3 items found in 1 pages
Things worth knowing: Participatory research with children on media cultures and play
Professor John Potter explores how mixed research methods have contributed to understanding the detail of children’s lived experience through qualitative enquiry. He aims to uncover the ‘things worth knowing’ about the details of children’s lives, dispositions and ways of being in the world. Working within the paradigm of the new sociology of childhood, seeing children as being and not simply becoming, John discusses placing their experience at the heart of research and theory building. The projects outlined in the lecture take place in a ‘third space’, in which attempts are made to flatten traditional hierarchies and see children as co-producers of research about their lives. In the era of platformisation, AI, and datafication, John's research, which draws on multimodality, cultural studies and postdigital theory, contributes rich descriptions of children’s lives past, present, and emergent, which speak back to quantitative, reductive, and performative datasets.
75
5/3/2024
Places, people and pageants: Writing and performing local histories
Mark Freeman's Professorial Lecture recorded 24th January 2024 Local history has often been marginalised from ‘mainstream’ academic history, but it has flourished in adult education, and has been at the centre of productive interdisciplinary developments in both teaching and research. It has also been a substantial vector of what is now termed ‘impact’, through its ability to engage local communities in inventive and sometimes surprising ways. In this lecture, Mark discusses the impact of historical pageants on people and places, and the extent to which local historians have participated in it. Introduction: Professor Li Wei Respondent: Professor Georgina Brewis
12
1/29/2024
The PISA results are coming! But should the findings be trusted?
Professor ​​​​​​​John Jerrim The OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) is a major international study of the reading, mathematics and science skills of 15-year-olds across the world. The results are closely watched by journalists, educationalists and policymakers across the globe. Yet there have been recent criticisms of the methodology used by PISA, and debate about whether the results can really be trusted. With the latest PISA results due to be released on 3 December 2019, this public lecture taking place the evening before will discuss some of these criticisms of PISA in detail. This will include key aspects, such as how the PISA sample is selected and whether it is a truly representative reflection of 15-year-olds’ achievement, as well as unusual aspects of the PISA test design.
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12/19/2019