stitcherLogoCreated with Sketch.
Get Premium Download App
Listen
Discover
Premium
Shows
Likes
Merch

Listen Now

Discover Premium Shows Likes

BERA UK Podcast

62 Episodes

38 minutes | Dec 6, 2022
Inclusivity in Contemporary Music Education
This episode of the BERA Podcast explores the role of contemporary music style and practice in promoting inclusivity in music education. Adam Hart is joined by Pete Dale and Pam Burnard, convenors of the AHRC Contemporary Urban Music for Inclusion Network (CUMIN), and Haleemah X, PhD student exploring identity as a Muslim female rap artist. The discussion includes how contemporary music practices can lead to a more inclusive creative education, how the curriculum might accommodate this, and the influence of contemporary music on practice-based research in higher education.
33 minutes | Jul 7, 2022
BERA Podcast Season 4 Review
On this week's episode  Nick Johnston the Chief Executive  introduces some of the best moments from season 4 of the podcast. This episode contains clips of all the interviewees throughout the season.
34 minutes | Jun 30, 2022
Youth Disability Activism - Dr Miro Griffiths MBE
Dr Miro Griffiths is a Leverhulme Research Fellow in Disability Studies, in the School of Sociology and Social Policy, at the University of Leeds. His research primarily explores disabled people’s resistance practices in challenging marginalisation and oppression, and the intersections between activism and policy-making. He is a respected adviser on disability policy to the UK Government, UK Equality and Human Rights Commission, Liverpool City Region Metro Mayor, European Commission, and various Civil Society Organisations across Europe.In today's episode Miro discusses Disability Activism with Nick Johnson the Chief Executive of BERA. The discussion focuses on how to get young people involved in disability activism and Miro's experience as a person with a disability.
33 minutes | Jun 15, 2022
The Playful Academic - Maarten Koeners
Maarten Koeners studies and teaches integrative physiology at the University of Exeter. He integrates insights in the physiology of play and playful learning with his academic practice. Recently he established The Playful University Club, an exciting initiative funded by the Educational Incubator, to form global connections on the creation of holistic pedagogic practices for both students and educators. He aims to enable individual and institutional play and playfulness to foster a culture that supports joyous, authentic transition to the co-creation of knowledge and skills, while counteracting a number of barriers to creativity and wellbeing.In todays episode Maarten speaks to Nick Johnson the Chief Executive of BERA about how to engage learners using 'playful' techniques, while giving examples and the theory behind them.
30 minutes | Jun 1, 2022
The 'Shadow Education' Phenomenon- Achala Gupta
Dr Achala Gupta is a lecturer at Southampton Education School, University of Southampton. Her research focuses on investigating educational issues sociologically. Achala’s current interests include education delivery systems (formal and ‘shadow’) and schooling practices in Asia, and students’ aspirations and transition into higher education in Europe. She has published research on the heterogeneity of middle-class advantage, teacher entrepreneurialism, social legitimacy and the organisational arrangements of private tutoring in India. Her work has also focused on how students are made sense of by policymakers, staff, the media and students themselves in higher education settings in Denmark, England, Ireland, Germany, Poland and Spain.On this episode she is interviewed by Nick Johnson, BERA's Chief Executive on the 'Shadow Education' phenomenon discussing her research using different cultural and class perspectives. 
28 minutes | May 25, 2022
Transitions in Education Post Lockdown- Beth Hannah, Claire Fox, Emma Harvey, Ben Broadhurst, Jonathan Glazzard, Michelle Jayman and Anthea Rose
In this episode multiple and multidimensional transitions in education are reflected on through a post-lockdown lens. Jonathan Glazzard interviews Beth Hannah about developing a framework for compassionate transition while Michelle Jayman discusses with Claire Fox the unique challenges for children transitioning to secondary school during a global pandemic and some of the lessons learned to inform a more emotion-focused approach. Emma Harvey and Ben Broadhurst share first-hand accounts of HE student experiences of the sudden shift to online learning and Anthea Rose concludes with a powerful take home message for all learning communities as they transition beyond lockdown.
30 minutes | May 18, 2022
Moral Understanding and its impacts on teaching and learning- Daniel Vanello and Catriona Card
Daniel Vanello is Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow in the Philosophy Department at the University of Warwick where he is pursuing the project “Shaping Our Moral Identity” (2020-2023). Vanello was awarded his PhD at the University of Warwick (2017) where he researched the role of the emotions in our learning moral value. He was previously Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Geneva (2017-2018) and Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Research Fellow at University College Dublin (2018-2020). His research interests lie in the intersection between ethics and the philosophy of mind and psychology. In particular, he is interested in the question of what moral understanding is and how do we acquire it with a special focus on the role of the emotions, social interaction and communication.Catriona Card is an experienced early years teacher and Religious Education subject leader who currently teaches a Reception class at a large primary school in Scunthorpe. She is a member of the executive of the National Association of Teachers of Religious Education (NATRE) and has presented locally and nationally on early years RE. Catriona is currently undertaking research in the field of RE in the early years and also has a keen interest in young children’s emotional development.In this episode Daniel and Catriona are interviewed by Nick Johnson the Chief Executive of BERA on their research into Moral Understanding and its impacts on both teaching and learning.
30 minutes | May 11, 2022
Inclusive Academic Writing- Gihan Ismail, Anna Robinson-Pant and Pat Thomson
Gihan Ismail is an Associate Lecturer in Sociology at Oxford Brookes University and a teaching assistant in Education at the University of Bath. She is also a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Education and her study explores the experiences of international doctoral students in UK universities, using a framework that draws on the theories of Critical Pedagogy and Critical Race and Capabilities Approach. She focuses on the complex relationship between knowledge, power and ethics.    Anna Robinson-Pant is Professor of Education at the School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of East Anglia, UK. She holds the UNESCO Chair in Adult Literacy and Learning for Social Transformation, working with university partners in Nepal, Ethiopia, Malawi, Egypt and the Philippines. Her ethnographic research in Nepal - Why eat green cucumber at the time of dying? Exploring the link between women’s literacy and development - received the UNESCO International Award for Literacy Research in 2001.  Since moving into UK higher education, she has been active in developing methodological approaches to researching across languages and cultures, and received the BMW Group Award for Intercultural Learning (Theory Category) 2007. Her current research focuses on adult literacy, gender and sustainable development; the geopolitics of academic writing and the internationalisation of higher education. As former editor of the journal Compare, she set up the BAICE/Compare Writing for Publication Programme in 2008 with Theresa Lillis and Anna Magyar. This programme is still running, and alongside mentoring for junior scholars now includes institutional capacity strengthening activities, based on academic literacies research with journal editors, writers and reviewers in the Global South.   Pat Thomson PSM PhD FAcSS FRSA is Convenor of the Centre for Research in Arts, Creativity and Literacy (CRACL) at the University of Nottingham.  Pat is known for her interdisciplinary engagement with questions of creative and socially just learning and change. She is an Adjunct Professor at the Free State University, South Africa; Visiting Professor at the University of Iceland; a Visiting Professor at Deakin University, Victoria and The University of South Australia, Australia and a visiting Associate in the School of Education, University of Western Ontario.  Pat chairs the research group of the APPG for Art Craft and Design. They will publish a major report Art Now later in 2022.   Today’s episode is an edited version of a 50 minute online conversation hosted by Gihan on inclusive academic writing . The guests give advice about submitting to journals, and speak of the pitfalls as women and for people outside the anglosphere.     
31 minutes | May 4, 2022
Children's Voice in Childhood Education and Nursery Provision- Lorna Arnott-
Dr Lorna Arnott is a Senior Lecturer and Director of Early Years in the School of Education, University of Strathclyde. Lorna's main area of interest is in children's early play experiences, particularly in relation to technologies, social and creative play. She also has a keen interest in research methodologies, with a specialist focus on consulting with children and methods derived from pedagogy. Lorna is the convener for the Digital Childhoods, STEM and Multimodality Special Interest Group as part of the European Early Childhood Educational Research Association. She is the Deputy Editor for the International Journal of Early Years Education and Assistant Editor for the Journal of Early Childhood Research.Today on the podcast she speaks to Nick about some of the key challenges and achievements of her recent work. There is a focus on discussing children's voice in research
27 minutes | Apr 27, 2022
Environmental Sustainability- Dr Lizzie Rushton and Dr Lynda Dunlop
Dr Lynda Dunlop is a Senior Lecturer in Science Education and a member of the University of York Science Education Group (UYSEG). Her research focuses primarily on the philosophical and political aspects of science education, and on youth perspectives and experiences of environmental interventions. This research has been funded by, amongst others, the Education Endowment Foundation, the Gatsby Foundation, and the Wellcome Trust.   Dr Elizabeth Rushton lectures in Geographic Education at Kings College London. Her research interests are focused on geography and science education, specifically the professional development of teachers, student participation in research, and environmental education. Prior to joining King’s, Elizabeth was Director of Evaluation for the Institute for Research in Schools where she oversaw the evaluation of school science education programmes that involved over 300 schools and 25 universities.   Elizabeth and Lynda have lead BERAs latest Research Commission into Environmental Sustainability. Their innovative work has included co-creating a state of the art manifesto on the topic. To do this, their commission made five participatory workshops for students and teachers, drawn from the four parts of the UK, who helped co-author the manifesto. In today’s episode they discuss the process  with BERAs Chief Executive Nick Johnson.      
45 minutes | Apr 4, 2022
BERA Youth and Informal Education SIG: Youth Work, Music Production and Measurement
This podcast explores music production as a form of youth work and how the benefits have been quantified and reported. Ian McGimpsey speaks to Frances Howard (Nottingham Trent University) and Simon Glenister (Noise Solution) about how music shapes and structures youth – both constructing and characterising the experiences of diverse groups of young people – and go on to question how these impacts have been measured, and could be measured in future.
23 minutes | Dec 17, 2021
BERA Podcast Season 3 Review
On this week's episode  Nick Johnston the Chief Executive  introduces some of the best moments from season 3 of the podcast. This episode contains clips of all the interviewees throughout the season.
30 minutes | Dec 15, 2021
How children's play has adapted over the pandemic- Yinka Olusoga and Kate Cowan
Yinka Olusoga is a historian of childhood and education in the School of Education at the University of Sheffield. Herr research focuses on the discursive construction of children and childhood in the educational policy, political debate, art and popular culture, in the present and in the past.Kate Cowan is an early years specialist researching children’s play and communication from a multimodal perspective. Based at UCL Knowledge Lab, her research covers areas including literacy, creativity and digital technologies. Kate’s work also involves developing multimodal methodologies, video-based methods and participatory approaches with children. In this weeks podcast Yinka and Kate are interviewed by BERA Chief Executive Nick Johnson, on how children's play has changed over the pandemic.
28 minutes | Dec 8, 2021
Children's literacy and personalisation of reading materials- Natalia Kucirkova
Natalia Kucirkova is Professor of Early Childhood Education and Development at the University of Stavanger, Norway and Professor of Reading and Children’s Development at The Open University, UK. Natalia’s work is concerned with social justice in children’s literacy and use of technologies. She is the founder of the International Collective of Children’s Digital Books that connects research and design in children’s e-books and literacy apps and Chair of the Children’s Digital Book Award that is the first award judged entirely by teachers. Her research takes place collaboratively across academia, commercial and third sectors.On this week's episode Natalia speaks to Nick Johnson (BERA chief executive) on adapting literature to make it more personal for children.
31 minutes | Dec 1, 2021
Neurodiversity in the classroom and LEANS - Sue Fletcher Watson
Dr Sue Fletcher-Watson is a Senior Lecturer at the Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh. Today she discusses her work in neurodiversity in the classroom and her work with the LEANS project with Nick Johnson (Chief Executive of BERA)Find Sues work with the LEANS Project at http://dart.ed.ac.uk/research/leans
32 minutes | Nov 24, 2021
The Impact of COVID 19 on children - Emily Marchant
On this week's episode of the BERA podcast Nick Johnston (Chief Executive of BERA) interviews Dr. Emily Marchant from Swansea University. Emily's research focuses on primary school-aged children and examines the relationship between epidemiological factors and lifestyle behaviours with educational outcomes, using data linkage. She also evaluates school-based interventions and has previously published evaluation research on outdoor learning and The Daily Mile. During Emily’s PhD, she developed and expanded the HAPPEN Wales Primary School Network to a national network that collects and shares school-level health behaviour information with schools. On today's episode Emily discusses the effect Covid 19 has had on children with a particular focus on their health and wellbeing, staff experiences and the potential future effects as schools return. 
29 minutes | Nov 17, 2021
The Work of UCL Centre for Education Policy and Equalising Opportunities - Jake Anders
In this week's episode Nick Johnson (Chief Executive of BERA) interviews Jake Anders. Jake is Associate Professor of Quantitative Social Science and his research focuses on the causes and consequences of educational inequality and the evaluation of policies and programmes aimed at reducing it.  He is also Deputy Director of the UCL Centre for Education Policy and Equalising Opportunities (CEPEO).  CEPEO opened at the beginning of the pandemic and Jake discusses this challenge as well as upcoming projects and the core aims of the research centre. 
21 minutes | Nov 10, 2021
Interview with BERA John Nisbet Fellowship 2021 Recipient Neil Mercer
In this weeks episode BERA President Dominic Wyse interviews the John Nisbet Fellowship recipient Neil Mercer. Neil is Emeritus Professor of Education at the University of Cambridge, where he is also Director of Oracy Cambridge: the Centre for Effective Spoken Communication and a Life Fellow of the college Hughes Hall. Before he joined Cambridge, he was Professor of Language and Communications and Director of the Centre for Language and Communications at the Open University. 
34 minutes | Nov 3, 2021
Cross Community Education in Divided Societies - Joanne Hughes and Rebecca Loader
Joanne Hughes is Director of the Centre for Shared Education at Queen’s University Belfast. She has led more than 20 research projects on these themes and has been awarded research grants from the EU, ESRC, British Council, British Academy, Nuffield, UNICEF, Atlantic Philanthropies, and a range of other sources. Her current research projects explore longitudinally the effect of inter-group contact between Protestant and Catholic pupils in Northern Ireland, and the development and effectiveness of shared education interventions locally and in international settings.Rebecca Loader is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Shared Education at Queen's University Belfast. Her research interests include Education and Peacebuilding, Educational Inequalities and Minority Groups in Education. In September 2021 she won the Postdoctoral award for Citizenship and Outreach from QUBFor this week's episode Nick Johnson (Chief Executive of BERA) talks to Joanne and Rebecca about their research into cross community education in divided societies in Northern Ireland, the Balkans and Israel.
31 minutes | Oct 27, 2021
The Prevent Duty and its Impact on English Secondary Schools: Adam Peter Lang
This week on the BERA podcast we have Adam Peter Lang. Adam is a former London secondary school teacher and school leader. He is now at University College, London, working as a PhD research scholar. He is also an education leadership consultant engaged with a number of projects. He writes and comments in the media on education.For this episode Adam talks with Nick Johnson BERA's Chief Executive on his current research on the Prevent Duty. He explains this with reference to schools in London, Greater Manchester and the south of England
COMPANY
About us Careers Stitcher Blog Help
AFFILIATES
Partner Portal Advertisers Podswag Stitcher Studios
Privacy Policy Terms of Service Your Privacy Choices
© Stitcher 2023