Basic Principles of Decolonising Academic Practice - Roundtable
Date and time
Location
Online event
Basic Principles of Decolonising Academic Practice - Roundtable
About this event
Chair: Pro Vice-Chancellor (Learning and Teaching) Professor Julie McLeod
Professor Julie McLeod joined Birmingham City University in January 2020 as Pro Vice-Chancellor (Learning & Teaching) leading on the teaching and learning strategy and responsible for the Directorates of; Quality Standards & Inclusion, Education Development Service and Library & Learning Resources. Prior to that Professor McLeod was interim Pro Vice-Chancellor (Education) at Bucks New University and Pro Vice-Chancellor (Student Experience) at Oxford Brookes University since 2014. Professor McLeod has been a QAA assessor and was an assessor for the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) subject plots for the Medical Health subject panel. She has worked with the Department of Health in implementing Modernising Scientific Careers and was an executive member of the Heads of Biomedical Sciences. She has been invited to speak on a range of aspects related to enhancing the student experience.
Panel
Marva De La Coudray – Director, Teaching & Learning, London Metropolitan University
Dr. Leroy Hill – Director, Centre for Excellence in Teaching, University of the West Indies
LeRoy holds a Ph.D. in Education (eLearning) from the University of Nottingham. His academic qualifications also include a Masters in Instructional Design & Technology from Virginia Tech, Post-graduate Teaching Certificate from The UWI and a Certificate in University & College Administration from the University of Manitoba. Dr. Hill has taught online in the fields of Teacher Education, Learning Design & Educational Leadership. His research interests include Socio-Cultural Activity Theory, eLearning, Learning Designs and Teacher Education and is host of the podcast - “Let’s Talk eLearning”.
Dr. Martin Glynn
Dr Martin Glynn is a criminologist and Winston Churchill Fellow with over 35 years’ experience of working in criminal justice, public health, and educational settings. As a writer Dr Martin Glynn has written for theatre, television, radio drama, children’s writing, and data storytelling. Dr Glynn is currently a lecturer in criminology at Birmingham City University
Privacy notice
By joining this event please note that your name and email address will be visible to other attendees, including Birmingham City University (BCU) staff and students as well as our invited speakers. By joining the call you will be consenting to BCU processing your data in this manner. Your details will only be displayed for the length of the session. BCU cannot accept liability for how others, including other attendees, may use this information. BCU will use this data to allow entry to the event. As we are intending to record the event any contributions you decide to make will be published post event through our website together with other platforms such as BCU social media channels, YouTube and any relevant podcasts; a reminder about this will be provided at the start of the event and you can decide not to contribute if you do not wish your contributions to be published in this manner. BCU will be the data controller of this information, but please additionally refer to MS Teams privacy policy here which covers the collection of personal data, legal basis for processing and the retention of data by Microsoft as this event will be run on Teams. You can also access Birmingham City University’s privacy policy here.
Full links for MS Teams, Eventbrite and BCU privacy policies: