Dr Richard Whewell FÂ鶹AV
I certainly had a busy work life, but managed it by ensuring that my employer knew what I was doing and was able to understand how the results of my volunteering fitted with and helped what I was employed to do.
Soon after starting work at the University of Strathclyde, Dr Richard Whewell could see that its success needed not only top-class chemistry research but also individual attention to its students to help them achieve the highest levels of personal development and employability. He saw this at Oxford and again over 40 years later as pupils started their education at Blenheim Primary School. Alongside departmental work, Richard was Warden of Baird Hall (1982–2004) with 313 students, most of whom were away from home for the first time.
At Strathclyde, he carried out much of the early work on industrial placements and later devised the accepted curriculum for a joint degree in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, meeting requirements for both CChem and CEng.
Following his experience of student mobility as a result of the European Credit Transfer System, Richard coordinated new EU-funded educational links in chemistry with America and Canada and assisted discussions on the Bologna Process in the new European Higher Education area. He spent a memorable time with the Tuning Academy in Georgia and Lithuania, developing teaching, curricula and higher education outcomes in chemistry with a team of experts in other disciplines, which, in Lithuania, he led.
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