Fi Daisy G
@fidaisyg.bsky.social
930 followers 1.7K following 910 posts
Engineering Academic, Chartered Structural Engineer, Open University Staff Tutor, global citizen living in UK, Mum, she/her.
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Reposted by Fi Daisy G
ianwalker.bsky.social
"The single most important behaviour, design or regulation for creating streets conducive to walking and cycling, was physical separation between the modes"

We've got a new study out, learning from a broad mixture of street users, planners and designers

www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Highlights
    For marginalised street users mode separation is the key to human-scale movement.
    Streets conducive to walking and cycling have functional, safe and accessible design.
    Professionals must approach street design, regulation and user behaviour holistically.
    Combinations of influencing factors persuade people to either use or avoid a street.
    There are no easy fixes to the public realm that will work for all non-drivers.
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
germanatportsmouth.bsky.social
8 October 1985: stamps issued in the GDR depicting bridges in East Berlin
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
claireboardman.bsky.social
"Rebuilding in a way that is just & inclusive will be a slow process that starts with sharing our memories & perceptions of the city & the way we lived within it ... We have to learn to see the city in the ways that others see it, drawing maps and inviting others to draw with us ..." #deepmapping
placesjournal.bsky.social
"The City and the City and the City"
by Ayham Dalal

A mapping workshop with refugees from Homs, Syria, illuminates the complexity of rebuilding after war.

Read more: placesjournal.org/article/mapping-homs-syria-rebuilding-after-war/
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
mattpope.bsky.social
Awful news from Wales, the St Fagan's Museum has been broken into and prehistoric goldwork has been taken. Its painful to think what objects might now be at risk. Thoughts with the museum team who must be devastated, all speed to the police and a curse on the crooks.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
St Fagans: Bronze Age gold jewellery stolen from musuem
Police are investigating a burglary at St Fagans museum in the early hours of Monday morning.
www.bbc.co.uk
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
michaelburchert.bsky.social
See how teeny tiny the estimated HYPED recarbonation of concrete would be in 2050. (Lower right corner.)
This is used as THE argument vs bio based "temporary" storage to keep the status quo biz alive.
From:
Decarbonizing the cement and concrete industry, Griffiths et al.
doi.org/10.1016/j.rs...
Cement/concrete production, ccus, end-use differentiated for contribution to net zero goals. Durable CO2 sinks are only a very small fraction compared to the ongoing marketing of these products
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
saulstaniforth.bsky.social
The govt should be investing in NHS staff, not putting doctors at the start of their careers on the scrap heap. These newly qualified doctors have run up massive debts to get to that point, & the govt is then saying, sorry, no jobs for you.
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
svenetitay.bsky.social
Les politiques d'E.Macron ont conduit à ce désastre. La question n’est plus de savoir dans combien de temps l’École s’en relèvera mais si elle pourra s’en relever. Ce n'est pas juste un enjeu éducatif, c'est aussi un enjeu démocratique. Quelle cohésion sociale avec une École dans cet état ? 1/3
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
michaelburchert.bsky.social
This MEGA transformation should be more popular.
In fact this should be a new category.
RAPIDLY RENEWABLE RETROFIT BRUTALISM
#straw
#timber
#bamboo
#Bauwende
This feels so 2024, let's do it.
Atelier Schmidt: www.atelierschmidt.ch/complemedis-...
fidaisyg.bsky.social
Unexpected bonus of a #NeverTooLate PhD; GP lined me up with a full set of going to Uni jabs - which I had not been eligible for whilst working as a Lecturer!
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
petraboynton.bsky.social
So many HE colleagues at risk of redundancy are struggling with limited support and understanding.

Universities may believe they are putting packages in place but the realities of so much risk, change and threat are way more significant than is currently appreciated.
politicalquarterly.bsky.social
There have likely been 10,000 or more university redundancies in the academic year 2024-25.

@gsoh31.bsky.social, Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at Oxford Brookes, argues that the Higher Education system as we know it is coming to an end.
Where now for Britain’s Universities?
UK higher education now faces a very bleak future, retreating in the face of little public sympathy and limited political interest.
politicalquarterly.org.uk
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
zackpolanski.bsky.social
I'd actually forgotten how extraordinary it is that when I won the leadership - I wasn't interviewed as it was too close to our party conference interviewed.

And then refused a second time!

Part of the antidote to all of this is creating our own media platforms.

Hey @boldpolitics.bsky.social 👋🏼
adambienkov.bsky.social
BBC accused of 'extraordinary' anti-Green bias after party say the Laura Kuenssberg Show scrapped a promised interview with @zackpolanski.bsky.social on Sunday.

Green sources say the show also refused to interview Polanski after he was elected as leader last month

bylinetimes.com/2025/10/06/b...
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
petraboynton.bsky.social
Many aspects of academia normalise abusive practices.

Like putting people through stressful situations, encouraging pile ons and put downs, all to be mitigated by alcohol.

When we ask 'who does this bring in? who does it leave out? who might it help? who might it harm?' so much becomes clear.
pengzell.bsky.social
Academia turns its eye toward itself

(Source: The art of anthropology: Essays and diagrams / Alfred Gell 1999, edited by Eric Hirsch)
The British-style (anthropology) seminar is a peculiar institution with rules of its own. A regular weekly (term-time) event, the 'ideal' seminar usually brings together some 20 or more participants, around a table, under the chairmanship of an experienced teacher and seminar leader. The chairman introduces, and generally gives moral support to, the speaker, while the audience undertake the role of critics, and may, indeed, ask extremely hostile-sounding questions. In a good seminar, there are usually three or four expert seminar practitioners, who can be relied on to give the speaker something of a grilling. The questioning goes on for an hour, allowing time for the more junior members of the seminar to intervene as well and acquire the interrogatory skills of their seniors. However, the seminar is not as unfriendly an occasion as it sometimes seems to visitors unused to its conventions. There is an implicit rule that really severe questioning is reserved for speakers who have shown, in the course of their papers, either that they possess the dialectical skill to handle even the most destructive questioning, or, on rare occasions, that they are so bumptious and thick-skulled that they are unlikely to comprehend the devastating nature of the questioning they receive. The mild, tentative, paper from an inexperienced speaker will not be dealt with harshly. Meanwhile, the skilled dialectician relishes the cut and thrust of debate, and exploits the opportunity afforded by hostile questioning to produce additional extemporized displays of wit, turning the questions back on the questioners and making fun of their positions. As the question period draws to a close, the skilled speaker elaborates the main points of the paper in a series of improvisations on themes suggested by the audience. Adrenalin flows copiously through the speaker's bloodstream by this time - now the hard questioning has been overcome - and unusual freedom of expression may be attained. The audience are enjoying themselves too. But the chairman must close the seminar once the time allotted for its duration is over, since, like Cinderella's ball, seminar bonhomie has a fixed temporal compass, which cannot exceed two hours, even by a second. At this point, the chairman thanks the speaker, conducts him to a place of refreshment, where adrenalin is tempered with alcohol, and happy, animated conversations ensue. The point is that the seminar is a social occasion, a game, an exchange, an ordeal, an initiation. To one of a naturally social disposition, to hear a paper in a seminar is intrinsically much more interesting than to read the same paper in cold blood, because one's social proclivities are excited as well as one's strictly academic or intellectual interests. I confess to being a social animal of this type. Consequently, it is much more exciting for me to write a paper for presentation at a seminar than it is to write for an imaginary reader, as one does when writing a book. Books do not give anything like the feedback that one gets from seminars.
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
pintofscience.uk
We're starting to organise #pint26 (18-20 May 2026) and are looking for volunteers in: Cambridge, Coventry, Leicester, Southampton and Worcester!

Please express your interest here and join the team!
forms.gle/HiSnvd14R1qZ...
Group of six Pint of Science volunteers at an event.
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
profbillmcguire.bsky.social
"The Ministry of Defence spends around £1m a year sending children to private schools in north Wales because 'state schools teach some or all lessons in the Welsh language' "

What complete and utter stupidity - and an insult to us Welsh

www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Defence ministry spends millions on private schools to avoid Welsh
Military personnel receive a private education allowance to avoid lessons in Welsh in state schools.
www.bbc.co.uk
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
peterwelsh68.bsky.social
I know one cure for
BBC prasinophobia
(fear of green)

It's a Question Time invite for @zackpolanski.bsky.social on Thursday night.

What's the point of Fiona even
having a preshow Green room if there's never any Greens in it?

#bbcqt
#Shrewsbury
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
bodartlib.bsky.social
Watery environments don't usually mix well with libraries, but we've found a way to make it work!

"Decks and Wrecks: a Voyage through Maritime Art and Archaeology" is now available for you to peruse on the ground floor.
A collection of books arranged on a table, all on the subject of maritime art and archaeology
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
eicathomefinn.bsky.social
'Five years after having their first child, mums' earnings drop by an average of £1,051 a month compared with their salary one year before having a child.

But let's put that one into the "too hard to deal with" box and instead propose ICE-style arrests of migrants to grab the headlines.
True cost of becoming a mum highlighted in new data on pay
New figures reveal mums in England see their earnings drop after having a first, second and third child.
www.bbc.co.uk
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
Reposted by Fi Daisy G
pastandotherplaces.bsky.social
The Innocent Railway - a mining trail from #Edinburgh to Newtongrange. #mining #coal #railways #LocalHistory #museums 🗃️📚
mininglandscapes.bsky.social
1/2 A big drum roll for another #Ecomuseum first, a rail tour route #MiningLandscapes (Waverley to #NewtonGrange home of the National Mining Museum Scotland) from the train window a legacy project by Mark Robottom who worked with the team across the summer……