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STAFF ACCOMPLISHMENTS

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FOUNDATION STUDIES

FOUNDATION STUDIES

Heather Bailie was a member of the organising committee for VALA Tech Camp 2021 and hosted two online TechEx talks as part of the program. Dr Peter Campbell, JP, AALIA is a Justice of the Peace for Victoria. He serves as Chair of the Student Services Committee of the University of Divinity and is an Honorary Research Fellow in the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, the University of Melbourne. He continued as a member of the editorial committee for Context: A Journal of Music Research, as Treasurer of the Victorian Chapter of the Musicological Society of Australia (MSA), the International Association of Music Libraries, Archives and Documentation Centres (IAML) Australian branch, and Ensemble Gombert Inc. An article written with composer Joseph Twist, ‘Eclectic Experience—Eclectic Style: An Interview with Joseph Twist’, appeared in Take Note: Interviews with Australian Composers, ed. Madeline Roycroft (Melbourne: Faculty of Fine Arts & Music, 2021). A concert review, ‘Big Bach program uplifting’, appeared in The Age (23 Nov 2021), and a reflection entitled ‘Make a Joyful Noise’ was published in the Messenger: A Magazine for Western Australians (Jun 2021). His carol I Sing of a Maiden was sung by the Choir of Trinity College at its carols service at St John’s, Toorak, on 5 December. Peter sings with Ensemble Gombert and the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Chorus, though performances were limited during 2021. Dr Yiqian Katherine Cao serves on the editorial board for System (SSCI indexed, impact factor = 3.167) and RELC Journal (SSCI indexed, impact factor = 1.72). Her co-authored publications included ‘Willing, silent or forced participation? Insights from English for Academic Purposes classrooms’, RELC Journal (2021) and ‘Written corrective feedback strategies employed by university English lecturers: A teacher cognition perspective’, Sage Open (2020). Felipe Casasayas completed a Graduate Certificate in Arts (English & Theatre Studies) at the University of Melbourne.

Professor Ken Hinchcliff continues as Co-Editor-inChief of the Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, which continues to be the top-ranked veterinary clinical journal, and completed his term as a member of the Zoological Parks and Gardens Board and Chair of its Scientific Advisory Committee in June 2021 after 13 years. He is a member of the Zoo Foundation Advisory Board, and member of the Listing Group of the Fédération Equestre International, which advises on drug and medication use in sports horses (Olympics, World Equestrian Games etc). Ken delivered a small number of lectures in the Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences and supervises or co-supervises graduate students from the University of Melbourne. He is a member of the Equine Limb Injury Steering Committee of the University of Melbourne and Racing Victoria Ltd. During 2021, Ken, with 3 co-editors, compiled and contributed to the 3rd edition of the textbook ‘Equine Sports Medicine and Surgery’, to be published by Elsevier in late 2022. Ken is a collaborator on a project investigating respiratory disease in racehorses in Hong Kong.

The Revd Dr Fergus King attended the Fellowship for Biblical Studies meeting in Melbourne, where he presented a paper entitled ‘Friends, Foes or Rivals?: John among the Philosophers’, and the University of St Andrews Biblical Studies Symposium, where he presented a paper entitled ‘‘Duplicitous’ Philosophers? Reflections on Stoic and Epicurean Participation in Ritual’. He published two books, Nuru na Uzima: Essays Celebrating the Golden Jubilee of the Anglican Church of Tanzania, 1970-2020 (North Augusta GA: Missional University Press, 2021), A Missional Introduction to the New Testament (North Augusta GA: Missional University Press, 2021), and five articles/book chapters with Dorothy A. Lee. ‘Lost in Translation: Rethinking Words about Women in 1–2 Timothy.’ Scottish Journal of Theology 74, no. 1 (2021), ‘Hit or Myth? Methodological Considerations in Comparing Dionysos with the Johannine Jesus.’ Biblical Theology Bulletin 51, no. 2 (May 2021), with Matt Brain and Srebrenka Kunek (2021) ‘Aether and Ethernet: Historical Perspectives on Immediacy and Eucharistic Participation in a Digital Age.’ Cursor – Zeitschrift Für Explorative Theologie, GDNT, ‘Of Blood and Black Puddings: Learning of the Importance of Contextual Biblical Reading from the Anglicans of Tanzania’, and with Emmanuel Mbennah, Mecka Ogunde and Dorothy Prentice, Nuru na Uzima: Essays Celebrating the Golden Jubilee of the Anglican Church of Tanzania, 1970-2020 (North Augusta GA: Missional University Press, 2021), ‘A Failure to Launch: Paul and the Philosophers of Athens’ ABR 69 (2021). He joined the editorial board of the Journal for Anglican Studies and was appointed Honorary Associate Priest at the parish of St Alban the Martyr, St Albans. The Revd Professor Mark Lindsay was re-elected for a fourth term as President of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Theological Studies (ANZATS). In February, he was also appointed a Director of the Melbourne Anglican Diocesan Schools Commission. In May, he was appointed to the editorial board of the Journal of Theological Studies. Mark’s publications included: ‘Divine Pastness and the Creation of Hope: The Significance of the Sepultus est’, in Religions, 12.6, Special Issue: ‘Karl Barth’s Theology in a Time of Crisis’, (June 2021). In May, he was commissioned as editor of the T&T Clark Encyclopedia of Christian Theology: Providence and Election. In July, Mark presented a paper entitled ‘Markus Barth, Chicago, and the Inauguration Sermon’ at the 2021 ANZATS Conference. Mark continued his Sunday ministry through the year as an associate priest of St Mary’s North Melbourne. Emily McAuliffe had feature articles and photography published in a number of titles, including The Age, Sydney Morning Herald, BBC News, Tourism Australia’s Connect to Country magazine, Caravan World, Camper Australia and RACQ’s The Road Ahead. She was also elected to the board of the Australian Society of Travel Writers and was named a national finalist in the society’s Awards for Excellence for best accommodation story. The Revd Dr Christopher Porter published his monograph, ‘Johannine Social Identity Formation after the Fall of the Jerusalem Temple: Negotiating Identity in Crisis’ (Leiden, Brill, 2021), three journal articles: ‘“Hic Sunt Dracones” Mapping the Rebellious Social Dynamics of Bel and the Snake from the Daniel and Joseph Competitive Court-tales,’ BTB, 51:2 (2021), ‘Of Sheep, Shepherds, and Temples: Reading the Good Shepherd paroemia on the way to a destroyed temple,’ Conspectus, 32 (2021); and ‘‘All Things to All People’: 1 Corinthians, Ethnic Flexibility, and Social Identity Theory’ CBR, 19:3, and a book chapter: ‘On Choirs, Kwaya Competitions, Muziki wa Injili, and Spiritual Formation: Reflections on Choir Competitions in the Diocese of Karagwe’ in Nuru na Uzima: Essays Celebrating the Golden Jubilee of the Anglican Church of Tanzania, 1970-2020. eds King, FJ, Mbennah, E, Ogunde, M, Prentice, D. He also authored several pieces for broader audiences through TMA, Zadok Perspectives, and EFAC Essentials. Chris serves as a board member for Scripture Union Australia, SparkLit, the Christian Research Association, and the University of Divinity People and Culture Committee. Lyn Shalless joined the Board and Finance, Audit and Investment Committee of Knoxbrooke Inc, a not-forprofit entity operating in the disability sector. Jane Sykes was a panel member for a webinar facilitated by Alexander Horton, Managing Director of Econome, and Trinity alumni. The purpose of the webinar was to educate people on the process of becoming a net-zero emitter and implementing such policy in an organisational context. Jane spoke about Trinity’s journey to becoming carbon neutral.

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