TCELT research seminar - October 2023

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Research

A talk entitled: Challenges and opportunities for aspiring Headteachers examined through the lens of MMT theory

It is now well established that the pandemic and associated privations had a significant impact on the mental health and wellbeing of children and young people [1-4]. Within this context, the role that senior leaders play in schools in supporting their school communities is crucially important and this formed the focus of a small-scale study drawing on the perspectives of current and former students on the Into Headship programme at the University of Strathclyde. 

The study was conducted in two phases – the initial phase, a survey issued to three cohorts of students; the second phase, interviews and focus group discussions with eight former students, three secondary, three primary and two from the special education sector. Analysis in ongoing and this presentation will focus on the accounts of the three secondary participants in interview. It will focus on the challenges they experienced, the approaches adopted and the impact on their own leadership and sense of identity as aspiring headteachers. At a time of significant turbulence, how these aspiring headteachers negotiated the transitions (both personal and work-related) associated with the pandemic in supporting their school communities will have had a significant impact upon how the pandemic (and associated transitions) was experienced by the wider school community. The presentation will therefore examine this issue through the lens of Multiple and Multi-dimensional Transitions (MMT) Theory [5].  

Dr. Joan Mowat is a Senior Lecturer in the Strathclyde Institute of Education. Her key research interests are inclusion (with a particular focus on social, emotional and behavioural needs), social justice, the mental health and wellbeing of children and young people, transitions and educational leadership. Her most recent research has focussed on the poverty-related attainment gap, the impact of Covid-19 on the mental health and wellbeing of children, and the challenges faced by aspiring headteachers in supporting their school communities during lockdown and in the recovery period, in particular, more vulnerable families. 

Dr. Anna Beck is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Social & Environmental Sustainability at the University of Glasgow, Dumfries Campus. Her key research interests are teacher professionalism and policy. 

Publications

Ding, N.; Skripkauskaite, S.; Waite, P.; Creswell, C., (Eds.) Changes in children’s mental health and parents’ financial stress from March 2020 to October 2022 (Report 13). Co-Space Study.; University of Oxford: Oxford, England, 2023.

UNICEF. UNICEF Data: Covid-19 and children. 2023.

Cattan, S.; Farquharson, C.; Krutikova, S.; McKendrick, A.; Sevilla, A. Parental labour market instability and children's mental health during the pandemic. 23/21. London: Institute for Fiscal Studies; 2023.

Mowat, J.G. Establishing the medium to long-term impact of Covid-19 constraints on the socio-emotional wellbeing of impoverished children and young people (and those who are otherwise disadvantaged) during, and in the aftermath of, Covid-19. In Education in an Altered World - Pandemic, Crises and Young People Vulnerable to Educational Exclusion, Proyer, M., Dovigo, F., Veck, W., Seitinger, E.A., Eds.; Bloomsbury: London, England, 2023; pp. 96-111.

Mowat, J.G.; Beck, A. Rising to the Challenge of Creating Equitable, Inclusive, and Compassionate School Communities in the Recovery Phase of the Pandemic: The Role of Aspiring Headteachers. Education Sciences 2023, 13, 524.

Research Centre for Transformative Change: Educational & Life Transitions (TCELT)
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Yes
Supporting the wellbeing of the school community in the recovery phase of Covid-19

Towards a typology of governance mechanisms in cross-sector partnerships based on multiple agency theory

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Research

We use the multiple agency theory to explain the governance issues in cross-sector partnerships. In doing so, we identify five typologies of cross-sector partnerships, each distinct from one another in terms of the governance structure. We also discuss three problems that occur in these relationships, mainly differences in institutional logic, temporal differences, and free-riding and opportunistic behaviour, as well as how these problems affect each type of cross-sector partnership. These findings make several contributions to the literature. First, this is one of the few studies to use agency theory to examine the governance structures in cross-sector partnerships. Second, our study further contributes to solidifying our understanding of the agency problems arising in such partnerships. Lastly, our study explains that these problems do not affect each type in the same way, leading us to offer more nuanced implications.

Presenters: Jihye, Kim (University of Dundee), Jiwon, Song (University of Edinburgh), Dhruba, Borah (University of Liverpool) 
Host: Dr Felippe de Medeiros Oliveira

Join us on Teams or come to the presentation at the School of Business.

Venue: 

School of Business 
3 Perth Rd -  Room 1.1
University of Dundee 
DD1 4HN 

Microsoft Teams meeting 
Join on your computer, mobile app or room device 
Click here to join the meeting 
Meeting ID: 351 467 328 019 
Passcode: kWdNtJ

Felippe Oliveira
School of Business
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Yes
A School of Business managing and marketing seminar to explain the governance issues in cross-sector partnerships.

Daily Mail University Guide 2025

Caroline Petrie
Submitted by Caroline Petrie on
Scottish University of the Year 2025

Alastair McCall, editor of the Daily Mail University Guide, said, “For its outstanding performance in our latest ranking and long-standing and impactful policies that put students first, Dundee is the Daily Mail Scottish University of the Year.”

Dundee also ranks 10th in the overall league table of UK universities.

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Presenting Patterns

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x-ray diffraction pattern
Public engagement Research Student community

To accompany the current Pattern Play exhibition in the Lamb Gallery, this free online event features short presentations by four researchers from different parts of the University, all involving patterns in some way. Expect a stimulating multi-disciplinary discussion about the role of pattern in our lives and out into the universe! 

Our speakers are:

Anne Keitel (Psychology)

Philip Murray (Mathematics)

Dominic Smith (Philosophy)

Aurora Sicilia-Aguilar (Physics)

Please note - this event was originally scheduled to be in person but due to Storm Babet (an interesting example of weather patterns!) it will now be held online. If you have already booked for the in-person event you will be sent a Zoom link and there is no need to book again. If you don't receive this, or the tickets sell out for the online event, please email [email protected] and we can send you the link.

Find out more about University of Dundee Museums

Free
Matthew Jarron
Curator
University of Dundee Museums Philosophy courses Physics courses Mathematics courses Psychology courses
Book here
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Yes
An evening of fascinating talks from researchers around the University on the importance of pattern in their work
Students Staff

Transitions Community Compass series - September 2023

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Research

Karen Abi-Karam will share her experience as a Celebrant who creates and conducts ceremonies to mark life transitions. In addition to her professional experience, she will offer a personal perspective of the transitions she has (and hasn’t) marked with ceremony. She will then discuss how both professional and personal experiences intersect with her ongoing PhD literature review, as she investigates the impact and value of ceremony and ritual on the transition between menarche (first menstrual period) and menopause (last menstrual period).

Research Centre for Transformative Change: Educational & Life Transitions (TCELT)
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Yes
Professor Divya Jindal-Snape will be in conversation with Karen Abi-Karam.

DXG #1: Thinking the Otolith Sigil

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Title slide: Sit-in Curriculum #3 DXG #1 Thinking the Otolith Sigil
large audience seated listening to a panel discussion
Design and Art

Cooper Gallery is delighted to invite you to the preview of The Otolith Group's exhibition ...But There Are New Suns, the third Sit-in as part of our ongoing programme The Ignorant Art School.

Celebrating the opening of Sit-in #3, the in-conversation event Thinking the Otolith Sigil will feature The Otolith Group artists Kodwo Eshun and Anjalika Sagar and Glasgow based artist and academic Ranjana Thapalyal

Departing from and returning to multivalent readings of that which is encrypted in the sigil of the Otolith Group, the dialogue aims to darken the light of transparency that illuminates the perspectives and the positions of the Group. 
 

Schedule

Doors open: 5.45pm
DXG #1: Thinking the Otolith Sigil (Panel Discussion): 6–7pm 
Exhibition viewing and drinks reception: 7–9pm 
 

Booking

The event is free and open to all.
Book a seat for the panel discussion via Eventbrite. 
The exhibition preview and drinks reception is un-ticketed.

Sit-in Curriculum #3 is conceived and activated in collaboration with The Department of Xenogenesis or DXG, a time space enacted by The Otolith Group. The curriculum of events is an open invitation for interlocutors to think together critically. View future events here.

Biographies

The Otolith Group is an award-winning artist led collective founded by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun in 2002.

Their moving image, audio works, performances and installations are characterized by an engagement with the legacies and potentialities of diasporic futurisms that explore modes of temporal anomalies, anthropic inversions and synthetic alienation.

Approaching curation as an artistic practice of building intergenerational and cross-cultural platforms, the collective has been influential in critically introducing particular works of artists such as Chris Marker, Harun Farocki, Anand Patwardhan, Etel Adnan, Black Audio Film Collective, Sue Clayton, Mani Kaul, Peter Watkins, and Chimurenga in the UK, US, Europe, and Lebanon.
 

Dr Ranjana Thapalyal is an inter-disciplinary artist and writer based in Scotland. Her practice spans ceramic sculpture, painting, collaborative performance, critical and creative writing. Research areas include materiality in art, cultural identity, and the metaphysical self in relation to all of these.  Of particular interest are concepts of self in South Asian and West African traditions, feminist readings of ancient philosophies of the global South, inter-disciplinary and inter-cultural pedagogy. Recent writing can be found in Art Monthly, Nowness Asia, MAP, Panel, and Mrin. In her book, Education as Mutual Translation, a Yoruba and Ancient Indian Interface for Pedagogy in the Creative Arts (Brill 2018) Ranjana suggests that a more resilient original voice emerges from awareness of others than from individualism, and that genuine pedagogic exchange changes student, tutor, and the work of both. She lectured for many years at Glasgow School of Art and now works independently.

About the exhibition

...But There Are New Suns is the first major exhibition in Scotland by the Turner Prize nominated artist collective The Otolith Group; and is the third iteration of The Ignorant Art School: Five Sit-ins towards Creative Emancipation.

Founded in London in 2002 by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun, The Otolith Group practices modes of digital image making, exhibition making and discourse making that seek to activate the chronopolitical potentials of differentiated futurisms.

Visit:
13 October – 16 December
Monday – Saturday, 12–5pm

Read more on our exhibition page.

 

Access

The gallery is on two floors. First floor has ramped access and disabled toilet.

Second floor is accessible via lift and for wheelchair access via a stairclimber. The In-conversation will take place on the second floor. 

Please email in advance if you require lift or stairclimber access so we can arrange support.

Large print versions of the exhibition information handout are available, please ask our Guides.

If you require live captions for the panel discussion please email to request.

Alcoholic drinks will be served. Non alcoholic refreshments available.

All enquiries please contact: [email protected]

Image credits

Header
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, 2022 (film still)
 

Funding support

The Ignorant Art School at Cooper Gallery, DJCAD is supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland. 

Logo block. Cooper Gallery, DJCAD, Creative Scotland, National Lottery Funded
Cooper Gallery
Cooper Gallery Cooper Gallery The Ignorant Art School | Sit-in 3 | The Otolith Group The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3
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Preview & In-conversation | The Otolith Group: ...But There Are New Suns
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