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IOE Early Career Impact Fellowship

Developing a sustainable and inclusive research culture at the IOE through an innovative programme co-created with early career researchers, for early career researchers.

A small group gathered outside the IOE building (Photo by Jack Hobhouse for UCL Institute of Education)

The IOE Early Career Impact Fellowship is a 5-month researcher development programme that provides funding for the award holder to participate in engagement and impact activities. Six IOE early career staff are working with highly experienced members of the IOE’s Research Engagement and Impact Committee (REIC), academics and other stakeholders to enhance their skills and knowledge for research engagement and impact. Impact Fellows are working towards increasing their research engagement with policymakers, practitioners, under-represented groups and organisations beyond academia, aiming to achieve research impact.

By the end of the programme, Impact Fellows are expected to have:

  • Expanded their support networks
  • Gained an insight into best practice for engagement and impact
  • Participated in five interactive and tailored online workshops
  • Applied the learnings to undertake their proposed engagement an impact activity
  • Evidenced a successful professional development activity for career development as part of UCL’s Academic Career Framework
  • Considered how best to embed impact into future research proposals.
Workshops, activities and outcomes
  • Introduction to the Fellowship and overview of Research Impact - including definitions and how impact has evolved
  • Building an Audience and Communicating Your Research
  • Using Co-Production Principles to Engage Under Represented Groups in Research
  • Crafting Written Evidence for Policy Audiences
  • Tracking and Demonstrating Engagement and Impact Success
  • Developing a Narrative and Writing an Impact Case Study
  • Delivering Effective and Inclusive Events

Following the workshops, Impact Fellows begin to build on the skills developed to plan, deliver and evaluate an engagement and impact activity related to their area of research. Activities aim to address a question on the area of policy, practice or public understanding that their research has the potential to challenge, influence or inform.

The IOE Research Development Manager, Tatiana Souteiro Dias, provides 1-to-1 support in liaison with colleagues.

At the end of the programme, the cohort of Impact Fellows work to co-create an event to share their learnings with the IOE research community. Impact Fellows continue to act as impact ambassadors/advisors within their research communities. They will receive a certificate upon completion.

2021 Impact Fellows and outputs

Impact Fellows

Dr Claire Forrest, Department of Learning and Leadership

Claire Forrest

is a Research Fellow on a Nuffield funded randomised controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the efficacy of an oral language intervention called ‘Talking Time’ (PIs: Professor Julie Dockrell, Department of Psychology and Human Development, IOE; Professor James Law, University of Newcastle and Dr Sandra Mathers, University of Oxford). This project targets nurseries in areas of high social deprivation in London and Teesside and trains nursery staff to support language development in children aged 3-4 years.

She plans to use the Impact Fellowship to provide resources to the parents of nursery children in Tower Hamlets, the most deprived borough of London. Together with parents, she will co-create a resource to share knowledge about language development and parents will become ‘Communication Champions’ to ensure that language supporting skills from the ‘Talking Time’ project are embedded within the local community.

Lauren Hammond

Dr Lauren Hammond, Department of Curriculum, Pedagogy and Assessment

is Lecturer in Geography Education, co-leads the PGCE Geography and convenes an undergraduate module for students in UCL Geography department, ‘Geography Education’. She is committed to researching with, and for, children and her research straddles the fields of children’s geographies, children’s rights, geography and education.

Her project will focus on schools in London and Glasgow that serve communities with over 50% of children living in poverty. Using participatory methods, Lauren will engage children in her research, to develop their knowledge of their rights in education and everyday life. She will also collaborate with their teachers, developing their knowledge and skills in research. The project aims to contribute to debates in children’s rights and children’s geographies through examining the intersections between policy, place, education and lived experience.

Jessica Massonnie

Dr Jessica Massonnie, Department of Psychology and Human Development / Department of Learning and Leadership

is a Research Fellow working across the Department of Psychology and Human Development and the Department of Learning and Leadership at the IOE. Her work focuses on understanding how we can best help children to thrive, by considering the influence of the home and classroom environments on their learning and development. She is part of the team on the GCRF UKRI Action Against Stunting project.

Dr Massonnie leads discussions with partners in India, Indonesia and Senegal to profile access to quality preschool education in each country. This work feeds in international debates about how best to balance comparability and the respect of cultural diversity in educational assessments. As part of the Fellowship, she plans to create an infographic summarising the contextual factors and challenges at play when measuring education provision and educational quality across countries, as a helpful tool for policy stakeholders.

Meghna Nag Chowdhuri

Dr Meghna Nag Chowdhuri, Department of Education, Practice and Society

is a Research Fellow and lead researcher for the ‘Primary Science Capital Teaching Approach’ project (PI Prof Louise Archer). This project focuses on developing a social-justice oriented primary science teaching pedagogy. Her research interests include primary mathematics and science education, teacher professional development and issues of equity and social justice.

The project aims to benefit teachers, school leadership, policy makers and STEM education networks. Through the Impact Fellowship, she wants to focus on supporting Initial Teacher Education providers, co-creating infographics that can communicate and translate her research findings for this audience.

Georgia Pavlopoulou

Dr Georgia Pavlopoulou, Department of Psychology and Human Development

is Lecturer in Psychology and Mental Health and founder of the Group for Research in Relationships And Neurodiversity (GRRAND). She is also the Anna Freud Centre lead autism mental health practitioners' trainer as well as a UKCP traineepsychotherapist at Newham talking therapies service.

She is committed to creative participatory health and educational research, co-produced with community members. Her recent collaborative work shares interesting ideas for improving sleep routines that come directly from autistic teenagers employing an experience sensitive (Lifeworld) framework. School mental health leads, educational mental health practitioners, clinical mental health NHS staff and parents will benefit from the digital material that will be co-created with autistic young people as part of this Fellowship, to communicate key messages about autistic young people's sleep.

Rhiannon Thomas

Dr Rhiannon Thomas, Department of Culture, Communication and Media

is a Senior Research Fellow on the Science Learning+ project, , based at the UCL Knowledge Lab. Her research explores how embodied learning theory and research on gestural communication can help inform the design of STEM learning experiences for children, and in turn help support multimodal forms of discourse around these.

As part of the Impact Fellowship, Dr Thomas intends to run workshops for practitioners in both formal and informal STEM education settings, aiming to create a network of practitioners and academics with a shared interest in broadening children’s engagement in STEM by translating embodied learning theory into real world settings.

Outputs

Learning about Sleep with Autistic Teens

Primary Science Capital

The CHAT Project

Action Against Stunting

    2022 Impact Fellows and outputs

    Impact Fellows

    We are delighted to introduce our new cohort of IOE Early Career Impact Fellows. The new award holders are:

    • is a lecturer in Secondary ITE in Science specialising in Physics. Prior to working at IOE, he was a teacher for 10 years in a London school. He is currently studying for a PhD at IOE, seeking to explore how pupils' agency is exercised during physics lessons and, in particular, the anxiety that pupils experience during these lessons. As part of his Fellowship project, John wishes to work with physics teachers at secondary school to investigate how to mitigate pupils' negative emotional responses in physics and science in school.
    • is a Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Teachers and Teaching Research. Her research explores psychological and social factors influencing teachers’ thoughts and beliefs about inclusion. Her current project proposal seeks to understand the main influences on early career teachers’ (ECTs') conceptualisations of neurodiversity and obstacles to teacher agency in the enactment of inclusive practice. She plans to use the Impact Fellowship to increase opportunities for meaningful engagement and co-production with practitioners and communities representing neurodiverse groups. Her aim is to impact policy and practice through accessible dissemination of findings and co-created materials that help ECTs respond to the diverse needs of learners when they transition to complex learning environments.
    • is a Lecturer (Teaching) in Sociology at the Thomas Coram Research Unit, Social Research Institute (IOE). She is also an affiliated researcher in the University of Johannesburg's Department of Sociology. Dr Gaddini is currently a Social Science Research Council Fellow (2021-2022) and is conducting ethnographic research on evangelical Christians and politics in the US. Through this research, she has gained a keen understanding of what political issues matter to evangelical Christians and how their faith impacts their political beliefs. During her Fellowship Dr Gaddini plans to create an executive report to deliver to Christian audiences and host a knowledge exchange (KE) stakeholder meeting with leaders of Christian organisations.
    • is a cognitive neuroscientist in IOE’s Department of Psychology and Human Development and member of the newly founded Motor Executive Cognitive Interaction (MECI) research lab. Her main area of research interest is in the role of the cerebellum in cognition, particularly in relation to theories of ageing. Cultural differences in attitudes towards ageing are often unaccounted for in healthcare. Through this Fellowship Dr Gallant plans to work with older adults from diverse backgrounds to raise awareness of the cognitive health benefits of coordinative exercises, and share lessons learned about attitudes to ageing with healthcare providers. Her ultimate aim is to design a screening tool and intervention to prevent cognitive decline that is sensitive to diverse needs.
    • is a teacher educator in the Department of Curriculum, Pedagogy and Assessment at IOE. Her research interests include teacher education, teacher educator development and business education. Polly is currently writing up her doctoral research, which explores the characteristics of effective workplace learning environments for trainee teachers completing employment-based, or salaried, initial teacher preparation. Through her Fellowship project she will work with teachers and school-based teacher mentors to craft key messages that communicate her findings to audiences in schools, with clear proposals for action. She will develop a digital resource and plain language summary of these messages, with the intention that mentors and policy makers, respectively, will engage with her findings and act to improve the learning experiences of salaried trainee teachers.
    • is a Lecturer in Literacy Education, Reading Recovery National Leader, and co-leads the research and dissertation modules for the MA programmes in Early Years and Primary Education. She is based at the International Literacy Centre and much of her research to date has focused on understanding more about early writing development and supporting evidence-based practice, with a specific focus on review methodologies. Her most recent review, published in Educational Review, co-authored with Professor Gemma Moss was part of the ESRC/UKRI funded Duty to Care and Duty to Teach Project. In this study, they considered what learning there was from other unplanned events like hurricane Katrina for schools in the context of COVID-19, namely the need to focus on care and community – not learning loss. In her Fellowship project she proposes to work with education professionals to co-create a resource that combines their reflections on the research findings and their own experience and to launch this resource via a research to practice webinar.
    • is a Research Fellow at the Thomas Coram Research Unit, Social Research Institute, and is part of the research team for the ‘Young Adults Study’ (PI Associate Prof Sophie Zadeh). The project explores well-being, identity and social experiences among donor-conceived people in collaboration with the Donor Conception Network. Her broader research interests include parent and child adjustment in different family forms, assisted reproduction, and primary caregiver fathers. Through the Impact Fellowship, she wants to focus on creating educational resources that would benefit adolescents aged 16-18 and teachers, creating video clips that will communicate research on donor conception for this audience.
    • is a final year PhD student in the Department of Curriculum, Pedagogy and Assessment and also works as a PGTA on the BA Education Studies programme. Having worked as a secondary school teacher within an academically selective local authority, Francesca’s PhD research examines the lived experiences of pupils who fail the 11+, exploring how their stories reveal issues pertaining to social reproduction and social injustice. During this Fellowship she intends to hold workshops to facilitate dialogue between different stakeholders in the field of academically selective education. Agreed responses and actions to address key issues identified during these discussions will be used to create an infographic illustrating young people's perspectives on this matter, so that their voice informs practice and policy developments.
    • is a Research Fellow at IOE. Her postdoctoral fellowship focuses on an AHRC-funded project titled ‘Eco-capabilities: Supporting children’s wellbeing through participatory arts in nature’. She is also a research fellow and EDI co-lead at the Medical Education Innovation and Research Centre (MEdIC), Imperial College London, where she conducts studies related to authenticity, belonging, and the inclusion of arts and humanities in the medical curriculum. As part of this Fellowship, Dr Moula aims to raise UK Parliament’s awareness of the importance of engaging children and young people with sustainability issues across the whole educational spectrum. Through a policy briefing and stakeholder engagement event, the aim is to promote ‘Eco-capabilities’ to policy makers, ensuring development of ‘Eco-capabilities’ into UK schools.
    • is the programme leader for MA Education (Science) and teach on the Foundations of Science Education module and the PGCE Secondary Science programme at IOE. Research findings from her PhD inform pedagogies that encourage students to connect and relate to their local environments, as well as help empower students to realise the world is ‘beyond human’. In her Fellowship activity, she will work with Kew Gardens and a secondary school, so that PGCE students gain training from IOE and Kew about how to teach in outdoor areas. After this, the PGCE students will plan and teach the students from the Secondary school. She hopes the research and activity will inform and guide Kew educators, as well as be used to support science teachers with ways in which they can enhance the experience for their students once they are back in the classroom.
    • is a Lecturer (Teaching) in Psychology based at the Centre for Research in Autism and Education (CRAE). She currently teaches on the MA Special and Inclusive Education programme at IOE and is involved in research for Autistica’s Discover Autism Research and Employment (DARE) project. Mel plans to hold a public panel discussion about employment and autism disclosure, featuring autistic speakers who will share their lived experience with a wider audience. Autistic people may benefit from hearing these stories and knowing that they are not alone and employers of autistic individuals may recognise how difficult disclosure can be and take steps to support their employees through this process, thus improving the employment experiences and outcomes of autistic people.

    Outputs

    This year'sImpact Fellow's outputs include a range of written, infographic and video resources. See the research outputs

      2023 Impact Fellows and outputs

      The new cohort of IOE Early Career Impact Fellows 2022-23 has been selected following a panel selection process. The fellowship awards represent the impressive breadth and diversity of our research expertise across education and social sciences at IOE and the talents of our early career researchers.

      • works as a Research Fellow for the Psychology and Human Development Department at IOE. Her research interests focus on the neurocognitive processes of reading development for typically developing, dyslexic, and bilingual readers. Dr Antalek is working on a project investigating the efficacy of common access arrangements, such as the use of extra time, a word processor, or a scribe, for secondary students with specific learning difficulties (SpLD). The findings from her research will benefit students and practitioners in understanding how different types of learners use their available resources to implement successful reading and exam strategies. The activity will specifically benefit secondary students who have been identified as needing an access arrangement for their GCSE tests by providing them with an instructional tool to help them to understand and to effectively use their arrangement for exam success. This tool will also help practitioners with implementing and streamlining training of access arrangements in schools.
      • is a Lecturer in Social Psychology in the Thomas Coram Research Unit, Social Research Institute. Her qualitative research focusses on LGBTQ+ identities and diverse family forms, and her PhD research explored the experiences of trans and non-binary adolescents and parents. Dr Bower-Brown intends to create a short, animated video that depicts the findings from her study with trans and non-binary parents to be shared with practitioners, as research suggests that many of them lack understanding about the identities and experiences of trans and non-binary parents. Practitioners would benefit from the project, and as creating an informative and accessible video has the potential to decrease stigma, so the trans and non-binary parenting community would also benefit from the activity.
      • is an Associate Professor (Teaching) based at 911 Centre for Inclusive Education in the Department of Psychology and Human Development, IOE. She is the Programme Leader of the National Award in SEN Coordination Postgraduate Certificate. For her doctoral research, Dr Esposito has conducted a randomised controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of an oral language intervention for children aged 8-10 years with identified language comprehension difficulties. The fellowship project aims to develop a joined-up approach to embedding good practice in oral language learning and to strengthen the links with Inner London schools. It seeks to draw on the knowledge and expertise of families and practitioners to co-produce resources that can be shared widely within the community to increase engagement and improve outcomes for all children.
      • is currently a postgraduate teaching assistant in the department of Education, Practice and Society at the IOE. Simon’s PhD and research interest is in the field of Global Citizenship Education and Internationalisation in higher education articulated within critical discursive frameworks. His activity is a workshop that builds on recommendations from a recently UCL Grand Challenges-funded published report on Cultures of Decolonisation. The project aims to engage Higher Education policymakers and practitioners on how they might integrate themes on decolonisation in their activities and engagements, drawing on recommendations from the report. Beyond the workshop, it is expected that the engagement will inform doctoral training and researcher development more widely.
      • is a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Teacher and Early Years Education (CTEY) and a Lecturer at the Department of Curriculum, Pedagogy and Assessment, IOE. Dr Gao’s current research projects focus on participatory research with young children in Early Childhood Education and continuing professional development for teachers. Her activity will be based on an ongoing project which explores how to engage socio-economically disadvantaged families in education research. Informed by research findings, the long-term goal is to set up an online network platform to connect researchers with schools, NGOs, local authorities and individual families for the purpose of promoting participation of under-represented families in education research. The expected outcomes for the fellowship include the setting up of a website for the network; and holding an online launch event to introduce this initiative.
      • is a PhD Candidate at the Department of Education, Practice and Society at 911 Institute of Education. Her research interests includes issues relating to student happiness and wellbeing, the role of international organisations and transnational corporations in education policymaking, and future and sociotechnical imaginaries of education. Through this fellowship, Evelyn plans to develop digital resources on student happiness and wellbeing that benefit teacher educators and teachers in South Korea. Central to these resources would be the school-level actors’ first-person narratives on the matter of enhancing student happiness and well-being so that their experiences and perspectives inform future practices within schools and policy developments.
      • is an Honorary Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Department of Curriculum, Pedagogy, and Assessment, IOE. Dr Palange is building upon her doctoral research, which investigated Muslim education and activism in online spaces, and has also developed a new research project in the areas of faith education, participatory democratic engagement and environmental activism. Her project will benefit research participants from backgrounds that are underrepresented in the climate movement, such as people from minorityethnic and religious backgrounds, as the educational materials and co-design workshops devised as part of the fellowship aim to help community members connect with each other and co-design environmental initiatives as a community. She plans to work closely with workshop participants after the workshops if they wish to build community capacity to run these environmental initiatives by developing a peer support network to share skills, tools and opportunities for local and concerted local initiatives and/or national campaigns.
      • is a Research Fellow at the Thomas Coram Research Unit, Social Research Institute, IOE. She is a PI on the ‘Developing (language) learning opportunities for precarious migrant workers at HE institutions – charting possibilities, challenges, and recommendations for policy and practice’ project (funded by BERA). For the Fellowship, she is planning to deliver impact activities in collaboration with the project participants to amplify the voice and increase the visibility of precariously employed cleaning staff as well as to provide a versatile platform for engagement for staff, students, and precarious migrant workers. This will include an exhibition/intervention, a website featuring an online gallery of project photographs and an ‘information exchange event’, working towards the development of a culture and practice of social responsibility around improving precarious migrant workers’ rights, inclusion, and wellbeing at HE institutions.

      Outputs

      This year's Impact Fellow's outputs include a range of written, infographic and video resources. See the research outputs.

      2024 Impact Fellows and outputs

      is a Research Fellow for the National Consortium for Languages Education (NCLE) based at the International Centre for Intercultural Studies, at the Department of Culture, Communication and Media, IOE.

      Her research interests centre around language learning and multilingual education in the UK context, with a specific focus on England and Wales. For her PhD research, funded by the ESRC and the Welsh Government and sponsored by British Council Wales, Elin conducted a qualitative inquiry into the beliefs of International Languages secondary school teachers regarding plurilingual education in the new Curriculum for Wales.

      The fellowship project aims to raise awareness of the findings from Elin’s PhD research through publicly available materials in both English and Welsh. These materials will be shared with policy, practice and research colleagues who are thinking about next steps for the Curriculum for Wales in terms of multilingual education and International Languages learning, teaching and assessment in Wales.


      is a social anthropologist based at theUCL Social Research Institute. Sabina is interested in human mobilities between West-North Africa and Europe and the effects of migration policies at Europe's threshold. Through a socio-legal approach, she examines everyday forms of liminality, precarity, and bordering that affect migrant men, women, and children with an irregularmigration status.

      Sabina’s research explores the International Organization for Migration's 'Assisted Voluntary Return and Reintegration' programme from Morocco towards West and Central Africa, and has the potential to benefit migration practitioners and decision-makers, as well as the general public, providing fresh evidence about a return migration programme from an understudied terrain, which can contribute to critically rethinking this controversial policy.

      Through the fellowship, Sabina intends to develop a small portfolio of texts and evidence-based resources including case studies and infographics and use them as a basis for workshops and meetings.


      (UCL Social Research Institute) is a researcher working at the intersection of medical anthropology and epidemiology. Her doctoral research is funded by the ESRC and BBSRC, and explores the biosocial trajectories and experiences of chronic pain during the perimenopause. She has a clinical background in rehabilitation and women’s health so her work has a strong focus on impact within clinical practice and patient outcomes. In addition, Catherine is a research associate at Barts Health NHS Trust working on the representation of ethnic minorities in research and sustainability in orthopaedic practice.

      Catherine’s research addresses the gender inequalities in chronic pain by exploring its intersection with the perimenopause. Her findings have the opportunity to influence clinical practice both in primary care and specialist pain management and women’s health services by providing data and context to chronic pain during perimenopause.


      is a Senior Research Fellow based at IOE's Centre for Longitudinal Studies. Charis' research interests are in social inequalities in health, and particularly in understanding population level trends in obesity and body composition. Recent projects that Charis has been involved in include using the British Birth Cohorts to explore health inequalities in mid-life between the UK and US, and in understanding how experience of infections in early life impact accelerated aging in later life.

      As part of her fellowship project, Charis intends to develop a briefing note on her research on health inequalities, alongside the wider body of work on “generational health drift” in the British Birth Cohorts, seeking to benefit the general public, policy and third sector organisations who wish to advocate for changes in the way the healthcare and welfare systems are funded. This briefing note, alongside an infographic on the same topic, will subsequently be used in an engagement event.


      is a researcher affiliated with the Social Research Institute, IOE. His research project, entitled "Enhancing Mental Health Support for Nigerian and Ghanaian Adolescents in London", aims to help develop culturally sensitive mental health support frameworks, addressing the unique challenges these communities face.

      The research aspires to contribute to reducing stigma, improving access to mental health services, and enhancing the cultural competency of healthcare providers. This could foster a more inclusive and effective mental health care environment, significantly benefiting adolescents' mental well-being and contributing to broader societal understanding and support.


      is a Research Fellow at the Department of Education, Practice and Society, IOE. As a team member, she is now working on the Making Spaces 2 – an international project aimed at developing equitable STEM practices at makerspaces across five countries. She has also contributed to the ASPIRES 3 project to investigate young people’s STEM trajectories. Her research interests include technology-enhanced pedagogy, equitable participation in STEAM, and teacher professional development for technology integration.

      The longitudinal research evidence on young people’s computing trajectories from ages 10 to 22 revealed the issues pertaining to equitable participation in computing, including male dominance, peer sexism, a lack of sense of belonging, high non-completion rate at the degree level, and felling less prepared by A-levels for degree study. Based on the findings and insights, a roundtable event will be organised to yield deeper and more practical understandings of the issues that hinder young people’s equitable and meaningful participation in computing from diverse but interconnected perspectives.

      This event also provides a collective opportunity to foster a meaningful and critical discussion across sectors, with a focus on actions to better support diverse young people’s engagement in computing, resulting in a review of action points. Moreover, the review will be presented in an engaging, illustrative manner through social media, ensuring wide public reach. This is expected to enhance public awareness of the issues and facilitate wider discussion based on the research and roundtable discussion.


      is a doctoral candidate at the Department of Education, Practice and Society at IOE and a Patient, Public, Involvement and Engagement (PPIE) Officer, NIHR ARC North Thames at the Department of Applied Health Research, UCL. As part of the Eugenics Legacy Education Project (ELEP) since August 2023, she focused on investigating and enhancing inclusive concepts for teaching and learning activities.

      The primary beneficiaries of this project include the public, who will attain a detailed understanding of eugenics, and policymakers, who will receive a framework for crafting policies that address historical discriminations within institutions.

      By leading focus group discussions with lecturers and the ELEP team, an informative infographic will be created. This will be distributed to regions with a history of eugenics. The focus group seeks to deepen the knowledge of educators on incorporating the complex narrative of eugenics into teaching, promoting inclusive and thoughtful educational settings. This is crucial for the instruction of sensitive topics, enabling educators and the public to explore strategies for discussing such matters in an ethically and pedagogically sound way.


      is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Longitudinal Studies with a background in social epidemiology and medical anthropology. They specialise in LGBTQ+ health disparities and inequalities across the lifecourse with a particular focus on chronic physical health disparities and analyses using UK longitudinal cohort studies. They are currently researching pathways to impact and policy engagement in longitudinal studies.

      Research on LGBTQ+ physical health can improve health and wellbeing in LGBTQ+ people through identifying issues and points of intervention, informing practitioners and professionals interacting with LGBTQ+ people, and highlighting the impact of historic and contemporary social inequality on health. Through the fellowship, discussions will be facilitated between researchers, policymakers, and people with lived experience to identify important future research and share existing evidence for better decision making.