life. One reason for "hard" science getting more money than the Arts or Social Sciences is that labs, infrastructure, equipment are more costly than normal offices, classrooms and lecture theatres which are the usual habitat of many Humanities scholars. Not to say all though: there are Humanities people involved in all sorts of digital stuff, and lab. work too so they can (for example) decipher what's written on papyri. But "why Latin" is a bit like " why not just science". The answer probably isn't just to do with what can or can't be sold (though of course, fiction and music, TV and film support huge commercial enterprises).

One significant reason is to do with how people know what direction to take, what choices to make and how to arrive at moral decisions. Some of that wisdom can be informed by scientific method. Other - very significant - areas are informed by past example, imagination and reasoning. So a major value of the Humanities is in equipping people with the intellectual skills to arrive at and exercise balanced judgements. (Without the lessons of history we are sleepwalkers - and of course Roman and much mediaeval history is written in Latin).

I'm a strong supporter of science as well...and I'd opine that no-one is much educated until they have some understanding and experience of both Arts and Science. So it seems depressing to have Government determined to protect research in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (http://www.hefce.ac.uk/AboutUS/sis/stem.htm) without offering similar protection to research in the Humanities. But it isn't about "dead languages": it's about the ideas and culture that everyone is entitled to have access to - and it can be argued that ideas and culture are some of what makes life worth living.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: HTFB on 26 February, 2009, 07:31:48 am
There's no reason why these great thinkers should be channelled purely down the "scientific" or the "artistic" corridor.  I think that great minds should be encouraged to investigate anything they see fit.

Einstein plays excellently. However, his worldwide fame is undeserved. There are many other violinists who are just as good.
---the music critic of a German local paper forgets that he's at a charity concert.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Manotea on 26 February, 2009, 07:43:09 am
Is it just that supercolliders cost more than Stradivari?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 26 February, 2009, 08:07:52 am
Thanks, Geoff, a very helpful post.

To what extent is the concentration on science working? I seem to remember hearing a few years ago that in one particular year, the national total of Physics graduates going into teaching was 19. (Warning: this is a vague memory and is probably wrong, but physics went through a prolonged period of being a shortage subject).
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 26 February, 2009, 08:25:41 am
If they all go and work for industry, it works to an extent Wow and it may be that more people need training in the subject; and better salaries to be offered to them for them to become teachers.

I don't like the work concentration though. The UK and its companies are finding it useful to invest in science and engineering. It is useful in that novel material and knowledge are produced that will give them a competitive edge. It is useful in that it trains people to go to industry with the required skills; it provides an answer to a demand. If you do a PhD in engineering in a university I know well and in a subject I know well and/or on applications I know well  ;D, companies will line up to hire you because of those skills. They are also willing to fund PhDs. An example of such success, which hires very good British and European graduates in engineering and science, is a big gas turbine manufacturer located in Derby for example. Probably the government should sponsor more classic subjects though; but businesses will continue to invest in the training of people and the knowledge they think they need for the future, and that is going to be biased.

I do not agree that the sole reason for the difference in funding are the labs. Social scientists will require travel, will also use supercomputers... It is also possible to do the hardest of sciences, say in math, with a pen and paper. In general, yes, engineering physics and bio-sciences will require big hardware, but the reason for the difference in funding is elsewhere in my views.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: geoff on 26 February, 2009, 01:29:33 pm
Is it just that supercolliders cost more than Stradivari?

or that when they go wrong they waste cost £ lots (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7734251.stm) ?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: TimO on 26 February, 2009, 02:46:42 pm
Given it cost £3.6×109, the repair costs are less than 1% of the original cost, so on this scale, relatively small potatoes.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: andygates on 26 February, 2009, 08:13:50 pm
About the same as touching up a chip on a new bike's paintwork, in fact.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 01 March, 2009, 01:31:55 pm
It was reported on Radio 4 this morning that University challenge producers were investigating the fact that one of the CCC team members had already graduated from college and was therefore no longer a student.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | BBC in University Challenge probe (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7917481.stm)

Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Cunobelin on 01 March, 2009, 10:45:34 pm
Anyone know the rules?

Apparently he was student on application, and during all the games apart from the final by which time he had graduated......

Is there anything in the rules to deal with this?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Charlotte on 01 March, 2009, 10:52:07 pm
The Manchester captain's just been on telly saying that he's not sure whether the Corpus Christi team have broken the law and he's going to wait until there's been a full investigation.

It's an entertaining television programme, for heaven's sake, you spawny wazzock!


As The Liz pointed out, that's like having an investigation into whether or not a panellist on Gardener's Question time gave some wrong advice about when to plant a herbaceous border...

::-)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 02 March, 2009, 08:22:55 am
I'm thinking of suing all of Britain's Universities because, not having gone to one, I was deprived of my right to take part in University Challenge.

Having said that, in the 1970s my sister sported a very fine sweatshirt with a standard University-style logo in the front which said "Idontgoto University". Perhaps the alumni of that august seat of learning could raise a team?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Greenbank on 02 March, 2009, 11:48:18 am
Anyone know the rules?

Apparently he was student on application, and during all the games apart from the final by which time he had graduated......

Is there anything in the rules to deal with this?

The BBC article (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7917481.stm) say:-

"
The rules state that contestants must be a student throughout the filming and broadcasting.
"

By his own admission he wasn't a student for the QF round and beyond:-

"
He told the Observer: "I was a student when I applied to be on the show and on the day when we filmed the first two rounds, so I don't think I've done anything wrong."
"

Seems pretty simple to me. Rules say one thing. He did something outside the rules.

Disqualify them on the technicality and the prize should be handed over to the University of Manchester.

The BBC should have made more thorough checks at the time. The college, or team, should have owned up to it.

Gail Trimble should be burnt as a witch (a la The Daily Mash).
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Manotea on 02 March, 2009, 11:52:04 am
As The Liz pointed out, that's like having an investigation into whether or not a panellist on Gardener's Question time gave some wrong advice about when to plant a herbaceous border...
and whether, once planted, it should have the right to stay.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Really Ancien on 02 March, 2009, 12:05:52 pm
The usual MO would be for the team to travel in some sort of coach with supporters, organised by the Union, they should have noticed that one of the team could not be contacted via the internal mail. I suppose part of the problem is that they will have had his mobile number and E-mail, neither of which are geographical. So when they contacted him to make arrangements they would have had no indication that he was no longer at the University. They should take this opportunity to restrict the show to undergraduates.

Damon.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: andygates on 02 March, 2009, 12:21:41 pm
*takes surfboard to edge of teacup to ride the storm swell*
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: clarion on 02 March, 2009, 12:25:43 pm
I once took part in a University Archery Team which we later realised contained no current students other than (on a technicality) myself.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Julian on 02 March, 2009, 12:53:51 pm
The usual MO would be for the team to travel in some sort of coach with supporters, organised by the Union, they should have noticed that one of the team could not be contacted via the internal mail. I suppose part of the problem is that they will have had his mobile number and E-mail, neither of which are geographical. So when they contacted him to make arrangements they would have had no indication that he was no longer at the University. They should take this opportunity to restrict the show to undergraduates.

Damon.

If you're a student at Oxford, your college.ox.ac.uk address keeps working for almost a year after you graduate, and if you contact the Union they will give you a permanent ox.ac.uk email address if you want one.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: clarion on 02 March, 2009, 12:55:48 pm
At Oxbridge, aren't they 'studying' for their MAs after graduation? ;)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Julian on 02 March, 2009, 12:58:41 pm
No, and they don't pretend to be.

And the guy hadn't finished a BA, he'd dropped out of a PhD (I think).
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: her_welshness on 02 March, 2009, 01:12:23 pm
The fact remains though that he is at full-time employment with PWC, he was not a student when they filmed the final. Therefore the team gets an automatic disqualification.

I still luv the Trimble...
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: TheLurker on 02 March, 2009, 01:30:55 pm
Latin is very misunderstood. It is not the study of a language, like French or German. It is the definitive grammar and logic of thought that underpins most European languages - certainly English.  It is Latin that is also teh accepted language of the scientific definition or the law court - because its meanings and roots are so precise. Unlike the vernacular.
[snip]

Latin is no more precise than any other language. Legal and scientific terms in Latin are just names, the concepts have no connection with Latin itself. And Latin is not the definitive grammar and logic of thought that underpins most European languages, certainly not English. English is a Germanic language, although a large part of its vocabulary has Latin origins via French.
+1 See if you can find a copy of Baugh & Cable.  An excellent book on the history of the English language.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: TheLurker on 02 March, 2009, 01:35:43 pm
Oh be still my beating heart...
a thread about intelligent women with glasses and bicycles, and now librarians.

I'm going for a short lie down in a darkened room.
You are John Betjeman* AICMFP. :)

*Myfanwy. Verses 3 & 4 :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Manotea on 02 March, 2009, 01:42:30 pm
Oh be still my beating heart...
a thread about intelligent women with glasses and bicycles, and now librarians.

I'm going for a short lie down in a darkened room.
You are John Betjeman* AICMFP. :)

*Myfanwy. Verses 2 & 3 :)

For TheLurker, a picture of an intelligent woman librarian with glasses and bicycles. (http://culture11.com/blogs/ladyblog/files/2008/08/sarah-palin.jpg)

Sorry, closest I could get.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: TheLurker on 02 March, 2009, 01:44:41 pm
Hmmm yes. Not _quite_ my cup of tea, but thank you for the thought. :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: cc93 on 02 March, 2009, 08:11:05 pm
Has been defenestrated! (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Greenbank on 02 March, 2009, 08:14:46 pm
Excellent. You don't look that clever now do you Corpus Christi Trimble?

All that remains is to burn her. I hope, for Mr Larrington's sake anyway, that they're busy rounding up the Lighthouse Family for the pyre.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: clarion on 02 March, 2009, 08:15:03 pm
Did Kay answer any questions, or was he just a makeweight in the Trimble All Stars?
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Julian on 02 March, 2009, 08:17:53 pm
They could have replaced him with a sack of hay and they'd still have won. 
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: simonp on 02 March, 2009, 08:18:08 pm
Did Kay answer any questions, or was he just a makeweight in the Trimble All Stars?

You could try reading the article.  :P

(yes).
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: cc93 on 02 March, 2009, 08:18:38 pm
Quote
Did Kay answer any questions, or was he just a makeweight in the Trimble All Stars?
Apparently

Quote
Mr Kay was an important factor in the showdown, answering two "starters for 10" at a crucial point when his team was trailing.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: clarion on 02 March, 2009, 08:27:32 pm
Did Kay answer any questions, or was he just a makeweight in the Trimble All Stars?

You could try reading the article.  :P

(yes).


Ah.  It wasn't in the shorter version I read earlier.  Ta.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Jaded on 03 March, 2009, 12:12:13 am
It's all over for Trimble.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | University quiz team disqualified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)

No final year students can be part of a UC team, it's official.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 03 March, 2009, 07:54:37 am
It's all over for Trimble.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | University quiz team disqualified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)

No final year students can be part of a UC team, it's official.

That, I think, is quite hard to enforce. PhD students quite frequently fail to complete their projects, or take unexpected gap years. Their funding can be dependent on annually awarded grants, so if funds dry up part way through their course, they will have a problem.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 03 March, 2009, 08:46:51 am
It's all over for Trimble.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | University quiz team disqualified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)

No final year students can be part of a UC team, it's official.

That, I think, is quite hard to enforce. PhD students quite frequently fail to complete their projects, or take unexpected gap years. Their funding can be dependent on annually awarded grants, so if funds dry up part way through their course, they will have a problem.

Really?! I have never seen nor experienced this Wow to be very honest. Never. So it is not as generalised as you make it. In the current university system it is hard to justify signing someone up for a PhD without funding lined up upfront; unless of course the person is what we call "self funded" maybe (even so if it is rare that they get their award annually, at least in science, engineering or business I would say). For every PhD student that makes it past Year 1 but does not complete one's academic record gets "tarnished" with possible implications on further funding; so when one appoints a student one does not expect them to disappear at will. If they were to disappear, for any raeson, including to earn money, their PhD and student status would most likley be suspended. I think it will be possible to enforce the above as PhDs have finite lifes (4 years in the UK full time) and most universities have progression reports/vivas between Year 1 and 2 and Year 2 and 3 which formalise the progression of the student. For UG it is even easier; unless they are enrolled initially on a MEng for example and would decide to take the BEng or BSc only ending after 3 of a scheduled 4 year programme. But I still expect the type of students to take part in the show to take the longer route. I would maybe add one caveat though: A lot of classics students do take classes and labs to fund their research or do PhDs in parallel to some admin/teaching support; which may leave the door open to some controversy.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: iakobski on 03 March, 2009, 09:01:43 am
It's all over for Trimble.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | University quiz team disqualified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)

No final year students can be part of a UC team, it's official.

That, I think, is quite hard to enforce. PhD students quite frequently fail to complete their projects, or take unexpected gap years. Their funding can be dependent on annually awarded grants, so if funds dry up part way through their course, they will have a problem.

It would probably be a good idea to restrict it to undergraduates anyway. I suspect most people assume the contestants are undergrads - this is reinforced when they introduce themselves as "reading" a subject. "Reading" means studying, when you do a PhD you move from "studying" to "reasearch".
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: andygates on 03 March, 2009, 09:04:34 am
Filming the series across the calendar, rather than academic year seems a bit silly.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 03 March, 2009, 09:09:38 am
That would exclude a lot of students. Trimble was a postgrad. In the 1960s, my brother was made captain of his team because he was the only post-grad in the team.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Really Ancien on 03 March, 2009, 09:24:12 am
Being on the BBC gives it a 'quasi official' aura, but it was originally a US show, there's still a credit for 'College Bowl'. It was on ITV for most of its life and is still made by Granada. It holds a special place for Oxbridge Graduates as it allows colleges to field teams of their own.
Allowing Postgrads has meant that someone who is 26 is pitted against the average aged student who is about 20. So it's like pitting those 20 year olds against 14 year olds. it would be much fairer to be setting questions for a much more tightly defined age group with similar life experiences.

Damon.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: andygates on 03 March, 2009, 09:32:50 am
But they've always allowed mature students, there's usually some weirdy beardy reading Geology or Miss Prim reading Azerbaijani Literature.  They're obviously there for the "life-experience" questions.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: geraldc on 03 March, 2009, 09:52:31 am
A few years back, I think a team of pub quiz champions all enrolled at the Open University, with the express intention of winning university challenge. I don't know how they did.

There's now the University Challenge, The Professionals. So it's never too late.

When I was at uni, there was an intercollegiate trivia quiz between the colleges of the University of London.  It was sponsored by K cider and Time Out, and the prize for winning the UCL heat was a crate of K. The union decided to give us the prize the afternoon of the grand final at ULU. So having nothing better to do, we decided to sit in the union and drink the cider, it was 6 bottles each. Effectively the team destroyed itself, we were unable to walk, focus or talk. We still came 3rd though.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Really Ancien on 03 March, 2009, 10:09:25 am
A few years back, I think a team of pub quiz champions all enrolled at the Open University, with the express intention of winning university challenge. I don't know how they did.


Quote
The show has, since its revival in 1994, featured a number of very high-standard teams with postgraduate and mature students, who might be thought of as having the advantage of a greater breadth of general knowledge.[2] The Open University (OU) won the 1999 series with a team whose age averaged 46. Three of the four team members were former Brain of Britain and Mastermind finalists or otherwise professional quiz show contestants who had joined the OU specifically in order to appear on the show. In the quarter-final they beat a slightly younger team from part-time and mature student specialist Birkbeck, University of London, by only one question.

Host Jeremy Paxman openly criticised the OU team as not being in the spirit of the competition.[3] Paxman also apologised privately for this when challenged.[

Damon.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Mr Larrington on 03 March, 2009, 11:38:22 am
The only thing I have to add on this matter is "Toxteth O'Grady, USA".
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Kathy on 03 March, 2009, 12:45:06 pm
It's all over for Trimble.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | University quiz team disqualified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)

No final year students can be part of a UC team, it's official.

That, I think, is quite hard to enforce. PhD students quite frequently fail to complete their projects, or take unexpected gap years. Their funding can be dependent on annually awarded grants, so if funds dry up part way through their course, they will have a problem.

Really?! I have never seen nor experienced this Wow to be very honest. Never.

Just for the record, I failed to complete my PhD when the company funding me shut down and made me redundant. I'm willing to accept that I am in a very small minority, but it does happen. :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: clarion on 03 March, 2009, 12:52:43 pm
I have known a number of people who have been anxious about the continuation of their doctoral studies because of funding being piecemeal.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 03 March, 2009, 02:39:38 pm
It's all over for Trimble.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | University quiz team disqualified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)

No final year students can be part of a UC team, it's official.

That, I think, is quite hard to enforce. PhD students quite frequently fail to complete their projects, or take unexpected gap years. Their funding can be dependent on annually awarded grants, so if funds dry up part way through their course, they will have a problem.

Really?! I have never seen nor experienced this Wow to be very honest. Never. So it is not as generalised as you make it. In the current university system it is hard to justify signing someone up for a PhD without funding lined up upfront; unless of course the person is what we call "self funded" maybe (even so if it is rare that they get their award annually, at least in science, engineering or business I would say).

My son has been part-funded (tuition fees paid and guaranteed so for 3 years) but nothing for living / rent. Half-way through his first year, he's applied for further funding for year 2 and beyond. He's been encouraged by staff who have taken the attitude that "where there's a will, there's a way" with PhDs. He's been led to expect some sort of teaching opportunities from his second year onwards, but that's not guaranteed, and I'm his fall-back position if this funding doesn't materialise. So in his case, and, I'm sure, with some of his colleagues, much of it is done on a wing and a prayer.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: bikenerd on 03 March, 2009, 02:42:30 pm
I'm guaranteed 3 years, with a 6 month extension if need be, funding for tuition, college fees and living allowance, via the NERC research council.  I've done some teaching, but this was optional and I did it purely for CV purposes.

It'd be interesting to have some concrete figures on these matters, rather than just relying on anecdotes and personal experience.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 03 March, 2009, 10:50:46 pm
         Previous University Challenge winners appear to break rules |
            Media |
            guardian.co.uk
    (http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/mar/03/university-challenge-winners-break-rules)

It seems that rule-breaking is endemic in UC.

I don't like this raking over stuff: there is a very simple rule in chess which is applied rigorously and that is if you wish to make a complaint about an opponent's conduct or the play of the game, it has to be made at the time. Once the result has been agreed by both sides and handed to the arbiter, it doesn't get changed.

I think the BBC & Granada should have stood firm. The competition was completed satisfactorily and no one complained at the time. There's a case to say that in future programmes each contestant should have a signed statement from their tutor that they are still at the college, but I'm not sure that Guardian Newspapers have behaved honourably. On Sunday the Observer publishes a piece to say that one team member is ineligible, and on Tuesday the Guardian, which owns the Observer, implies that Corpus Christie have been badly treated because previous Champions have broken the same rule.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Charlotte on 03 March, 2009, 10:53:58 pm
Same in fupbal, innit?  Hand of God and all that.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: geoff on 03 March, 2009, 11:10:44 pm
         Previous University Challenge winners appear to break rules |
            Media |
            guardian.co.uk
    (http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/mar/03/university-challenge-winners-break-rules)

... Guardian, which owns the Observer, implies that Corpus Christi...


[pedant]
The Grauniad and Observer are editorially independent but are both part of the Guardian Media Group which is in turn owned by a charitable body, The Scott Trust (http://www.gmgplc.co.uk/ScottTrust/tabid/127/Default.aspx)
[/pedant]
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Wowbagger on 03 March, 2009, 11:16:02 pm
I think the difference in football is that the referee has to make constant, split-second decisions throughout the game whereas a chess arbiter never has anything to do with the vast majority of games other than record the result. It is up to the players to involve him if they are not satisfied with their opponent's conduct, or there is some point of rules, eg a draw claim by 3-fold repetition of position. I'd say that in an issue such as eligibility, Granada / BBC should have checked and didn't but, having allowed CC to contest the final, that was implicit acceptance that all their players were eligible.

It would be a somewhat different matter if a contestant was told his answer was wrong when he knew full well it was right. Given that the programme isn't live, I suppose he could interrupt Paxman and stand his ground. I seem to remember a Mastermind contestant arguing with Magnus Magnusson over the correctness of his answer. I can't remember the outcome of the dispute.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Jezza on 03 March, 2009, 11:18:19 pm
Breaking News: BBC disappears up own fundament.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Tom B on 04 March, 2009, 12:29:52 am
Quote
Given that the programme isn't live, I suppose he could interrupt Paxman and stand his ground

Yes. Contestants are strongly encouraged before recordings to do just this  :)
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Frenchie on 04 March, 2009, 08:14:54 am
It's all over for Trimble.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | University quiz team disqualified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm)

No final year students can be part of a UC team, it's official.

That, I think, is quite hard to enforce. PhD students quite frequently fail to complete their projects, or take unexpected gap years. Their funding can be dependent on annually awarded grants, so if funds dry up part way through their course, they will have a problem.

Really?! I have never seen nor experienced this Wow to be very honest. Never. So it is not as generalised as you make it. In the current university system it is hard to justify signing someone up for a PhD without funding lined up upfront; unless of course the person is what we call "self funded" maybe (even so if it is rare that they get their award annually, at least in science, engineering or business I would say).

My son has been part-funded (tuition fees paid and guaranteed so for 3 years) but nothing for living / rent. Half-way through his first year, he's applied for further funding for year 2 and beyond. He's been encouraged by staff who have taken the attitude that "where there's a will, there's a way" with PhDs. He's been led to expect some sort of teaching opportunities from his second year onwards, but that's not guaranteed, and I'm his fall-back position if this funding doesn't materialise. So in his case, and, I'm sure, with some of his colleagues, much of it is done on a wing and a prayer.

Sorry Wow but, again, you use an anecdote to generalise. That has no value.
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: geraldc on 11 March, 2009, 01:39:42 pm
The 'other' end of the spectrum.

London university girls gather for beauty pageant | The Sun |News (http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article2312666.ece)

I find this funny for so many reasons.

Including the fact that Imperial didn't field a candidate...
Title: Re: Corpus Christi Trimble
Post by: Justin(e) on 11 March, 2009, 06:25:16 pm
"I wanna be her starter for ten

...

Next to her my brain looks like a thimble

She is smarter than Stephen Fry
and cuter than a thimble

ohhh, Corpus Chrisi Gail Trimble (http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/fricomedy/fricomedy_20090306-1830b.mp3)"  ohhhh yeahhh