CEPEO Seminar Series - Dr. Alice Badbury & Prof. Dominic Wyse on Reading, phonics and testing: teaching during the pandemic and beyond
Alice Bradbury is Associate Professor of Sociology of Education at the UCL Institute of Education (IOE), and Co-Director of the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Pedagogy (0-11 years) (HHCP). Her research interests are in the relationship between education policy and inequalities in terms of class, gender, and 'race'. Her research examines the impact of policy in primary and early years education with a focus on issues of social justice.
Recent research projects have focused on the role of the priorities of primary schools during Covid (funded by ESRC) and the retention of BME teachers in schools in areas of disadvantage (funded by the British Academy). Alice's latest book, Ability, Inequality and Post-Pandemic Schools: Rethinking Contemporary Myths of Meritocracy will be published in June 2021.
Dominic Wyse is Professor of Early Childhood and Primary Education at University College London (UCL), Institute of Education (IOE). He is President of the British Educational Research Association (BERA), and Founding Director of the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Pedagogy (0-11 years) (HHCP). Dominic is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS), and a fellow of the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce (RSA).
The main focus of Dominic’s research is curriculum and pedagogy. His research has contributed to the understanding the pedagogy of writing, reading, literacy, and creativity across the life-course (e.g. How Writing Works: From the Invention of the Alphabet to the Rise of Social Media - Cambridge University Press; and The Good Writing Guide 4th Edition SAGE).