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Researcher in language learning and cultural awareness in children and adolescents with migration background
Universität Konstanz
Konstanz

(part-time 50 %, E 13 TV-L)Reference number 2024/116. The start date is 01.07.2024. The position is available for two years with an option to be extended. The University of Konstanz is one of eleven Universities of Excellence in Germany. Since 2007 it has been successful in the German Excellence Initiative and its follow-up programme, the Excellence Strategy.The Multilingualism Group at the University of Konstanz headed by Prof Dr Theodoros Marinis is recruiting a researcher to work on the project ‘ACT and connect for Integration’ (ACTIN) that has been funded by the European Union under the AMIF program (Transnational Actions on Asylum, Migration and Integration). The candidate will be seconded as 'Chercheur invité' at the University of Geneva.Project description ACTIN is an international project involving the University of Konstanz, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, the University of Strasbourg, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, the University of Geneva, Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, and the NGOs Roscommon in Ireland, Solidarity now in Greece, and Fundacja Wspierania Kultury I Jezyka Polskiego Im. Mikolaja Reja.The aim of the project is to support and reinforce the integration and inclusion of migrant children and adolescents in education and by extension in the society by developing, implementing, and evaluating language and language & content learning activities within schools and informal educational activities within and outside schools. The researcher will develop, implement and evaluate cultural awareness activities and language learning activities involving migrant children/adolescents/families and locals. Activities to be developed capitalize on two existing informal education programs at the University of Geneva (Solidarity cafés and Uni-R) and on current research conducted by members of the ACTIN project on pedagogical translanguaging. Working languages are English and French.

Doctoral Position in Neuroethology
Universität Konstanz
Konstanz

Doctoral Position in Neuroethology(65 %, E 13 TV-L)Reference No.: 2024/102 . The start date is September 1st 2024, or by agreement. The position is initially available for three years. The University of Konstanz is one of eleven Universities of Excellence in Germany. Since 2007 it has been successful in the German Excellence Initiative and its follow-up programme, the Excellence Strategy.The Visual Neuroethology group headed by Dr. Anna Stöckl is recruiting a PhD candidate to study the dynamic visual abilities of nocturnal moths. Our growing lab at the University of Konstanz focuses on how insects process information for flower selection and movement control in varying light environments. We approach these questions using a combination of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, quantitative behavioural methods and computational tools.Project description:Driving along a tree-lined avenue, we have all experienced how the rapid succession of light and shade disrupts our vision. Such conditions push even synthetic sensors to their limits, but many animals master these challenges on a daily—and nightly—basis. Indeed, a high dynamic range is a hallmark of natural sensory environments. For nocturnal animals, artificial light at night makes this range even more extreme, and poses a considerable challenge to their visual system. How then is dynamic visual information processed with the limited bandwidth available in neural circuits? And what role do an animal’s movements, which shape what it sees, play in matching the acquired information to the limited processing capacity? The visually-guided flight of nocturnal moths is uniquely suited for approaching these questions.In this project, the PhD candidate will study the mechanisms underlying vision in dynamic light environments. The elephant hawkmoth (Deilephila elpenor) currently serves as a focus species. We plan to expand our investigations comparatively to other nocturnal moths. To dissect the neural basis of natural behaviour in dynamic light, the project will have a strong focus on quantitative behavioural measurements of the moths’ free flight in different light intensities, using newly established motion-capture tracking in a large flight arena. Depending on the candidate’s qualifications and interests, neurophysiological measurements of motion processing neurons, or quantifications of the natural and polluted light environments of moths, can complement this approach. Integrated into an expanding group in the international environment at Konstanz University, this research project will pioneer our understanding of how nocturnal insects cope with dynamic light environments, including artificial light pollution.

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