Issue - Any -Issue 107Issue 106 Issue 105Issue 104Issue 103Issue 102Issue 101Issue 100Issue 99Issue 98Issue 97 Type - Any -Alumni lifeFeaturesBrainwavesCrosswordDon's diaryDownloadInboxMuseoMy room, your roomNewsSchool of thoughtShelfieSoundtrackStudent lifeThis idea must dieUniversity matters Topic - Any -Arts, humanities and societyBusiness and financeScience, medicine and technologySports, hobbies and personal stories Alumni life / “Not everyone is going to like you – and that’s fine. In fact: “Embrace it!” An alumni life: Maud Millar (Clare 2007) swaps opera for operating systems to launch a revision app for students. This idea must die / This idea must die: “Learning styles determine outcomes” Professor Duncan Astle says an over-reliance on adapting teaching methods to specific individuals is misplaced. Features / Best in class Everyone’s path to Cambridge is different and, as a stepping stone to study, the Foundation Year programme is giving outstanding students a chance they might not have expected. Inbox / Inbox: CAM 99 Read the editor’s letter and all your emails, letters, tweets and posts in response to CAM 98. Features / Evolving Origins A former slave turned taxidermist, a governess and skilled translator, an American pioneer of women’s suffrage: Charles Darwin’s prolific correspondence – around 15,000 letters over his lifetime – reveals the rich tapestry of his global network. Features / That’s what I call the 90s Britpop, Girl Power, Mr Blobby, gastropubs, Netscape, champagne supernovas, no frills, Ross and Rachel, cyber cafés, Blair, Cool Britannia, bling, Tamagotchis, Pretty Good Privacy, Maastricht, Clinton, rain on your wedding day, doing the Macarena, Gazza, AOL, Sensation and the end of history. Think the 1990s were frivolous? Think again. Features / Generation Alpha Generation Alpha is set to inherit a world completely unrecognisable from the one their parents and grandparents remember. We uncover what childhood looks like in 2023. Features / City of refuge From London students escaping the Blitz to Ukrainian students fleeing the Russian invasion, Cambridge has long offered a place of safety. Features / A world to you without oppression Imagine, says Dr Mónica Moreno Figueroa, what your life would be like without sexism, racism, fat oppression and class distinction. Inbox / Inbox: CAM 98 Welcome to the Lent Term edition of CAM. The oldest millennials are now parents. Generation Z are graduating from university. So what’s next? Soundtrack / “I found someone I could be serious about, and the focus of music was addictive” Opera singer Gabrielle Haigh (Clare 2010) uses favourite memories to conjure emotions in her performances, and says her time at Cambridge is a rich source. Brainwaves / For true equality in postgrad education, we need a new vision Professor Bhaskar Vira on making postgrad education more accessible. Pages« first‹ previous…5678910111213next ›last »