Research in the classroom

On Friday 7 February, Dr Kirsty Liddiard went to Greenacre School in Barnsley to co-run a workshop for teachers and school leaders on the benefits of research as pedagogy for disabled children and young people in SEN/D schools.

Person drawing in a classroom

On Friday 7th February, Dr Kirsty Liddiard, of iHuman and the School Education, went to Greenacre School, Barnsley, to co-run a workshop for teachers and school leaders from the Wellspring Academy Trust on the benefits of research as pedagogy for disabled children and young people in SEN/D schools.

Alongside Professors Dan Goodley and Katherine Runswick-Cole (iHuman and the School Education), Kirsty has been developing the Living Life to the Fullest Co-Production Toolkit – a key output from their ESRC-funded project, Living Life to the Fullest. The Living Life to the Fullest Project explores the lives of disabled children and young people, but through its Co-Researcher Collective, has developed ways of making research processes accessible to disabled young people as researchers and research leaders.

Working closely with Harry Gordon, SEN/D teacher at Greenacre School, the Research Team are furthering tailoring the Living Life to the Fullest Co-Production Toolkit to the needs of teachers and schools. The team began working with Greenacre School in order to diversify their methods of co-production, extending the work to children and young people with the labels of learning disability and/or autism. Greenacre is a school educating children and young people aged 3 – 19 labelled with severe and complex needs.

Friday’s Research in the Classroom workshop is the first step in sharing the Toolkit inter/nationally. To learn more, please see our project website here and visit the Living Life to the Fullest Co-Production Toolkit here.

Robot reading books

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How we understand being ‘human’ differs between disciplines and has changed radically over time. We are living in an age marked by rapid growth in knowledge about the human body and brain, and new technologies with the potential to change them.

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