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University of Cambridge Training

All-provider course timetable

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Sun 21 Jun 2020 – Tue 30 Jun 2020

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Sunday 21 June 2020

09:30
How to Give a Better Presentation new Finished 09:30 - 13:00 CPPD Basement Room

CPPD offer a 1 day intensive course Presentation Skills: An Introduction which is more suitable for university staff.

This course is open to all members (staff and students) of the University.

It teaches the skills necessary to deliver more successful presentations. It is designed to offer you the opportunity to pick up tips and tricks for better planning, to think about creating or sourcing a range of appropriate visual aids, and how to improve your delivery technique. Participants will not be asked to present.

14:15
InDesign (Desktop Publishing): Getting Started Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Balfour Macintosh Room

InDesign is a desktop publishing package available for both Macs and PCs which is used to build up a publication from ready-prepared text, images and graphics in the same way as QuarkXpress and PageMaker. Participants use pre-written text and scanned-in pictures to assemble and produce a double-sided, two-column newsletter using InDesign.

Matlab: Introduction for Absolute Beginners (1 of 3) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

Matlab is a software package for numerical computation with high quality graphics facilities. This course is for beginners and new users of the package and describes basic concepts and use of Matlab, but not any other optional 'Toolboxes' available from the developers of Matlab.

Google Analytics: An Introduction new Finished 14:15 - 16:00 Titan Teaching Room 1, New Museums Site

Initially there will be a talk and demonstration then there will be an opportunity to try out any techniques you have learned about. To this end, if you are interested in looking at analytics for your own site and you haven't yet obtained a code and installed it on your pages, you will need to do that before the course. If you are interested in interpreting data that is already being collected you won't have to worry about that. Bear in mind that there is a lag in data collection of 24 hours.

Program Design: Building Applications out of Several Programs Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Room AL.08 (CMS, Wilberforce Road)

This course is part of the Scientific Computing series.

This is an introduction to when and how to combine separate programs together to form an application, and when and how to split a single program apart. It will concentrate on principles rather than details, to help attendees make the right decision and proceed in the right direction. It is aimed at users with some programming experience who need to start or join a significant programming project.

Monday 22 June 2020

09:30
Grooming new charged (1 of 2) Finished 09:30 - 16:30 Cockcroft Lecture Theatre
grooming
Publisher 2007: Creating Professional Publications new Finished 09:30 - 13:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

Do you want to create more professional publications by having a deeper appreciation of what Publisher 2007 can do for you? Through a series of graded exercises this course focuses on practical work giving you ample opportunity to use your PC skills to produce various publications.

14:15
Fortran: Converting Old To Modern Fortran Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Room AL.08 (CMS, Wilberforce Road)

This course is part of the Scientific Computing series.

This course will cover the important programming tasks that used to be messy or complicated in Fortran 77, and can be done more cleanly and effectively in modern Fortran (i.e. Fortran 90/95/2003). It is intended for people who have been using Fortran for many years, but have not been following the recent standards. It is also intended for people who have an older, but still valid, Fortran program and want to clean it up and make it easier to understand and maintain. It will cover only aspects of old Fortran (i.e. Fortran 77) that can be improved by replacing them, and not the totally new aspects.

Matlab: Introduction for Absolute Beginners (2 of 3) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

Matlab is a software package for numerical computation with high quality graphics facilities. This course is for beginners and new users of the package and describes basic concepts and use of Matlab, but not any other optional 'Toolboxes' available from the developers of Matlab.

EndNote for Bibliographies: Introduction (Self-paced) Finished 14:15 - 16:15 Titan Teaching Room 1, New Museums Site

An introduction to the bibliography package EndNote and its interface with Microsoft Word. EndNote is a program that stores bibliographic references, and notes about those references, in an EndNote Library. EndNote then interfaces with MS Word to help you create a bibliography and bibliographic citations while you type a document. The style (contents and layout) of the citations and bibliography can then be formatted in an Output Style of your choice; this can easily be changed without retyping.

Tuesday 23 June 2020

09:30
Excel 2007: Introduction (Self-paced) Finished 09:30 - 13:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

Microsoft Excel is the chosen spreadsheet package as it is a popular choice, both on Macintosh and PC.

14:15
Matlab: Introduction for Absolute Beginners (3 of 3) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

Matlab is a software package for numerical computation with high quality graphics facilities. This course is for beginners and new users of the package and describes basic concepts and use of Matlab, but not any other optional 'Toolboxes' available from the developers of Matlab.

Word 2007: Mastering Dissertations and Theses (Level 3) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Cockcroft Lecture Theatre

This course is a task-focused version of the "Mastering Advanced Features" course. It is designed to give a overview of the advanced features of Microsoft Word 2007 that are most relevant to producing dissertations, theses and other long documents.

Wednesday 24 June 2020

09:30
Visio 2007: Organisational, Gantt and Flowcharts new Finished 09:30 - 13:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

This course is designed for users new to the software who need to create various types of chart including organisational charts, Gantt charts and flowcharts. The skills and knowledge acquired in this course are sufficient to be able to use and operate the software at an efficient level and covers from beginners to intermediate skills. It is fast paced.

Saturday 27 June 2020

09:30
Web Authoring: Cascading Style Sheets Next Steps (Level 4) (1 of 2) Finished 09:30 - 12:30 Phoenix Teaching Room

This two-part course will build on the simple style sheets produced in the introductory courses. The aim is to give you a full appreciation of how stylesheets work and how to work with them, and using them as an integral part of producing web pages and sites.

14:15
Stata (Statistical Package): Introduction (1 of 2) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

Stata is a powerful general purpose statistical package.

This course is for beginners and fairly new users of the package. Basic concepts and use of Stata will be introduced. The main aim of the course is to give participants a foundation and some background. However statistical techniques are not covered (see note below).

The first session looks at an overview of the Stata system and getting data into Stata format and the second looks at reporting, graphing and analyses. It is strongly recommended for anyone likely to use Stata for any but the very simplest analysis of the very simplest data.

Parallel Programming: Options and Design (1 of 2) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Hopkinson Lecture Theatre

This course is part of the Scientific Computing series.

This is a detailed overview of using parallelism for achieving more computation in the same amount of elapsed time, covering both "shared memory" and "distributed memory" designs. It will concentrate on principles rather than details, to help attendees make the right decision and proceed in the right direction. It is aimed at users with significant programming experience who need more computation power than can be delivered by a single thread of execution on a single CPU core, including those who already program in parallel. The course is also designed for system administrators who need to support parallel codes, by describing the range of practical options, and their strengths, weaknesses, configuration issues and other important issues.

Sunday 28 June 2020

09:30
Web Authoring: Cascading Style Sheets Next Steps (Level 4) (2 of 2) Finished 09:30 - 12:30 Phoenix Teaching Room

This two-part course will build on the simple style sheets produced in the introductory courses. The aim is to give you a full appreciation of how stylesheets work and how to work with them, and using them as an integral part of producing web pages and sites.

14:15
Parallel Programming: Options and Design (2 of 2) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Hopkinson Lecture Theatre

This course is part of the Scientific Computing series.

This is a detailed overview of using parallelism for achieving more computation in the same amount of elapsed time, covering both "shared memory" and "distributed memory" designs. It will concentrate on principles rather than details, to help attendees make the right decision and proceed in the right direction. It is aimed at users with significant programming experience who need more computation power than can be delivered by a single thread of execution on a single CPU core, including those who already program in parallel. The course is also designed for system administrators who need to support parallel codes, by describing the range of practical options, and their strengths, weaknesses, configuration issues and other important issues.

Monday 29 June 2020

09:30
Grooming new charged (2 of 2) Finished 09:30 - 16:30 Cockcroft Lecture Theatre
grooming
Excel 2007: Managing Data & Lists (Self-paced) Finished 09:30 - 13:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

This hands-on course is a follow up from the Excel 2007 Introduction course.

14:15
Stata (Statistical Package): Introduction (2 of 2) Finished 14:15 - 17:00 Phoenix Teaching Room

Stata is a powerful general purpose statistical package.

This course is for beginners and fairly new users of the package. Basic concepts and use of Stata will be introduced. The main aim of the course is to give participants a foundation and some background. However statistical techniques are not covered (see note below).

The first session looks at an overview of the Stata system and getting data into Stata format and the second looks at reporting, graphing and analyses. It is strongly recommended for anyone likely to use Stata for any but the very simplest analysis of the very simplest data.

Tuesday 30 June 2020

13:00
Test Course for Online Coursegiving (online) new Finished 13:00 - 14:00 UIS Online Microsoft Teams 1

This is just to test the online booking process

14:15
Word 2007: Taking Control of Document Design (Level 2) (1 of 2) Finished 14:15 - 17:30 Cockcroft Lecture Theatre

This course extends the basic use of Microsoft Word 2007 for Windows, in particular the features which affect the arrangement & look of a printed page.

Word 2007: Taking Control of Document Design (Level 2) (2 of 2) Finished 14:15 - 17:30 Phoenix Teaching Room

This course extends the basic use of Microsoft Word 2007 for Windows, in particular the features which affect the arrangement & look of a printed page.

Override user: