<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>myblog | Ian Holmes | Activity</title>
	<link>https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/iholmes/activity/</link>
	<atom:link href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/iholmes/activity/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<description>Activity feed for Ian Holmes.</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2026 04:56:16 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<generator>https://buddypress.org/?v=</generator>
	<language>en-GB</language>
	<ttl>30</ttl>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>2</sy:updateFrequency>
	
						<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">70bc4abdb7fe01a74de5897c74d5eca1</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=209</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2026 20:50:50 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=209" rel="nofollow ugc">Action research project blog: Contents</a></strong>Background to study and Research Question (including Initial thoughts, Ethical Action Plans, ARP Action Plan) &#8211; LO1    Rationale for making languages visible &#8211; LO2    Methods: Guerilla research? (including link to MS Form survey/questionnaire) &#8211; LO3    Methods: A &#8216;critical realist&#8217; view &#8211; both above and below the water line &#8211; LO3    Noticing: Flipping the classroom &#8211; LO4    Noticing otherwise: Narration of the teacher learner &#8211; LO4    So what: What now? &#8211; Reflecting on methods and findings (including FINAL presentation slides) &#8211; LO4    Reference List (Bibliography)    Appendices &#8211; (&#8216;A view from the swamp&#8217; &#8211; Example Consent form &#8211; <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=209" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Action research project blog: Contents&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">0201d5fe1dae94fbb0504e5ae6562a76</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=162</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2025 16:14:44 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=162" rel="nofollow ugc">7. So what: What now? Reflecting on methods and findings</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=162" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/12/image-1.png" /></a> Positioning myself as educator agent of change, as Monbec and Ding (2024, p. 12) suggest, ‘calls for robust theoretical tools’ for analysis, and as Bhaskar (1989, p. 2 in Ibid) argues, ‘change cannot occur unless we understand the structures that operate the events that lead to how things are.’        Understanding that qualitative research is ‘to a large degree an art’ (Tesch, 1990, p. 304 in Gray and Malins 2007, p. 130) was helpful in guiding my approach to data reduction. It is a representation of the raw data ‘in the same sense that an artist can… create an image of a face that we would recognise, if we saw the original in a crowd&#8217; (Ibid). Fryer (2022, p. 366) offers a critical realist approach to thematic analysis that is appropriate for this project, which ultimately ‘seeks to develop causal explanations;’ this being compatible with the stages suggested by Braun and Clarke (2020) &#8211; see figure 1., (see appendix C for data reduction).        Fig. 1 Thematic Analysis &#8211; A Critical Realist Approach (1)Download    Using Monbec and Ding’s (2024) broad ontology of language as resource vs language as rule to frame the responses to the intervention, the key themes range from the facilitative: cognitive legitimacy of the intervention, to the constraining: cognitive illegitimacy, the themes of affective value and reflexivity connecting via sub themes (see fig. 2), perhaps the most significant (paradoxical) intersecting subtheme is the notion of comfort vs discomfort.         Fig. 2 Themes_ data reduction_ causal mechanismsDownload    Whilst a pedagogy of discomfort is more explicitly focussed on the &#8216;pedagogisation of white discomfort within the broader decolonising project&#8217; (Zembylas, 2020), language educators should also ‘explicitly aim to sensitise students’ about social injustice, cultivating ‘empathy, solidarity, hospitality and inclusion’ (Porto and Zembylas, 2020). These were all themes which were evident in the empirical data, and through challenging preconceptions students can develop a deeper sense of interconnectedness with each other (Smeenk, Mayer, and James, 2025). The data shows the affective value for both self and other as well as the cognitive value for learning, the pedagogy of translanguaging being strongly connected to ‘identity affirmation, equity, equality, and decolonialization&#8217; allowing students &#8216;to construct and negotiate meanings&#8217; (Haim and Manor, 2024).     A key limitation of study was data pertaining to the constraint of the intervention being limited to one or two responses. although there was a lot of potential data from some students and course leaders, which could not ethically be used as it was not offered as part of the data collection. This has however, prompted me to adjust the research question to more explicitly include the perspectives of educators (see figure 3),        I will continue to use of a critical realist lens as methodological approach for the future cycle (see fig 4). The EAP classroom ‘is a site of power, agency and multiple meaning makings&#8217; (Chun, 2015, p. 2) and as Bourdieu (1993 in Monbec and Ding, 2024, p. 12) asserts ‘we must provide causal explanations to “make trouble” and “provoke”; that is, to question received categories and unveil the doxic taken-for-granted assumptions of the social world that typically conceal power relations.’         Fig. 4 Action Research CyclesDownload    Here is FINAL presentation 16/01/2026:      FINAL PRESENTATION_ Making Languages Visible_ 16th Jan 2026 (2)Download    (500 words)    References:    Bhaskar, R. (1989) Reclaiming reality: A critical introduction to contemporary philosophy. Routledge​    Braun, V. and Clarke, V. (2020) Thematic Analysis: A Practical Guide. Sage     Chun, C. W., (2015) Power and meaning making in an EAP classroom: Engaging with the everyday. Multilingual Matters​    Crouch, C., and Pearce, J. (2012) Doing research in design. Bloomsbury    Fryer, T. (2022) &#8216;A critical realist approach to thematic analysis: producing causal explanations,&#8217; Journal of Critical Realism, DOI: 10.1080/14767430.2022.2076776    Gray, C., and Malins, J. (2007) Visualizing Research: A Guide to the Research Process in Art and Design, Taylor &amp; Francis Group​    Haim, O., &amp; Manor, R. (2025) &#8216;Exploring translanguaging in academic discourse through an ecological analytic lens.&#8217; International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 28(4), 449–464. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/13670050.2024.2433145" rel="nofollow ugc">https://doi.org/10.1080/13670050.2024.2433145</a>    Monbec, L. and Ding, A. (2024) Recovering Language in Higher Education Social Justice, Ethics and Practices. Palgrave Macmillan    Newman, J. (2020) ‘Critical realism, critical discourse analysis, and the morphogenetic approach.’ Journal of Critical Realism, 19 (5) pp. 433- 455.​    Porto, M., and Zembylas, M. (2020) Pedagogies of discomfort in foreign language education: cultivating empathy and solidarity using art and literature,&#8217; Language and Intercultural Communication, 20(4), 356–374. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2020.1740244" rel="nofollow ugc">https://doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2020.1740244</a>    Smeenk, W., Mayer, C., and James, E. (2025) &#8216;The Empathy Compass for addressing Societal Challenges in Education. A tool for higher education to stimulate, facilitate and assess empathic awareness in multistakeholder collaborations,&#8217; Higher Education Research &amp; Development pp. 1-19​https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2025.2510670    Tesch, R. (1990) Qualitative Research: Analysis Types and Software Tools, pp. 77–111 Falmer​    Zembylas, M. (2024) &#8216;Affect, race, and white discomfort in schooling: Decolonial strategies for ‘pedagogies of discomfort’,&#8217; in Critical philosophy in race a <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=162" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;7. So what: What now? Reflecting on methods and findings&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">aedd3bf113cc0350e16fd4ea2f5413d7</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=150</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 06 Dec 2025 12:59:41 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=150" rel="nofollow ugc">6. Noticing otherwise: Narration of the teacher/learner</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=150" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/12/image-5.png" /></a> Figure 1. Translanguaging LCF Fashion Business School 2025    The first thing I narrated from my position as learner/ noticer, was my access to the European languages, they all had similar forms. Fashion for example, was, in all the European languages represented, a variation of the Greek &#8220;moda,&#8221; highlighting the historical and etymological foundation of European languages – and how this provides Europeans with access to meaning through visual (and phonological) proximity. I was not able to identify any pattern between Hindi, Mandarin, Hebrew, Thai, for example (interestingly, of all the Asian languages represented, Vietnamese is the only one to use Roman characters). Reflecting on the root moda, I narrated my connection to the English mode, the verb and noun form model –it&#8217;s relationship to both the verb to fashion, and its significance to fashion (the noun). I also observed that the French translation for the adjective fashionable – elegant – is also a word in English, with a related (polysemic), but not precisely the same (synonymous) meaning. This prompted me to point out the homographic proximity between French and English.     With those languages for which I do not have access, my focus became what I could notice about the repetition of / or differentiation of characters between noun verb and adjective form, the suggestion of affixes and where they might be in relation to the root word. I then invited the speakers of these languages to explain how it works. I commented that this gives me – the non-literate in the non-Roman script &#8211; some access to the language which I can otherwise only appreciate on an aesthetic level.     One observation I made was that, when we looked at translations of communication – communicate – communicative &#8211; (much like the homographic, polysemic – fashion in English) &#8211; the Mandarin verb and noun is both homographic and homophonic (see fig. 1) . I also learned that, whilst being able to recognize Hebrew – I had never seen it being written – not realizing that, like Arabic, it was written right to left. This created some discussion around how we might read images differently having been conditioned to read text in a particular direction.       I was reacting to what I could see, and as Citton (2019, p. 2) suggests, a significant part of our attentional behaviour is reactive, and this reaction ‘is massively conditioned by the sum of previous impressions and external circumstance.’ My positionality as a teacher interested in how languages work no doubt informed my reactive noticing. However, identifying and reflecting on aspects of positionality regarding what is noticed aims to move towards a non- normative noticing, what Robinson (2022, p. 24) calls noticing otherwise; the practices of both giving and taking notice having potential for change regarding the terms and time of attention (Ibid). The act of asking students to hand write in their own language on a whiteboard was, in part, an attempt to focus attention away from the digitally mediated space and into the classroom space, finding myself as the model noticer, in the hope that the students may find some value in noticing each other&#8217;s multilingual – multicultural identities.     (500 words)    References    Citton, Y. (2019) ‘Attention Agency Is Environmental Agency’ in Waddick Doyle &amp; Claudia Roda (ed.), Communication in the Age of Attention Scarcity, Cham, Palgrave Macmillan, 2019, p. 21-32.     Robinson, D. (2022) &#8216;Ethics of performance and scholarship: Giving/ taking notice,&#8217; Perf <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=150" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;6. Noticing otherwise: Narration of the teacher/learner&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">00ec9e22cdb843f23c9ee680470d86c7</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=149</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 06 Dec 2025 12:54:57 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=149" rel="nofollow ugc">5. Noticing: Flipping the classroom</a></strong>Although the worlds of EAP (English for Academic Purposes) and ESL (English as a Second Language) differ in respect of their focus, my experience of SLA (Second Language Acquisition) has undoubtedly informed my approach to Language Development at UAL. One debate in SLA is that between the idea that genuine learning &#8211; ‘language acquisition’ is a subconscious process, conscious learning having very little impact on actual production or comprehension (Krashen, 1981); and the thesis put forward by Schmidt (1990, p. 131) that consciousness is a useful part of learning because, amongst other things, it focuses on the importance of attention as a concept. This ‘noticing hypothesis’ posits that unless it is consciously registered – input does not become intake in language learning – and more broadly SLA is ‘driven by what learners pay attention to and become aware of’ (Schmidt, 2010). In essence people learn about the things they pay attention to – and do not learn much about the things they don’t (Ibid).      The aim behind my intervention in making ‘autonomous languages’ (Garcia, 2009) visible was less about learning these languages, and more about noticing them – the patterns, the differences, and whether this could help us empathize and understand each other culturally, using language as a cultural lens.     Before implementing the intervention, (after clearing the ethics form with supervisors and course leaders), I briefed the students about the action research project. I told them that we would be doing an exercise that would involve their participation, and my research would involve me asking them about what they thought and how they felt about doing the exercise, and/or seeing the exercise being done, and the product of the exercise. I also told them that, as is the case with research, we did not know what was going to happen.      I knew that I wanted to create a discussion around the product of the exercise, and that this would involve some metalinguistic framing, but I did not really plan anything beyond this. The intervention and the discussion would be an act of discovery both for myself and the learners. Once the exercise was completed and we had a whiteboard which centred on the ‘parts of speech’ forms in English with translations of the other languages of the learners (see example figure 1), my instinct was to focus the learners on what I could see &#8211; from my position &#8211; central to the process (Crouch and Pearce, 2015, p. 62).       The exercise itself was an adaptation of the ‘flipped classroom’ strategy, whereby students&#8217; acquisition of knowledge prior to the class is practiced ‘through interaction with peers and teachers’ in the class time (AdvanceHE, 2017). However, in this instance, the knowledge would be that acquired through the lived experience of the learners: their first language. This also changes the power dynamic between myself and the learners – they are the experts in their own language for which they have access, but I do not, especially those languages that do not use Roman script (See 6. Noticing otherwise) .    (500 words)    References    AdvanceHE (2017) flipped learning. Available at: <a href="https://www.advance-he.ac.uk/knowledge-hub/flipped-learning#:~:text=A%20pedagogical%20approach%20in%20which,Assessment%20and%20feedback" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.advance-he.ac.uk/knowledge-hub/flipped-learning#:~:text=A%20pedagogical%20approach%20in%20which,Assessment%20and%20feedback</a> (Accessed 28 November 2025)      Crouch, C., and Pearce, J. (2015) Doing research in design. Bloomsbury    Krashen, S.D. (1981) Second Language Acquisition and Second Language Learning. Pergamon Press Inc.    Schmidt, R. (1990). The role of consciousness in second language learning. Applied Linguistics, Vol. 11, pp. 17-46.<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/applin/11.2.129" rel="nofollow ugc">http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/applin/11.2.129</a>    Schmidt, R. (2010). ‘Attention, awareness, and individual differences in language learning.’ In W. M. Chan, S. Chi, K. N. Cin, J. Istanto, M. Nagami, J.W. Sew, T. Suthiwan, &amp; I. Walker, Proceedings of CLaSIC 2010 pp. 721-737. Singapore: National University of Singapore, Centre for <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=149" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;5. Noticing: Flipping the classroom&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">057e0fa0a3da4ebb5903bd848853c743</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=139</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 21 Nov 2025 14:15:24 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=139" rel="nofollow ugc">4. Methods: A &#039;critical realist view&#039; &#8211; both above and below the water line</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=139" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/11/image.png" /></a> As a researcher, I need to engage in reflexivity ‘to account for how subjectivity’ is ‘fundamentally intertwined’ with my process (Olmos-Vegaa et al., 2023). A qualitative approach provides an ‘opportunity to excavate’ the evolution of ‘previous frames of reference’ (Nguyen et al., 2023). Moreover ‘ethical reflexivity involves considering the social and political implications of research,’ being mindful of the experience of the participants (von Unger, 2021) &#8211; and other stakeholders. Tensions and contradictory demands create challenges, but as von Unger (2021) notes, a way forward might be found through dialogue with peers,’ but also through ‘dialogue with actors in the field.’      Crouch and Pearce (2015, p. 59) posit that since ‘social processes cannot be directly discovered’ the purpose of research is to attempt to ‘understand those processes through the ‘use an interpretivist lens.’ However, assuming that the ‘world is characterized by inequalities’ the role of the researcher is to ‘explore and attempt to expose’ those inequalities through use of a critical lens (Ibid), and the development of ‘participatory action research’ to provoke change (Ibid, p. 63). I am positioned more centrally in the process – acknowledging that my epistemology is ‘culture – value and history specific’ and therefore I must be explicit about my ideology relative to the design of my intervention and where this position has taken me (Ibid, p. 62).      I am drawn towards a critical realism, with its connection to discourse analysis as its distinction between ‘between the causal power of structures and the causal power of agency’ (Newman, 2020, p. 2). Reflecting on the roots of my research question (see Holmes, 2025a) &#8211; racism and the issue of digitally mediated translation &#8211; I recognize I am attempting to explore the connection between a deeper structural reality and the empirical space above the water – whilst acknowledging that a considerable ontological amount of the iceberg will remain unseen and unknown – see fig. 1.              Figure 1. Adapted from Introducing critical realism. (Wiltshire, 2021)    This image is something I adapted whilst helping students to understand Saunders, Lewis and Thornhill’s (2023) Research Onion – see figure 2.         Figure 2.The Research Onion. [diagram] (Saunders, Lewis and Thornhill, 2023, p.131)​    This also helped me to reflect on how my positionality is situated – and how my previous research fits into this paradigm, exploring how frames in the foreground serve forces in the background &#8211; emphasizing the importance of ideas, which ‘impact the chain of events’ in the evolution of policies (Holmes, 2025b, p. 14).     My current project aims to discover how the mediation of languages might foster a greater sense of inclusion and empathy between students in the learning space and overcome some of the risks presented by a world where communication is increasingly mediated by machines. In my view, these two elements are not mutually exclusive in respect of the tension between systemic power and human agency.      When I think of the roots of the project, I am also cognizant of the routes of multiculturism – as articulated by Stuart Hall (Paul, 2005), and how, through exploring critical dialogues, we might work towards creating a more equitable, sustainable (UAL, 2023), inclusive and less divided space at UAL in the future.     (481 words)    References     Crouch, C., and Pearce, J. (2012) Doing research in design. Bloomsbury     Holmes, I.D. (2025a) IP Unit_ Reflective Report. Available at: https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/07/15/intervention-reflective-report_-fostering-inclusivity-in-the-international-multi-lingual-multi-cultural-university-space/ (Accessed 12 December 2025)    Holmes, I.D. (2025b) ‘Framing COVID-19: ‘How UK government and media narrated the “crisis,”’ Politics and Policy, Vol. 53 (3) https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.70040     Newman, J. (2020) ‘Critical realism, critical discourse analysis, and the morphogenetic approach.’ Journal of Critical Realism, 19 (5) pp. 433- 455.     Nguyen, D.J.,Mathuews, K., Herron, A. Troyer, R.,  Graman, Z., Goode, W.A., Shultz, A., Tackett, K. and Moss, M. (2019) ‘Learning to become a scholar-practitioner through research experiences,’ Journal of Student Affairs, Research and Practice, Vol 56 (4) pp. 365-378, DOI: 10.1080/19496591.2019.1611591     Olmos-Vegaa , F.M., Stalmeijerb, R.E. Varpioc, L. and Kahlked, R. (2023) ‘A practical guide to reflexivity in qualitative research.’ AMEE Guide No. 149. Vol. 45, (3) pp. 241–251       Paul, A. (2005) Stuart Hall: “Culture is always a translation.” Available at: https://www.caribbean-beat.com/issue-71/culture-always-translation (Accessed on 17.03.2025)       Saunders, M.N.K., Thornhill, P., and Lewis, A. (2023) Research methods for business students: Ninth ed. Pearson       von Unger, H (2021) ‘Ethical reflexivity as research practice,’ Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung, Vol. 46, (2)- Special Issue: ‘Reflexivity between science and society,’ pp. 186-204     Wiltshire, G. (2021) Introducing critical realism: Workshop four- analysis. Available at: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFpZYF0dF38" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFpZYF0dF38</a> (Accessed 20 Nov 2025)     UAL (2023) Roots and Routes. Available at: https://millbanke <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=139" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;4. Methods: A &#8216;critical realist view&#8217; &#8211; both above and below the water line&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">753918dd21db7a74d1f95f30599b3439</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=131</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 02 Nov 2025 18:27:05 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=131" rel="nofollow ugc">2. Rationale for Making Languages Visible</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=131" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/11/MA-SFM-07.10.25-5-rotated.jpg" /></a> This rationale attempts to position my intervention within the curriculum (see example SOW- figure 1). The project foregrounds the plurality of languages as a resource for exploring the mediation of worldviews and culture (Ponorac, 2022); considering language from an intersectional (Crenshaw, 1991) perspective, and as an aspect of social justice in the Anglonormative university space (Odeneyi, 2022). Bourdieu&#8217;s (1991) &#8216;linguistic capital&#8217; resonates with the experience of “non-native” (L2) speakers of English at UAL, and how academic and societal &#8216;markets&#8217; privilege English over other languages.     Figure 1. Example SOW (Language Development MA Fashion Design Management)     Example SOWDownload    Teaching and assessment in HE has traditionally focused on the cognitive rather than the affective (Shepherd, 2007). The Language Development scheme of work began with an analysis of learning outcomes and unit briefs through the lens of ‘cognitive domains’ (Bloom et al., 1956; Anderson and Krathwohl, 2001; Krathwohl, 2002) &#8211; see example scheme of work above (fig. 1). However, the seminar skills lessons leaned more towards encouraging learners to participate in group ‘seminar’ interaction with a focus on affective domains (Krathwohl, Bloom and Masia,1964), practising systemic functional language (Matthiesen and Halliday, 1997),‘connecting features of language with the social actions with which they correlate’ (Ding and Bruce, 2017, p. 70) whilst emphasising the empathy and mutual inclusion that is required for dialogic learning to take place (Friere, 2005, p. 90).     Translanguaging optimizes the potential for communication (Garcia, 2009, p.140), benefits both L1 and L2 speakers: a lack of worldview awareness where mastery of our native tongue, ‘in turn masters us&#8217; (Fantini, 1989, p. 2). Our mediation of the world, being exposed to other languages may expand this view and aid participation with other cultural groups (Ibid, pp.2-3). This mediation regards learners as social agents focus on meaning making and communicating beyond linguistic and cultural barriers; all mediation relying on collaborative processes (CE, 2022). Albaba (2025, p. 2) proposes the &#8216;concept of linguistic repertoire,&#8217; which focuses not purely on students’ performance in English but views their existing language &#8216;as cognitive tools that can scaffold both content learning and language development.&#8217;     My intervention therefore attempts to bring the multilingualism in the classroom into focus through viewing this as a pedagogically resourceful and legitimate part of classroom practice which promotes &#8216;greater linguistic, epistemic and culturally (more) open inclusion&#8217; (Odeneyi, 2022, p. 5). The &#8216;rhetorical power&#8217; of &#8216;reimagining&#8217; conversations in the HE space goes beyond teaching and learning (Ibid, p. 7), and this study aims to support both classroom practice, peer behaviours and even institutional change.     Figure 2. Translanguaging fashion and communication            The intervention involves the procedure of activating schemata &#8211; contextualizing key terms: fashion, communication, sustainability, narrative &#8211; through students saying and writing the words in their L1 alongside the English forms (see example figure 2 above). The qualitative research aims to evaluate, from a student perspective, how this procedure could affect inclusivity, motivation and attendance for this non-compulsory class. However, it is a procedure which I feel could equally be explored in other teaching contexts across the university, forming the next iteration of the action research cycle (see figure 3).      Figure 3. Action Research Cycle: Making Languages Visible at UAL    Figure 3. Action Research Cycle_ Making Languages Visible Download    (492 words)    References    Albaba, M.B. (2025) ‘Proposing a linguistic repertoires perspective in multilingual higher education contexts,’ Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education (36)​    Anderson, L. W., and Krathwohl, D. R. (2001) A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Complete Edition. New York: Longman.     Bloom, B.S., Engelhart, M.D., Furst, E.J., Hill, W.H. and Krathwohl, D.R., (1956) &#8216;Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals.&#8217; Handbook 1: Cognitive domain. pp. 1103-1133 New York: Longman.     Bourdieu, Pierre (1991). Language &amp; symbolic power, J. Thompson (ed) (trans. G. Raymond &amp; M. Adamson). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press    CE- Council of Europe (2025) ‘Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR): Mediation. ‘Available at https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/mediation (Accessed on 25/05/25)      Crenshaw, K. (1991) ‘Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color.’ Stanford Law Review 43 (6), pp.1241-1299     Ding, A., and Bruce, I. (2017) The English for Academic Purposes Practitioner: Operating on the Edge of Academia. Springer    Fantini, A.E. (1989) ‘Language and Worldview’ Journal of Bahá’í Studies Vol. 2-2: this paper was presented in Ottawa, October 7–10, 1988, at the Association’s Thirteenth Annual Conference, “Towards a Global Civilization.”       Friere, P. (2005) Pedagogy of the Opressed: 30th Anniversary Edition, (Originally published 1970): New York: Continuem      García, Ofelia (2009). ‘Education, multilingualism and translanguaging in the 21st century.’ In: Ajit Mohanty, Minati  Panda, Robert  Phillipson and Tove Skutnabb-Kangas (eds). Multilingual Education for Social Justice: Globalising the local. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan, pp. 128-145     Krathwohl, D.R., Bloom, B.S., &amp; Masia, B.B. (1964). Taxonomy of educationalobjectives: The classification of educational goals. Handbook II: Affective domain. NewYork: David McKay Co.(PDF) Three Domains of Learning: Cognitive, Affective and Psychomotor. Available from: <a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330811334_Three_Domains_of_Learning_Cognitive_Affective_and_Psychomotor" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330811334_Three_Domains_of_Learning_Cognitive_Affective_and_Psychomotor</a> [accessed Nov 03 2025].    Krathwohl, D.R. (2002) ‘A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy: An Overview’ Theory Into Practice,  Vol. 41, No. 4, pp. 212-218 Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/1477405 (Accessed 11 February, 2025)     Matthiessen, C., &amp; Halliday, M. (1997). Systemic functional grammar (1st ed.)       Odenayi, V. (2022) ‘Reimagining Conversations’ Available at: https://www.arts.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0032/359339/Reimagining-Conversations_FINAL.pdf (Accessed on 26.09.2025)     Ponorac, J. (2022) ‘Culture and Language,’ Available at: https://epale.ec.europa.eu/en/blog/culture-and-language#:~:text=The%20relationship%20between%20language%20and,of%20identifying%20language%20and%20culture (Accessed on 25/05/25)Shepherd, K. (2007) ‘Higher education for sustainability: seeking affective learning outcomes,’ International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education Vol. 9 No. 1, pp. 87-98 D <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=131" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;2. Rationale for Making Languages Visible&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">2d4f27528ddc6301486966d50de1b3cf</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=128</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 02 Nov 2025 15:37:47 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=128" rel="nofollow ugc">3. Methods: Guerilla research?</a></strong>Having moved on from the &#8216;swampy lowlands&#8217; (Cook, 2009, p. 279), I now find myself in the research jungle, where I may encounter unexpected obstacles &#8211; but, thinking reflexively, perhaps opportunities to understand, not only the view of student participants in the study &#8211; but also the tensions that exist between the pedagogy and the institution itself &#8211; at least at course level.      Indeed, I did feel somewhat feel ambushed when I received an instruction to effectively cease and desist with the intervention with one of my groups. The focus on &#8216;translanguaging&#8217; &#8211; despite only being only a small part of the lesson &#8211; seemed to be putting students off from attending. Any activity focused on multicultural community building should take place outside the class time. This in contrast to the generally positive and supportive feedback I had otherwise received from both students and course leaders.       This unexpected direction has motivated me to implement the data collection both pragmatically and strategically. In a previous workshop at LCC, critical friendship had highlighted that need to consider the language ability and comprehension of participants (as largely L2 users of English) of any questions in interviews or focus groups. The language appropriate for any survey would also need to be graded to the extent that all participants could access the necessary response – and be able to articulate this. For this reason, I have decided to advance a volley shot of surveys (see link below*) this designed to reach the maximum range of participants and achieve data saturation (Creswell and Poth, 2016) – especially those who I may not see again in the Language Development classroom, being delivered via Moodle announcement to all the various course groups who had been included in the intervention. It&#8217;s worth noting that following this action I was also instructed not to communicate anything regarding the ARP to the students of particular groups via announcements &#8211; to paraphrase Tyler Durden from Fight Club (1999): the first rule of Action Research is &#8211; don&#8217;t talk about Action Research!     The synchronous data collection would potentially involve a smaller number of participants and would also need to be organized as appropriate to the wishes of the student participants. Where this can form a meaningful learning experience as part of the lesson (an opportunity to apply the seminar skills that we have developed earlier in the scheme of work), and where participants are no longer willing, or able, to engage with this ‘teaching moment’ (O’Reilly, 2025), I will organize ad hoc outside the class time. This also attempts to respect the principles (at least) of &#8216;participatory action research&#8217; (Lenette, 2024).       I hope that the outcome of this research can provide meaningful insights for both learners and teachers. Ethically I cannot use a lot of the potentially useful data, as it was not offered in response to the agreed data collection. In the future iteration of the research, in addition to students, I will also be seeking to understand the attitudes and feelings of educators regarding the intervention.       (500 words)    Here is a link to the anonymous survey/ questionnaire MS form which was sent via Moodle to 3 x PG Marketing, MA FDM, MA FEI, PG Dip FM at LCF:    Action Research Project &#8211; Making Languages Visible in the Language Development Classroom  – Fill in form    References:    Cook, T. (2009) ‘The purpose of mess in action research: building rigour though a messy turn,’ Educational Action Research, 17- (2)- 277-291, DOI: 10.1080/09650790902914241     Creswell, J.W. and Poth, C.N. (2016) Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five approaches. Sage publications.    Fight Club (1999) Directed by D. Fincher. [Feature Film] 20th Century Fox    Lenette, C. (2024) PAR: Participatory action research. August 2024 (Available at: https://moodle.arts.ac.uk/pluginfile.php/2190224/mod_folder/content/0/Lenette%20%282024%29%20PAR%20%28Video%29.mp4?forcedownload=1 (Accessed 25 October 2025).     O’Reilly, J. (2025) Workshop 1: Action research project, 2025-26 PG Cert Academic Practice. London College of Communication, 26 S <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=128" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;3. Methods: Guerilla research?&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">893107b0b56f4ed5bc101c89a7072807</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=124</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2025 10:04:35 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=124" rel="nofollow ugc">Appendices:</a></strong>Appen <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=124" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Appendices:&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">a57f506476bb600be10149bee200be4d</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=121</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 03 Oct 2025 21:07:22 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=121" rel="nofollow ugc">1. Background to study and Research Question</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=121" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/12/MA-SFM-07.10.25-6-rotated.jpg" /></a> Background to <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=121" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">9cd41fc5b118c1b5aa701b13b291e4ce</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=200</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 12 Sep 2025 15:29:47 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=200" rel="nofollow ugc">Reference List (Bibliography)</a></strong>Master Reference List     This reference list includes all texts cited in the blog posts (either in text, figure captions, or in the figures themselves), including the appendices.    Bibliography    Texts used in research development but not cited in blogs or presentation marked orange &#8211; this includes some texts which are cited in presentation slide deck (all texts cited in the main 10 min presentation and the extended discussion slides are listed in the reference list on the slide deck).    AdvanceHE (2017) flipped learning. Available at: <a href="https://www.advance-he.ac.uk/knowledge-hub/flipped-learning#:~:text=A%20pedagogical%20approach%20in%20which,Assessment%20and%20feedback" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.advance-he.ac.uk/knowledge-hub/flipped-learning#:~:text=A%20pedagogical%20approach%20in%20which,Assessment%20and%20feedback</a> (Accessed 28 November 2025)    Albaba, M.B. (2025) ‘Proposing a linguistic repertoires perspective in multilingual higher education contexts,’ Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education (36)​    Alverson, M. (2012) ‘Views on interviews: A skeptical review,’ in Interpreting Interviews, 9- 42, Sage ps://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781446268353    Anderson, L. W., and Krathwohl, D. R. (2001) A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Complete Edition. New York: Longman.     Archer, M. S. (2007). Making our way through the world: Human reflexivity and social mobility. Cambridge: Cambridge university Press.    Bera (2024) Ethical guidelines for educational research, fifth edition Available at: https://www.bera.ac.uk/publication/ethical-guidelines-for-educational-research-fifth-edition-2024-online (Accessed on 26/09.2025)     Bhaskar, R. (1989) Reclaiming reality: A critical introduction to contemporary philosophy. Routledge​    Bhaskar, R. (2008) A Realist Theory of Science. Routledge​    Bloom, B.S., Engelhart, M.D., Furst, E.J., Hill, W.H. and Krathwohl, D.R., (1956) ‘Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals.’ Handbook 1: Cognitive domain. pp. 1103-1133 New York: Longman.    Bourdieu, P. (1977) Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge University Press.​    Bourdieu, P. (1991) Language &amp; symbolic power, J. Thompson (Ed) (trans. G. Raymond &amp; M. Adamson). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press    Bourdieu, P. (1993) The Field of Cultural Production: Essays on Art and Literature. Columbia University Press​    Braun, V. and Clarke, V. (2020) Thematic Analysis: A Practical Guide. Sage    Bloom, B.S., Engelhart, M.D., Furst, E.J., Hill, W.H. and Krathwohl, D.R., (1956) ‘Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals.’ Handbook 1: Cognitive domain. pp. 1103-1133 New York: Longman.    CE- Council of Europe (2025) ‘Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR): Mediation. ‘Available at https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/mediation (Accessed on 25/05/25)     Chun, C. W., (2015) Power and meaning making in an EAP classroom: Engaging with the everyday. Multilingual Matters​    Citton, Y. (2019) ‘Attention Agency Is Environmental Agency’ in Waddick Doyle &amp; Claudia Roda (ed.), Communication in the Age of Attention Scarcity, Cham, Palgrave Macmillan, 2019, p. 21-32    Cook, T. (2009) ‘The purpose of mess in action research: buildingrigour though a messy turn,’ Educational Action Research, 17- (2)- 277-291, DOI:10.1080/09650790902914241    Crenshaw, K. (1991) ‘Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color.’ Stanford Law Review 43 (6), pp.1241-1299     Creswell, J. W. (2013) Qualitative inquiry and research design: choosing among five approaches. 3rd ed. London: Sage Publications Ltd.    Creswell, J.W. and Poth, C.N. (2016) Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five approaches. Sage publications.    Crouch, C., and Pearce, J. (2012) Doing research in design. Bloomsbury    Converse, J.M., and Presser, S. (2011 [1986]) ‘The Tools at Hand  In: Survey Questions,’ Sage Research Methods pp. 48-75     Ding, A., and Bruce, I. (2017) The English for Academic Purposes Practitioner: Operating on the Edge of Academia. Springer    Fantini, A.E. (1989) ‘Language and Worldview’ Journal of Bahá’í Studies Vol. 2-2: this paper was presented in Ottawa, October 7–10, 1988, at the Association’s Thirteenth Annual Conference, “Towards a Global Civilization.”       Fight Club (1999) Directed by D. Fincher. [Feature Film] 20th Century Fox    Friere, P. (2005) Pedagogy of the Opressed: 30th Anniversary Edition, (Originally published 1970): New York: Continuem     Fryer, T. (2022) &#8216;A critical realist approach to thematic analysis: producing causal explanations,&#8217; Journal of Critical Realism, DOI: 10.1080/14767430.2022.2076776    García, Ofelia (2009). ‘Education, multilingualism and translanguaging in the 21st century.’ In: Ajit Mohanty, Minati  Panda, Robert  Phillipson and Tove Skutnabb-Kangas (eds). Multilingual Education for Social Justice: Globalising the local. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan, pp. 128-145    Gray, C., and Malins, J. (2007) Visualizing Research: A Guide to the Research Process in Art and Design, Taylor &amp; Francis Group​    Haim, O., &amp; Manor, R. (2025) ‘Exploring translanguaging in academic discourse through an ecological analytic lens.’ International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 28(4), 449–464. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/13670050.2024.2433145" rel="nofollow ugc">https://doi.org/10.1080/13670050.2024.2433145</a>    Holmes, I.D. (2025a) IP Unit_ Reflective Report. Available at: https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/07/15/intervention-reflective-report_-fostering-inclusivity-in-the-international-multi-lingual-multi-cultural-university-space/ (Accessed 12 December 2025)    Holmes, I.D. (2025) ‘Framing COVID-19: ‘How UK government and media narrated the “crisis,”’ Politics and Policy, Vol. 53 (3) https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.70040     Jackson, J. (ed) (2020) The Routledge Handbook of Language and Intercultural Communication Second Edition, London: Taylor &amp; Francis Group     Kulkarni T., Toksha, B., and Gupta P.A. (2022) ‘Applications of Artificial Intelligence in Learning Assessment’ in Artificial intelligence in higher education ed. Phrashant A Gupta. DOI:10.1201/9781003184157-5​    Krashen, S.D. (1981) Second Language Acquisition and Second Language Learning. Pergamon Press Inc.    Krathwohl, D.R., Bloom, B.S., &amp; Masia, B.B. (1964). ‘Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals.’ Handbook II: Affective domain. David McKay Co.​    Krathwohl, D.R. (2002) ‘A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy: An Overview’ Theory Into Practice,  Vol. 41 (4), pp. 212-218 Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/1477405 (Accessed 11 February, 2025)    Lenette, C. (2024) PAR: Participatory action research. August 2024 (Available at: https://moodle.arts.ac.uk/pluginfile.php/2190224/mod_folder/content/0/Lenette%20%282024%29%20PAR%20%28Video%29.mp4?forcedownload=1 (Accessed 25 October 2025).    Matthiessen, C., &amp; Halliday, M. (1997). Systemic functional grammar (1st ed.)     Monbec, L. and Ding, A. (2024) Recovering Language in Higher Education Social Justice, Ethics and Practices. Palgrave Macmillan    Newman, J. (2020) ‘Critical realism, critical discourse analysis, and the morphogenetic approach.’ Journal of Critical Realism, 19 (5) pp. 433- 455.​    Odenayi, V. (2022) ‘Reimagining Conversations,’ Available at: https://www.arts.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0032/359339/Reimagining-Conversations_FINAL.pdf (Accessed on 26.09.2025)​    Olmos-Vegaa , F.M., Stalmeijerb, R.E. Varpioc, L. and Kahlked, R. (2023) ‘A practical guide to reflexivity in qualitative research.’ AMEE Guide No. 149. Vol. 45, (3) pp. 241–251       O’Reilly J. (2025) Workshop 1: Action research project, 2025-26 PG Cert Academic Practice. London College of Communication, 26 September 2025    Paul, A. (2005) Stuart Hall: “Culture is always a translation.” Available at: https://www.caribbean-beat.com/issue-71/culture-always-translation (Accessed on 17.03.2025)     Porto, M., and Zembylas, M. (2020) Pedagogies of discomfort in foreign language education: cultivating empathy and solidarity using art and literature,’ Language and Intercultural Communication, 20(4), 356–374. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2020.1740244" rel="nofollow ugc">https://doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2020.1740244</a>    Ponorac, J. (2022) ‘Culture and Language,’ Available at: https://epale.ec.europa.eu/en/blog/culture-and-language#:~:text=The%20relationship%20between%20language%20and,of%20identifying%20language%20and%20culture (Accessed on 25/05/25)    Matthiessen, C., &amp; Halliday, M. (1997). Systemic functional grammar (1st ed.)      Newman, J. (2020) ‘Critical realism, critical discourse analysis, and the morphogenetic approach.’ Journal of Critical Realism, 19 (5) pp. 433- 455.     Nunan, D. (1991) ‘Communicative Tasks and the Language Curriculum.’ TESOL Quarterly. 25 (2): 279–295.  Available at: doi:10.2307/3587464. JSTOR 3587464. (Accessed on 20 February 2025)     Nguyen, D.J.,Mathuews, K., Herron, A. Troyer, R.,  Graman, Z., Goode, W.A., Shultz, A., Tackett, K. and Moss, M. (2019) ‘Learning to become a scholar-practitioner through research experiences,’ Journal of Student Affairs, Research and Practice, Vol 56 (4) pp. 365-378, DOI: 10.1080/19496591.2019.1611591     Poehner, M.E., and Lantolf, J.P. (2024) Sociocultural Theory and Second Language: Developmental EducationElements in Language Teaching. Cambridge: CUP. DOI: 10.1017/9781009189422    Robinson, D. (2022) ‘Ethics of performance and scholarship: Giving/ taking notice,’ Performance Matters Vol. 8 (1) pp. 24- 36    Saunders, M.N.K., Thornhill, P., and Lewis, A. (2023) Research methods for business students: Ninth ed. Pearson    Schmidt, R. (1990). The role of consciousness in second language learning. Applied Linguistics, Vol. 11, pp. 17-46.<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/applin/11.2.129" rel="nofollow ugc">http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/applin/11.2.129</a>    Schmidt, R. (2010). ‘Attention, awareness, and individual differences in language learning.’ In W. M. Chan, S. Chi, K. N. Cin, J. Istanto, M. Nagami, J.W. Sew, T. Suthiwan, &amp; I. Walker, Proceedings of CLaSIC 2010 pp. 721-737. Singapore: National University of Singapore, Centre for Language Studies    Schön, D. A. (1983) The Reflective Practitioner. New York: Basic Books.    Shepherd, K. (2007) ‘Higher education for sustainability: seeking affective learning outcomes,’ International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education Vol. 9 (1), pp. 87-98 DOI 10.1108/1467637081084220    Smeenk, W., Mayer, C., and James, E. (2025) ‘The Empathy Compass for addressing Societal Challenges in Education. A tool for higher education to stimulate, facilitate and assess empathic awareness in multistakeholder collaborations,’ Higher Education Research &amp; Development pp. 1-19​https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2025.2510670    Tesch, R. (1990) Qualitative Research: Analysis Types and Software Tools, pp. 77–111 Falmer​    UAL (2023) Roots and Routes. Available at: https://millbankexhibition.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2023/07/19/roots-and-routes/ (Accessed on 17.03.25)     von Unger, H (2021) ‘Ethical reflexivity as research practice,’ Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung, Vol. 46, (2)- Special Issue: ‘Reflexivity between science and society,’ pp. 186-204     Widdowson, H.E. (1983) Learning Purpose and Language Use. Oxford University Press​    Wiltshire, G. (2021) Introducing critical realism: Workshop four- analysis. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFpZYF0dF38 (Accessed 20 Nov 2025)    Yip, S.Y. (2024) ‘Positionality and reflexivity: negotiating insider-outsider positions within and across cultures’ International Journal of Research &amp; Method in Education Vol 47-Issue 3-pp.222-232    Zembylas, M. (2024) ‘Affect, race, and white discomfort in schooling: Decolonial strategies for ‘pedagogies of discomfort’,’ in Critical philosophy in race and education. Routledge​    Zhang, H. (2021) ‘Translanguaging space and classroom climate created by teacher’s emotional scaffolding and students’ emotional curves about EFL learning,’ International Journal of Multilingualism. DOI: 10.1080/14790718.20 <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=200" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Reference List (Bibliography)&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">0701194481e2434dfc0792bbc829d984</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/24/inclusive-practice_-blog-post-one_-disability/#comment-11</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2025 21:43:07 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Jeff. Thanks very much for the detailed comment &#8211; and for the reference to Bordieu (1991) I have had a read of some of the chapters and the idea of &#8216;linguistic capital&#8217; and the subordination of other languages by the hegemonic English resonates with my view of developing a critical literacy in the university space- this is something that I have&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-572471"><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/24/inclusive-practice_-blog-post-one_-disability/#comment-11" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/iholmes/" rel="nofollow ugc">Ian Holmes</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">iholmesPGCert_2025</a> <strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice_ Blog Post One_ Disability</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94" rel="nofollow ugc"></a> Crenshaw (1991, p.1245) highlights the &#8216;need to account for multiple grounds for identity&#8217; in understanding [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">46a335028459aef20833ef16282d9fc4</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/24/inclusive-practice_-blog-post-one_-disability/#comment-10</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2025 21:37:13 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Leila &#8211; Thanks for the comment. Yes, I think that the seeing past these assumptions is something that is likely to be relevant to a great number of practitioners in the university &#8211; and given the proportion of international students who do not speak English as a first language &#8211; this presents a significant communication and cultural barrier to&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-572470"><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/24/inclusive-practice_-blog-post-one_-disability/#comment-10" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/iholmes/" rel="nofollow ugc">Ian Holmes</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">iholmesPGCert_2025</a> <strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice_ Blog Post One_ Disability</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94" rel="nofollow ugc"></a> Crenshaw (1991, p.1245) highlights the &#8216;need to account for multiple grounds for identity&#8217; in understanding [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">f4a00ffedf88683a767f3b416e760a2e</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/05/15/inclusive-practice_blog-post-two_religion/#comment-9</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2025 21:30:17 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Leila &#8211; thanks for the comment. Yes I think there may be possibilities for data gathering that could shed some light on this &#8211; however, I&#8217;m not sure how this would be done &#8211; via student records or by surveying the students themselves &#8211; but something worth thinking about. </p>
<p>Generally my philosophy is to employ empathy on a human level &#8211; being&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-572468"><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/05/15/inclusive-practice_blog-post-two_religion/#comment-9" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/iholmes/" rel="nofollow ugc">Ian Holmes</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">iholmesPGCert_2025</a> <strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=100" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice_Blog Post Two_Religion</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=100" rel="nofollow ugc"></a> Using Crenshaw’s (1991) lens, this blog focuses on how Muslim women (MW) navigate social and academic spaces, b [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">316c74db4872ad809e365bba1d08a631</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/06/12/inclusive-practice_blog-post-3_race/#comment-8</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2025 21:19:51 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Jeff &#8211; thanks for the comment &#8211; and I think you have well articulated the tension between the hard metric and the allegoric/ qualitative. Something that didn&#8217;t occur to me before &#8211; is that this is likely the result of neoliberalism and the New Public Management approach that emerged in the 1980s and 1990s &#8211; in general to  quantify public&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-572467"><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/06/12/inclusive-practice_blog-post-3_race/#comment-8" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/iholmes/" rel="nofollow ugc">Ian Holmes</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">iholmesPGCert_2025</a> <strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=110" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice_Blog Post 3_Race</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=110" rel="nofollow ugc"></a> I was taught to see racism only in individual acts of meanness, not in invisible systems conferring dominance on my [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">fb15c569aedc4a7a7e1475ca1988ab6b</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=112</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2025 12:33:37 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=112" rel="nofollow ugc">IP Unit_ Reflective Report</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=112" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/07/image.png" /></a> This report aims to address:       Retention of Language Development (LD) students at London College of Fashion (LCF)       Translation, Mediation and Cognition       Inclusivity in the “international” multi-cultural, multi-lingual university space.          Contextualization     Regarding my own positionality, and ontology, I am cognizant of my relative privilege – as a white man in my late 40s living in the capital city of an advanced capitalist economy in the Global North, not to mention the fact that I speak English as a first language &#8211; I am, ostensibly, close to the apex of the power pyramid.     However, the murder of Steven Lawrence in Eltham SE London 1993, the consequence of the everyday street level racism of the 1980s and 1990s, and the demonstration that racism permeated institutions and social structures, provoked my belief in anti-racism (Kendi, 2019). “White privilege” often confused with wealth and power, being the “absence of having to live with the consequences of racism” (C4, 2020). I remember vividly the aftermath, the faces of his killers, assured that the system would protect them from justice. The murder eventually resulted in the Macpherson Report (1999), with the promise of “a pivotal moment in the advance of race equality in Britain” (Gillborn et al., 2017, pp. 848-849).      Racism involves both ideological and practical subordination (Golash- Borza, 2016), the synthesis of prejudice and power structures to sustain the dominance of privilege; “white supremacy” being a system which grants protections and power (Saad, 2020). Racism is perhaps less about the measure of social characteristics than the relationship between the dominant and the subordinate (Bhavnani, Mizra and Meeto, 2005), can be covert (Coates and Morrison, 2011), and becomes institutionalized when organizations fail to provide “an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture, or ethnic origin” (MacPherson, 1999, para 6.34). Inequalities may emerge unintentionally (Banaji, Fiske &amp; Massey, 2021) and, in the HE context, examples of systemic and structural racial inequality include gaps in award, retention and progression, and differing experiences of “othering” (Advance HE, 2021 &#8211; also see Holmes (2025a) blog post on race).          Fig 1. Percentage Continuation by Ethnicity (5 way). (UAL, 2025)     UAL data (see example figure 1) is useful in analyzing disparities among home students, however my intervention focuses, primarily, on a demographic, which must also be addressed reflexively regarding race and class. Chinese students axiologically represent global socio- economic superiority over home students given the price tag of their tuition fees being at least 100% more than their home student counterparts. The intersectional lens of social class, overlooked in the breakdown of data, and potentially a factor in the perception and treatment of Chinese students, ironically given the logic of disenfranchisements in Crenshaw’s (1991) thesis of intersectionality.     Anecdotally, Chinese students themselves have indicated their cognizance of socio- economic class superiority over home students. This is further compounded by the data collected regarding different racial groups being orientated by the requirements of the 2010 Equality Act (Gov.UK, 2023), international students absent via the intersectional lenses afforded to the analysis of home students. There is no specific data about the actual number of Chinese students at UAL, yet it is common knowledge that they make up the vast proportion of international students.      One struggle for (non-compulsory) LD is attendance, and one potential factor affecting this may be perceptions around inclusivity and identity. It is a conundrum that through the universal offer, those who are in most need of support may feel intimidated by more competent speakers (including L1) and are then less inclined to attend.      In the multicultural, multilingual space of the LD classroom, Chinese students will usually all sit together, this is understandable from the perspective of a shared language and identity, and not surprising with over 150,000 Chinese nationally, 90,000 of whom are postgraduates, that many should end up spending a lot of time with other Chinese students (Ebel, 2024, p.7). These students disclose that they “want to integrate better” and diversify friendship groups but feel unable to do this; often citing that they feel like they are being treated as sources of revenue (“cash cows”) rather than as valued members of the community (Ibid).      A critical incident observed during a presentation workshop illustrated this exclusivity. There were 8 students – all female &#8211; 7 home (mainly white – but one black British) and one Chinese. The Chinese student sat alone at the front, so I asked the student to sit with the others so that she could participate in group work. However, the home students worked together and still excluded the Chinese student. The refusal of the home students to be inclusive – struck me as being something endemic within the university. This student will be reluctant to repeat the experience – affecting attendance and learning. Students in HE do not acknowledge these microaggressions as being racism, although a deeper exploration reveals that this denial is rooted in the lack of discourse around “‘anti-Asian racism,” and may be obscured and complicated by intersections “with other power axes such as gender” (Yu et al. 2023, p.1700). The exclusion of the student was based on their racialized -“othered” characteristic. Central to this identity is the language barrier, although it is the plurality of languages that may hold the key to building an intercultural space and the mediation of worldviews, not restricted to the acquisition of the hegemonic (colonial) language: English.      Translanguaging and Paraphrasing     Translanguaging is the act of accessing different linguistic features or various modes of “autonomous languages,” to optimize the potential for communication (Garcia, 2009, p.140). However, as Friere (2005, p.90) notes, dialogue cannot exist when one or both parties lack humility. This means that teachers must foster a space where mutual inclusion can occur.      Paraphrasing is an essential skill in academic discourse, both in the production of writing and speaking, for several reasons. AI and machine translation enables generic product but lacks process: the cognitive linguistic synthesis of academic voices. In the context of HE, it is this process which enables students to demonstrate understanding of ideas and discourse, and crucially, enable autonomous learning. It also offers opportunities to explore how the differences between language systems can reveal the plurality of paradigmatic world views. The relationship between culture and language is deeply rooted in how language reflects perspective, where the plurality of ideas results from the plurality of languages in use (Ponorac, 2022).      A “worldview lack of awareness of our own language and language use arises from the fact that as we master our native tongue, it in turn masters us” (Fantini, 1989, p.2). This “Linguistic determinism” can be defined as the system through which we understand and mediate the world and individuals exposed to a second language may develop an expanded vision of the world, facilitating participation with other cultural groups, “expanding qualitatively our social possibilities” (Ibid, pp.2-3). This mediation also has cognitive, social, and pragmatic benefits for first language (L1) speakers of English in engaging in this collaboration in the LD classroom. Learners as social agents focus on meaning making and communicating beyond linguistic and cultural barriers; all mediation relies on collaborative processes (CE, 2022).     Reflection, Action and Evaluation     Through peer discussion I have gained more confidence with the validity of the idea, for example PG Cert Fellow Jeff highlighted how the experience of “non-native” (L2) speakers of English at UAL resonates with Bourdieu’s (1991) concept of linguistic capital, privileging English – and English speakers &#8211; within academic and societal “markets,” marginalizing those who are not. My tutor Kwame also gave me inspiration with how to frame this intervention through examples to my students – in the Ghanaian language of his parents there are no differentiations between pronouns, as opposed to English (where recently this has become a highly politicized issue); drawing on another peer example, the diverse language of colours also provides a way into understanding the relationship between how language(s) can inform our world view.          Fig 2. Language Development LCF Speaking and Listening Class: Student writing Chinese translations of key words from discussion (May 2025)         Fig. 3. Language Development_BSc Fashion Management Class: Student writing Chinese translation of keyword for analysis (May 2025)        I have afforded opportunities for students (only Chinese thus far) to write translations for key words and terms in the whiteboard/ flip chart (a tactile typography outside the digital space). This not only brings the visualization of culture through the visual representation of language into the foreground, but also provides the opportunity to explain the complexity of meanings, and how this might affect our world view (see Figure 2. and 3). Thus far this has been an illuminating process in which students’ culture and language is not hidden but forms a meaningful part of the learning process. This metalinguistic level of discussion also has potential for first language speakers in understanding how language informs their world view, although they will also need to be supported in the metalinguistics required for this discourse.       My idea is based on two activities/ procedures – firstly, using the above to allow students to provide a translation then present their evaluation of the different ways that languages interpret this word, ad hoc during lessons. Secondly, drawing on Intercultural Communication Zine workshops &#8211; (see figure 4 and 5) &#8211; also see Ramejkis (n.d.) and Holmes (2025b), a process of collaborative interaction and production of Zines or posters, where real collaboration and cultural sharing can occur. This is also intended to be a means of exploring dialectical variation both lexico-grammatically and phonemically, applicable to the range of contexts within the English-speaking body of students.          Fig 4. Welcome Week Zine Workshop Chelsea College of Arts (Autumn 2024)         Fig 5. Example of student Zine created at CCW Welcome Week Zine workshops (Autumn 2024)        This intervention will be evaluated cross sectionally using an ethnographic approach of student interactions and qualitative surveys (Saunders, Thornhill and Lewis, 2023) which could yield insights into student&#8217;s perceptions about both the value of the activities and their attitudes towards speakers of other languages – and through the analysis of the collaborative products themselves.      The procedure aims to practice mediation, paraphrasing, translanguaging and expansion of world view, in the production of a cross-cultural artefact – exploring both denotation and connotation in the representation and cognitive significance of language. In 2025/26 I aim to foster a community of discourse where a plurality of cultures and languages can be seen as a gift rather than a burden to the learning experiences of all students.     Word count 1650 (not including title, figure captions and reference list)     List of Figures     1. Percentage Continuation by Ethnicity (5 way). (UAL, 2025)     2. Language Development LCF Speaking and Listening Class: Student writing Chinese translations of key words from discussion (May 2025)       3. Language Development_BSc Fashion Management Class: Student writing Chinese translation of keyword for analysis (May 2025)       4. Welcome Week Zine Workshop Chelsea College of Arts (Autumn 2024)     5. Examples of student Zines created at CCW Welcome Week Zine workshops (Autumn 2024)           References     AdvanceHE (2021) ‘Understanding Structural Racism in UK Higher Education: an introduction’ Available at:  <a href="https://warwick.ac.uk/services/sg/si/diversity/advance_he_-_understanding_racism_report.pdf" rel="nofollow ugc">https://warwick.ac.uk/services/sg/si/diversity/advance_he_-_understanding_racism_report.pdf</a> (Accessed on 12 June 2025)       Banaji, M. R., Fiske. ,S. T., and Massey, D. S. (2021) ‘Systemic racism: individuals and interactions, institutions and society’ Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 82.     Bhavnani, R, Mirza, H S, and Meetoo, V. (2005). Tackling the roots of racism: Lessons for success. Bristol: Policy Press       Bourdieu, P. (1991) Language and Symbolic Power. Edited by J.B. Thompson. Translated by G. Raymond and M. Adamson. Cambridge: Polity Press     C4 &#8211; Channel 4. (2020) The School That Tried to End Racism. [Online}. Youtube. 30 June. Available at: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1I3wJ7pJUjg" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1I3wJ7pJUjg</a> (Accessed on 5th June 2025)     CE- Council of Europe (2025) ‘Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR): Mediation. ‘Available at <a href="https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/mediation" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/mediation</a> (Accessed on 25/05/25)        Coates, R. D., and Morrison, J. (2011) ‘Covert Racism Theories, Institutions, and Experiences Series:  Studies’ in Critical Social Sciences, Volume: 32.     Crenshaw, K. (1991) ‘Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color.’ Stanford Law Review 43 (6), pp.1241-1299        Ebel, C.P., (2024) ‘How can UK universities improve their strategies for tackling integration challenges among Chinese students?’ Higher Education Policy Institute -HEPI Report 183     Fantini, A.E. (1989) ‘Language and Worldview’ Journal of Bahá’í Studies Vol. 2-2: this paper was presented in Ottawa, October 7–10, 1988, at the Association’s Thirteenth Annual Conference, “Towards a Global Civilization.”       Friere, P. (2005) Pedagogy of the Opressed: 30th Anniversary Edition, (Originally published 1970): Noew York: Continuem     García, O. (2009) ‘Education, multilingualism and translanguaging in the 21st century.’ In: Ajit Mohanty, Minati Panda, Robert  Phillipson and Tove Skutnabb-Kangas (eds). Multilingual Education for Social Justice: Globalising the local. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan, pp. 128-145       Gillborn, D., Demack, S., Rollock, N., and Warmington, P. (2017) ‘Moving the goalposts: Education policy and 25 years of the Black/White achievement gap’ British Educational Research Journal Vol. 43, No. 5, pp. 848–874 DOI: 10.1002/berj.3297       Golash-Boza, T. (2016) ‘A critical and comprehensive theory of race and racism’, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, 2(2): 129– 41.       Gov.UK (2013) The Equality Act 2010. Available at: <a href="https://www.gov.uk/guidance/equality-act-2010-guidance" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.gov.uk/guidance/equality-act-2010-guidance</a> (Accessed on 14th July 2025)     Holmes, I. D. (2025a) Inclusive Practice_ Blog Post 3_ Race. Available at: <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/06/12/inclusive-practice_blog-post-3_race/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/06/12/inclusive-practice_blog-post-3_race/</a> (Accessed 14th July 2025)     Holmes, I. D. (2025b) Reflective Post 4: Reflections on ‘zines,’ ‘roots’ and ‘routes’ in the multicultural university learning space. Available at: <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/03/18/blog-4-reflections-on-a-zine-fair-roots-and-routes-in-the-multicultural-university-learning-space/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/03/18/blog-4-reflections-on-a-zine-fair-roots-and-routes-in-the-multicultural-university-learning-space/</a> (Accessed on 25th May 2025)     Kendi, I. X., (2019) How to be an antiracist. New York: One World    Macpherson, W. (1999) ‘The Stephen Lawrence Inquiry,’ London, UK Home Office, Available at: <a href="https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7c2af540f0b645ba3c7202/4262.pdf" rel="nofollow ugc">https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7c2af540f0b645ba3c7202/4262.pdf</a> (Accessed 12th June 2025)      Ponorac, J. (2022) ‘Culture and Language,’ Available at: <a href="https://epale.ec.europa.eu/en/blog/culture-and-language#:~:text=The%20relationship%20between%20language%20and,of%20identifying%20language%20and%20culture" rel="nofollow ugc">https://epale.ec.europa.eu/en/blog/culture-and-language#:~:text=The%20relationship%20between%20language%20and,of%20identifying%20language%20and%20culture</a> (Accessed on 25/05/25)     Ramejkis, A. (n.d.) ‘#amazines workshops 23/24 some feedback and reflections. Available at: <a href="https://artslondon-my.sharepoint.com/:b:/g/personal/i_holmes_arts_ac_uk/EamkKnaSxQBFgL-Q3qqhFwoBJ-fb4adjjaDdGfLH8QV1OQ?e=ouaEsI" rel="nofollow ugc">https://artslondon-my.sharepoint.com/:b:/g/personal/i_holmes_arts_ac_uk/EamkKnaSxQBFgL-Q3qqhFwoBJ-fb4adjjaDdGfLH8QV1OQ?e=ouaEsI</a> (Accessed 25/05/25)     Saunders, M.N.K., Thornhill, P., and Lewis, A. (2023) Research Methods for Business Students: Ninth Edition. Harlow: Pearson     Saad, L.F., (2020) Me and white supremacy, London: Quercus     UAL (2025) UG retention and continuation. Available at: <a href="https://dashboards.arts.ac.uk/dashboard/ActiveDashboards/DashboardPage.aspx?dashboardid=348a5321-e946-47c1-b9b8-aeb5a841d16c&#038;dashcontextid=638684775887265547" rel="nofollow ugc">https://dashboards.arts.ac.uk/dashboard/ActiveDashboards/DashboardPage.aspx?dashboardid=348a5321-e946-47c1-b9b8-aeb5a841d16c&#038;dashcontextid=638684775887265547</a> (Accessed on 12th June 2025)     Yu, J., Rai, R., Lim, M.A., and Li, H.  (2023) ‘The post‑racial myth: rethinking Chinese university students’ experiences and perceptions of racialised microaggressions in the UK.’ Higher Education (2024): 88:1695–1710 <a href="https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-0" rel="nofollow ugc">https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-0</a> <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=112" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;IP Unit_ Reflective Report&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">19d51734193e05d96e8f010a9a072213</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/25/blog-task-1-disability/#comment-3</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2025 08:27:08 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Jeff. I enjoyed reading your post &#8211; which articulates well how the lived experience of marginalization as described in the videos can be understood through the lens of Crenshaw&#8217;s (1990) &#8216;Intersectionality.&#8217; </p>
<p>I think the point that you touch on regarding your own positionality and lived experience of being am immigrant is not insignificant in&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-572123"><a href="https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/25/blog-task-1-disability/#comment-3" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/jdoruff/" rel="nofollow ugc">Jeffrey Doruff</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">Jeff&#039;s PgCert</a> <strong><a href="https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=63" rel="nofollow ugc">Blog Task 1: Disability</a></strong>Crenshaw’s theory of intersectionality shows how peoples intersecting social and political identities like race, gender, sexual o [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">a69e6dc2eeda91a3d444cd8edb7bcb93</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/05/31/blog-task-2-faith-and-belief/#comment-7</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2025 08:27:08 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Jeff.<br />
I enjoyed reading your post. I think you touch on something which is important to understanding the tension between religious freedom and secular governance in saying that &#8220;the religious, the cultural and the social are deeply interconnected beyond academia.&#8221; Also how the dichotomous worldviews: keeping &#8220;religion out of my state,&#8221; and&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-572121"><a href="https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/05/31/blog-task-2-faith-and-belief/#comment-7" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/jdoruff/" rel="nofollow ugc">Jeffrey Doruff</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">Jeff&#039;s PgCert</a> <strong><a href="https://jeffdoruff.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=66" rel="nofollow ugc">Blog Task 2: Faith and Belief</a></strong>Reflecting on Rekis’ (2023) paper, the dominant religion of a society often sets the standard for acceptable b [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">4a21b5855fe7e16917ff9ebe47d5bdd5</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://eduarts.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/23/disability-and-intersectionality-unpacking-layered-inequalities/#comment-2</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jun 2025 11:08:32 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a well articulated exploration of the lived experience of &#8216;disability&#8217; of the individuals from the videos using the lens of Crenshaw&#8217;s (1991) &#8216;intersectionality.&#8217; I would agree that the lack of an intersectional lens through which to analyze the data presented in the UAL dashboard presents limitations, especially regarding any meaningful&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-569619"><a href="https://eduarts.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/04/23/disability-and-intersectionality-unpacking-layered-inequalities/#comment-2" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/abodea/" rel="nofollow ugc">Andrada Bodea</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://eduarts.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">EduArts</a> <strong><a href="https://eduarts.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=113" rel="nofollow ugc">Disability and Intersectionality – Unpacking Layered Inequalities</a></strong><a href="https://eduarts.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=113" rel="nofollow ugc"></a> Kimberlé Crenshaw’s theory of intersectionality helps us understand how identities like race [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">2f5dce015f83344e2242acc1361045c5</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=110</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 12 Jun 2025 22:00:31 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=110" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice_Blog Post 3_Race</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=110" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/06/image.png" /></a> I was taught to see racism only in individual acts of meanness, not in invisible systems conferring dominance on my group.                                                        (McIntosh, 1989)     I remember vividly the aftermath of the murder of Steven Lawrence in Eltham SE London 1993, my heart sank seeing the smiling faces of his killers, secure in the knowledge that the system would prevent them being brought to justice. Steven would have been a little bit older than me, and for me the injustice (just as with any murder) was the life that he would have lived denied by his killers.      The murder of George Floyd in 2020 by police in the US provoked worldwide ‘Black Lives Matter’ (BLM) protests which served as a catalyst for Equality Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) initiatives. However, despite the billions invested (8 billion in US for example) in EDI its effectiveness in driving change is questionable (Sadiq, 2023). The racist murder of Steven Lawrence eventually resulted in the Macpherson Report (1999), hailed as &#8216;a pivotal moment in the advance of race equality in Britain&#8217; (Gillmore et al., 2017, pp. 848-849). However, the actual progress made since is perhaps equally disheartening.      Racism refers to both ideological belief of a hierarchy of races and those practices which subordinate certain racial groups (Golash- Borza, 2016). The combination of prejudice and power structures sustain the dominance of white privilege and negatively impact the subordinate groups, ‘white supremacy’ being a system which grants white people unearned privileges, protections and power (Saad, 2020). Bhavnani, Mizra and Meeto (2005) argue that racism is less about the measure of social characteristics and is more about the relationship between the dominant and the subordinate. It can also be covert (Coates and Morrison, 2011) and becomes institutionalized when organizations fail to provide &#8216;an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture, or ethnic origin&#8217; (Machpherson, 1999, para 6.34).      Systemic inequalities may emerge unintentionally and unconsciously (Banaji, Fiske &amp; Massey, 2021) and, in the HE context, examples of systemic and structural racial inequality include gaps in award, retention and progression, under representation of staff, experiences and representation relating to learning, curriculum and research; and differing experiences of ‘othering’, belonging and safety (Advance HE, 2021).     Using the analytic framework of Critical Race Theory (CRT), Gillmore et al. (2017) explore the impacts on education of the murder of Steven Lawrence and argue that policy interventions have actually widened the gap maintaining Black disadvantage; white students being at least 150% more likely to reach the benchmark, concluding that the negative impacts of policies are much more defined than any reduction in inequality. Likewise, Garrett (2024, p.2) drawing on Advanced HE (2022) data and using a CRT lens finds that whilst the number of white students progressing to professor level increased year on year, the BAME students and academics saw a corresponding decrease. Applying an intersectional lens, the disparity between white and black females is even greater, there being only 61 out of almost 23,000 professors (Ibid, p.1).      In the education context, &#8216;policy is always political&#8217; producing the discourse of success and failure, which ultimately provides advantage for some students over others (Bradbury, 2019, p. 256), and whilst the ‘leaky academic pipeline’ is examined at the PhD level by Garett (2024), the start point of this pipeline is primary school entry. A ‘datafied system’ perpetuates social inequalities and white dominance through systematic underestimation of English as an Additional Language (EAL) children, many from minoritized communities (Bradbury, 2019, p. 255). There is a tacit intentionality of policy makers in the design of baseline assessments which disadvantages EAL (often racialized) students from the beginning (Ibid). This will perhaps become more obvious policy in future, a new Reform- led council &#8216;DOGE&#8217; team in Kent aims to get rid of all English as a Second or Other Language (ESOL) teaching provision and have immigrant children use Duolingo (Holl-Allen, 2025).      Whilst the UAL data shows, for example, comparative data between continuation by ethnicity (see Fig 1) it does not take account of first language, which may offer a more intersectional lens to the ‘leaky pipeline.’         Fig 1. Percentage Continuation by Ethnicity (5 way). (UAL, 2025)     It could also be argued that academia stubbornly refuses to acknowledge its complicity in the reproduction of racial injustice and the recreation of inequality (Warmington, 2018). For example, white Professor James Orr (2022) of Cambridge university, takes aim at Advance HE initiatives such as the Athena Swan and Race Equality Charter, which oblige Universities to “make big structural top-down changes” to teaching, research, appointments, and admissions (significantly the two academics interviewed for this film for the Telegraph are not white).      Professor Arad Ahmed suggests that the de facto impacts have created an oppressive environment for academics and “have not been helpful for free speech” maintaining that there is plenty of evidence that implicit bias training “forced on staff,” has no impact, and that anti racism training is worse “as it pushes a particular ideology” (Ibid). Dr Vincent Harriman challenges the claim of the Co-chair of Racial Governance Committe that there is substantial evidence of systemic racism which all universities, institutionally, perpetuate, citing five reports of racism in five years, and based on this framing a charity turning universities “woke,” Orr suggests that any future award from advanced HE should be thrown straight in the Cam (Ibid).       It is worth considering that “white privilege” is often confused with wealth and power, however, in reality, it is the “absence of having to live with the consequences of racism” and whilst overt acts of racist violence and murder can provoke catalysts for change, actual systemic change is resisted by white hegemony whilst simultaneously denying that racism even exists, or that attempts to confront racism are in fact racist themselves &#8211; just take a look at the comments to the Channel 4 (2020) video cited above.     References     AdvanceHE (2021) ‘Understanding Structural Racism in UK Higher Education: an introduction’ Available at:  https://warwick.ac.uk/services/sg/si/diversity/advance_he_-_understanding_racism_report.pdf (Accessed on 12 June 2025)     AdvanceHE. (2022) ‘Equality in Higher Education: Statistical Reports 2022’ Available at: <a href="https://www.advance-he.ac.uk/knowledge-hub/equality-higher-education-statistical-reports-2022" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.advance-he.ac.uk/knowledge-hub/equality-higher-education-statistical-reports-2022</a> (Accessed on 12th June 2025)     Banaji, M. R., Fiske. ,S. T., and Massey, D. S. (2021) ‘Systemic racism: individuals and interactions, institutions and society’ Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 82.        Bhavnani, R, Mirza, H S, and Meetoo, V. (2005). Tackling the roots of racism: Lessons for success. Policy Press     Bradbury, A., (2020) ‘A critical race theory framework for education policy analysis: The case of bilingual learners and assessment policy in England.’ Race Ethnicity and Education, 23(2), pp.241-260     Channel 4. (2020) The School That Tried to End Racism. [Online}. Youtube. 30 June. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1I3wJ7pJUjg  (Accessed on 5th June)     Coates, R. D., and Morrison, J. (2011) ‘Covert Racism Theories, Institutions, and Experiences Series:  Studies’ in Critical Social Sciences, Volume: 32.        Garrett, R. (2024) ‘Racism shapes careers: career trajectories and imagined futures of racialised minority PhDs in UK higher education.’ Globalisation, Societies and Education, pp.1–15.       Gillborn, D., Demack, S., Rollock, N., and Warmington, P. (2017) ‘Moving the goalposts: Education policy and 25 years of the Black/White achievement gap’ British Educational Research Journal Vol. 43, No. 5, pp. 848–874 DOI: 10.1002/berj.3297     Golash-Boza, T. (2016). ‘A critical and comprehensive theory of race and racism’, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, 2(2): 129– 41.     Holl-Allen, G. (2025) English classes for migrants face the axe under Reform-led council Available at: <a href="https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/06/05/english-classes-for-migrants-face-the-axe-reform-council/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/06/05/english-classes-for-migrants-face-the-axe-reform-council/</a> (Accessed on 12th June 2025)      Macpherson, W. (1999) ‘The Stephen Lawrence Inquiry,’ London, UK Home Office, Available at: <a href="https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7c2af540f0b645ba3c7202/4262.pdf" rel="nofollow ugc">https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7c2af540f0b645ba3c7202/4262.pdf</a> (Accessed 12th June 2025)     McIntosh, P. (1989) ‘White privilege: unpacking the invisible knapsack.’ Peace and Freedom. Available at: <a href="https://med.umn.edu/sites/med.umn.edu/files/2022-12/White-Privilege_McIntosh-1989.pdf" rel="nofollow ugc">https://med.umn.edu/sites/med.umn.edu/files/2022-12/White-Privilege_McIntosh-1989.pdf</a> (Accessed on 5 June 2025)     Orr, J. (2022) Revealed: The charity turning UK universities woke. The Telegraph [Online]. Youtube. 5 August. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRM6vOPTjuU     Sadiq, A. (2023) Diversity, Equity &amp; Inclusion. Learning how to get it right. TEDx [Online}. Youtube. 2 March. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HR4wz1b54hw       UAL (2025) UG retention and continuation. Available at: <a href="https://dashboards.arts.ac.uk/dashboard/ActiveDashboards/DashboardPage.aspx?dashboardid=348a5321-e946-47c1-b9b8-aeb5a841d16c&#038;dashcontextid=638684775887265547" rel="nofollow ugc">https://dashboards.arts.ac.uk/dashboard/ActiveDashboards/DashboardPage.aspx?dashboardid=348a5321-e946-47c1-b9b8-aeb5a841d16c&#038;dashcontextid=638684775887265547</a> (Accessed on 12th June 2025)     Warmington <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=110" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Inclusive Practice_Blog Post 3_Race&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">493e19bafcc49b35fc4bf91ae3ff17bf</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes posted a new activity comment</title>
				<link>https://ldtacademicpractice.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/05/22/blog-task-1-disability/#comment-2</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 26 May 2025 20:31:19 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Leila. A great post which articulates the issue well regarding the limitations of the &#8216;medical model&#8217; in addressing disability in the HE context &#8211; which “focuses on the impairment and what can be done to ‘fix’ the disabled person or provide special services for them as an individual” (PHSO, n.d.) rather than adapting the physical and social&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-566352"><a href="https://ldtacademicpractice.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/05/22/blog-task-1-disability/#comment-2" rel="nofollow ugc">Read more</a></span></p>
				<strong>In reply to</strong> -
				<a href="https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/members/lduffytetzlaff/" rel="nofollow ugc">Leila Duffy-Tetzlaff</a> wrote a new post on the site <a href="https://ldtacademicpractice.myblog.arts.ac.uk" rel="nofollow ugc">ldtacademicpractice</a> <strong><a href="https://ldtacademicpractice.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=41" rel="nofollow ugc">Blog Task 1: Disability</a></strong><a href="https://ldtacademicpractice.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=41" rel="nofollow ugc"></a> Intersectionality reveals how overlapping forms of structural oppression shape experiences of marginalisation (Crenshaw, [&hellip;]			]]></content:encoded>
				
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">d0f309d7650be176b689f061c2c5a4c4</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=104</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 25 May 2025 14:59:28 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=104" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice: Intervention (Formative) &#8211; Making the plurality of language visible- intercultural mediation and exploration of &#039;world view.&#039;</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=104" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/05/image-4.png" /></a> This intervention aims to deal with two issues which have become manifest in my experience as a Language Development Tutor at LCF (and through my previous work with LD at other colleges) &#8211; 1: The use of machine translation in mediating academic communication and 2: the need for greater inclusivity among peers in the “international” university space.     The need for greater cultural inclusivity in the university     Fantini (2022) suggests that language is not merely about teaching “new ways to say old things (i.e., new symbols for old thoughts) rather it aims to aid the discovery, via new language systems, of new ways of “perceiving, of classifying and categorizing, of interacting, and to new ways of thinking about the world.” However, as I will argue, this process is not restricted to the acquisition of the hegemonic (colonial) language: English. “Translanguaging” is the act of accessing different linguistic features or various modes” of what are described as “autonomous languages,” to optimize the potential for communication (Garcia, 2009, p.140). However, as Friere (2005, p.90) notes dialogue cannot exist when one or both parties lack humility.     What happens in the multicultural, multilingual space of the classroom at LCF is that Chinese students (the predominant international student group) will usually all sit together, this is understandable from the perspective of a shared language – and a shared identity. It is not surprising, with over 150,000 Chinese nationally, 90,000 of whom are postgraduates, that many should end up spending a lot of time with other Chinese students (Ebel, 2024, p.7). These students disclose that they ‘want to integrate better’ and diversify friendship groups but feel unable to do this; and they often cite that the feel like they are being treated as sources of revenue (a “cash cow”) ‘rather than as valued members of the community (Ibid).      One example of exclusion, I observed a few weeks ago, was when delivering part one of a presentation workshop for BA Fashion Marketing. There were 8 students – 7 home (mainly white – but one black British) and one Chinese. The Chinese student sat alone at the front, there was a space among the other students on the back table, so I asked the student to sit with the others so that she could participate in the peer-based activities. However, when these activities began the home students worked together in pairs and small groups whilst the Chinese student was excluded. Whilst I tried to involve the student, the refusal of the home students to include the Chinese student – which may have required some adaptation, and indeed empathy – struck me as being something endemic within the university, and I imagine that this student will be very reluctant to repeat the experience of the workshop in part two– affecting attendance and learning. Students in HE do not acknowledge these microaggressions as being racism, although a deeper exploration reveals that this denial is tooted in the lack of discourse around “‘anti-Asian racism,” and may be obscured and complicated by intersections “with other power axes such as gender” (Yu et al. 2023, p.1700)     Had there been other Chinese students, then most likely these students would have worked together. My reason for moving the student was purely to facilitate communicative activities, however the opportunity for mediated cross-cultural communication exists, and would, in my view, benefit all students. What I observed in the above was, in my evaluation, an “othering” of the Chinese student, and the exclusion was based on this “othered” characteristic. Of course, central to this cultural identity is the language barrier, although it is the plurality of languages that may hold the key to building an intercultural space and the mediation of worldviews.      Paraphrasing and mediating as a cognitive process.      Paraphrasing is an essential skill in academic discourse, both in the production of writing and speaking, for several reasons. However, in the era of AI, this is a productive task which can be completed automatically by machine. This enables product, i.e. achieving what appears on the surface to be an academic text to the genre, but lacks the essential process: the cognitive linguistic synthesis of academic voices, i.e. that of the secondary source author and that of the primary researcher writer. In the context of HE it is this process which enables the student to understand, and demonstrate understanding of ideas and discourse, and crucially, through this synthetic process, enable autonomous learning.      However, there are significant barriers regarding the ability to do this for students who are using English as a second or other language. The process of paraphrasing, and indeed writing per se is often mediated through translation tools, this also risks subverting the cognitive processing on the part of the student; in as much as the text is translated into the first language, synthesized into the first language writing produced by the student, and then translated back into English by machine. However, this does offer some opportunity to investigate how a linguistic difference between one language and another reveal a plurality of cultural perspectives and paradigmatic world view, interpretations of ideas, and on the discourse around them. The relationship between culture and language is deeply rooted in how language reflects cultural perspective, where a plurality of ideas result from plurality of languages in use (Ponorac, 2022).     Fantini (1989, p.2) asserts that a “worldview lack of awareness of our own language and language use arises from the fact that as we master our native tongue, it in turn masters us.” This “Linguistic determinism” can be defined as the system through which we understand and mediate the world and individuals exposed to a second language may develop an expanded vision of the world, facilitating participation with other cultural groups, “expanding qualitatively our social possibilities” (Ibid, pp.2-3). The mediation of languages also has cognitive, social, and pragmatic benefits.     Mediation is one of the four modes in which the CEFR model organizes communication. Learners seen as social agents engage in receptive, productive, interactive or mediation activities or, more frequently, in a combination of two or more of them. While interaction stresses the social use of language, mediation encompasses and goes beyond that by focusing on making meaning and/or enabling communication beyond linguistic or cultural barriers. Both types of mediation rely on collaborative processes. (CE, 2022)     Proposed Intervention    I have begun talking to Chinese students about their experiences and behaviours (and I am also interested in learning the perceptions and behaviours of the home and other students). I have also afforded opportunities (in Chinese only classes thus far) to get students to write translations for key words and terms in the whiteboard/ flip chart (a more tactile form of typography and opportunity to step outside the digital space). This not only brings the visualization of culture through the visual representation of the language into the foreground, but then provides the opportunity to explain the complexity of meanings,  and how this might affect our world view (see Fig 1. and 2). Thus far this has been an illuminating process in which students&#8217; culture and language is not hidden but forms a meaningful part of the learning process. This metalinguistic level of discussion also has potential for first language speakers in understanding how language informs their world view, although they will also need to be supported in the metalinguistics required for this discourse (this is where the expertise of Language Development can support all learners at UAL).          Fig 1. Language Development LCF Speaking and Listening Class: Student writing Chinese translations of key words from discussion (May 2025)         Fig. 2 Language Development_BSc Fashion Management Class: Student writing Chinese translation of keyword for analysis &#8211; (May 2025)     My formative idea for this is based on two activities/ procedures – firstly, using the above to allow students to provide a translation then present their evaluation of the different ways that languages interpret this word, ad hoc during lessons. Secondly, drawing on an idea which I came across working with Adam Ramejkis on the Intercultural Communication programme on Zine workshops (see fig 2 and 3. also see Ramejkis (n.d.) and Holmes (2025) blog for more details about Zines) in order to offer an opportunity for cross cultural collaboration, mediation and exploration of identity and perception. This process utilizes interaction and production outside of the digital space, where real collaboration and cultural sharing can occur. It is also intended to be a means of exploring dialectical variation both lexico-grammatically and phonemically, through utilizing synthetic and IPA (EnglishClub, 2025) phonological tools) which is applicable to the range of contexts within the English speaking body of students.          Fig 3. Welcome Week Zine Workshop Chelsea College of Arts Autumn 2024.       In sum, the procedure aims to practice mediation, paraphrasing, translanguaging and expansion of world view perception, in the production of a cross-cultural artefact – which focuses on exploring both denotation and connotation in the representation and cognitive significance of language. Through doing this I want to foster a community of discourse where a plurality of cultures and languages can be seen as a gift rather than a burden to the learning experiences of all students.      References     CE- Council of Europe (2025) ‘Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR): Mediation. ‘Available at <a href="https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/mediation" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/mediation</a> (Accessed on 25/05/25)      Fantini, A.E. (1989) ‘Language and Worldview’ Journal of Bahá’í Studies Vol. 2-2: this paper was presented in Ottawa, October 7–10, 1988, at the Association’s Thirteenth Annual Conference, “Towards a Global Civilization.”       Friere, P. (2005) Pedagogy of the Opressed: 30th Anniversary Edition, (Originally published 1970): Noew York: Continuem      García, Ofelia (2009). ‘Education, multilingualism and translanguaging in the 21st century.’ In: Ajit Mohanty, Minati  Panda, Robert  Phillipson and Tove Skutnabb-Kangas (eds). Multilingual Education for Social Justice: Globalising the local. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan, pp. 128-145     Holmes, I. (2025) ‘Reflective Post 4: Reflections on ‘zines,’ ‘roots’ and ‘routes’ in the multicultural university learning space.’ Available at: <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/03/18/blog-4-reflections-on-a-zine-fair-roots-and-routes-in-the-multicultural-university-learning-space/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2025/03/18/blog-4-reflections-on-a-zine-fair-roots-and-routes-in-the-multicultural-university-learning-space/</a> (Accessed on 25/05/25)     EnglishClub (2025) ‘Interactive Phonemic Chart.’ Available at:  https://www.englishclub.com/pronunciation/phonemic-chart-ia.php (Accessed on 25/05/25)     NALDIC (2016) ‘What is translanguaging?.’ Available at  https://ealjournal.org/2016/07/26/what-is-translanguaging/ (Accessed on 25/05/25)     Ponorac, J. (2022) ‘Culture and Language,’ Available at: <a href="https://epale.ec.europa.eu/en/blog/culture-and-language#:~:text=The%20relationship%20between%20language%20and,of%20identifying%20language%20and%20culture" rel="nofollow ugc">https://epale.ec.europa.eu/en/blog/culture-and-language#:~:text=The%20relationship%20between%20language%20and,of%20identifying%20language%20and%20culture</a> (Accessed on 25/05/25)     Ramejkis, A. (n.d.) ‘#amazines workshops 23/24 some feedback and reflections’ Available at: <a href="https://artslondon-my.sharepoint.com/:b:/g/personal/i_holmes_arts_ac_uk/EamkKnaSxQBFgL-Q3qqhFwoBJ-fb4adjjaDdGfLH8QV1OQ?e=ouaEsI" rel="nofollow ugc">https://artslondon-my.sharepoint.com/:b:/g/personal/i_holmes_arts_ac_uk/EamkKnaSxQBFgL-Q3qqhFwoBJ-fb4adjjaDdGfLH8QV1OQ?e=ouaEsI</a> (Accessed 25/05/25)     Yu, J., Rai, R., Lim, M.A., <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=104" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Inclusive Practice: Intervention (Formative) &#8211; Making the plurality of language visible- intercultural mediation and exploration of &#8216;world view.&#8217;&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">58014c9b0ad964466c05c1c3162bab04</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=100</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 15 May 2025 12:33:37 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=100" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice_Blog Post Two_Religion</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=100" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/05/image.png" /></a> Using Crenshaw’s (1991) lens, this blog focuses on how Muslim women (MW) navigate social and academic spaces, both from a worldview perspective and that of social identity. The hypervisibility of MW via the hijab and niqab materialize assumptions about disempowerment within the faith and culture of Islam and therefore promote the idea of MW’s lack of agency. Despite the Advance HE (2018) recommendations, which includes the promotion of ‘inclusive environments’ and ‘greater awareness of attainment gaps between different groups,’ UAL (2025) attainment data do not consider the intersection of religion as a characteristic.      Religion is marginalized by secularism (Rekis, 2023, p.782), and the 19th Century division of religious and scientific epistemologies in the West– created a positionality through which religion is classified, however, in much of the world, this separation has not occurred (Appiah, 2014). The conceptualization of a list of paradigm religions and their sub parts, as Appiah (2014) suggests, was the construction of Europeans, who, upon discovering people who were not Christians – to describe what ‘they have instead of Christianity?’ The Equality Act 2010 includes. within its definition, the paradigm religions, but also smaller faiths, providing they have ‘clear structure and belief system’ (McKeown and Dunn, 2021, p.121).     Rekis (2023, p.784) maintains injustice occurs both when social identity is at stake, and, when ‘a person’s worldview is at stake.’  The conflation of two or more social identities can wrongly create assumptions about how they intersect. However, underestimating the connections potentially denies individuals the credibility to speak on those ‘specific theologies,’ placing individuals at a conceptual disadvantage i.e. MW in the contemporary West (Ibid, p.789).     The hijab and niqab are problematized through the frame of a highly gendered- Islamophobia emphasizing ‘incompatibility of aspects of Muslim identity with western values’ (Ramadan, 2022, p.34). This discourse designates MW’s ‘radical otherness’ associating it with religio-cultural oppression and backwardness. Participants, in Ramadan’s (2022, p.108) study, disclose the strategies that they employ to mitigate and recalibrate colleagues&#8217; perceptions, wanting to show them that they are ‘like any other person,’ by chatting and joking with them ‘along the corridors to show them that I am not what you see in the media. We are normal people …’ This is an instinct echoed by Simran Jeet Singh:     When I walk onto an airplane and people are looking at me with fear and funny looks – I strike up conversations – and smile and laugh and eventually pull out pictures of my daughters – so that they can see that I’m just a normal person.      (Trinity University, 2021)     In the video, we can see that he is wearing Sikh head covering, part of difference which, along with his beard and brown skin, signify the ‘radical otherness’ which he senses he must diffuse in the context of the post 9.11 world, where these racial and religious signifiers are enough to stimulate the described reaction. Significantly, he is not a Muslim, although the signifiers of his faith, just like the hijab for MW, are effective in focusing the attention and prejudice of the hegemonic white gaze. Also significant, he is a man, so his agency, in respect of choice of the signifiers of his faith, are assumed.      Jawad (2022) explores the intersection of gender and faith in the context of sport. The notion of women being excluded from participation in Islam is challenged, through the hermeneutical interpretation of the Hadith text as evidence of ‘equality and support for women attaining and maintaining physical capability,’ substantiating the ‘Accept and Respect’ declaration which claims Islam is a religion of enablement and not of prohibition towards women in sport; the onus being on sports educators, administrators, and organizers to ‘incorporate greater awareness of faith-based principles’ and create more inclusive spaces for female Muslims in sport (Ibid). This suggests that adjustment can be made in the hegemonic world to accommodate faith-based differences and (perhaps) highlights the tensions that exist within the perceived need for MW to prove that they are ‘just like’ their colleagues in the dominant culture where their social identity is at stake (as in Ramadan’s 2022 study), and the need to validate a worldview as compatible with the secular world’s claim on gender equality.      Although not having the same lived experience, my approach (and philosophy) regarding discourse around faith and culture, aligns with that of Simran Jeet Singh: ‘no community is a monolith’ – and I try to foster an environment where the differences within each community can be demonstrated, through developing an understanding of ‘where people are coming from – with empathy’ (Trinity University, 2021).     Applying intersectionality to awarding gaps helps to understand how identity and social location influence outcomes (Banerjee, 2024, p.35). The current UAL (2025) data for the student population shows that nearly 60% of the cohort would identify as secular (i.e. no religion) and of those declaring religious membership – Christian (12%) followed by Muslim (4.2%) are the largest groups (see fig 1). However, whilst data is presented regarding attainment and gender (see fig 2), and ethnicity (see fig 3), there is no data on religion, or for that matter, data that helps illustrate the relationship between intersecting identities (e.g. religion, race and gender) and attainment, ultimately a (quantitative) KPI of EDI.          Figure 1: Student Profiles – Characteristics: Religion (UAL, 2025)           Figure 2: Attainment Rates by Profile: Gender. (UAL, 2025)          Figure 3: Attainment Rates by Profile: Ethnicity 5 ways. (UAL 2025)          References:     Advance HE (2018) ‘Religion and belief: supporting inclusion of staff and students in higher education and colleges Section 3: Student inclusion: access, experience and learning’ Advance HE     Appiah, K.A. (2014) Is religion good or bad? (This is a trick question) Available at: <a href="https://youtu.be/X2et2KO8gcY" rel="nofollow ugc">https://youtu.be/X2et2KO8gcY</a> (Accessed on 15.05.25)      Banarjee, P. (2024) ‘Connecting the dots: a systematic review of explanatory factors linking contextual indicators, institutional culture and degree awarding gaps,’ Higher Education Evaluation and Development Vol. 18 No. 1, 2024 pp. 31-52 DOI 10.1108/HEED-07-2023-0020     Crenshaw, K. (1991) ‘Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color.’ Stanford Law Review 43 (6), pp.1241-1299       Jawad, H. (2022) Islam, Women and Sport: The Case of Visible Muslim Women. Available at: <a href="https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/religionglobalsociety/2022/09/islam-women-and-sport-the-case-of-visible-muslim-women/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/religionglobalsociety/2022/09/islam-women-and-sport-the-case-of-visible-muslim-women/</a> (Accessed on 15.05.25)     McKeown, P., and Dunn, R.A. (2021) A ‘Life‑Style Choice’ or a Philosophical Belief?: The Argument for Veganism and Vegetarianism to be a Protected Philosophical Belief and the Position in England and Wales,’ Liverpool Law Review 42:207–241 <a href="https://doi.org/10.1007/s10991-020-09273-w " rel="nofollow ugc">https://doi.org/10.1007/s10991-020-09273-w </a>    Ramadan, (2022) ‘When faith intersects with gender: the challenges and successes in the experiences of Muslim women academics,’ Gender and Education, 34:1, 33-48, DOI: 10.1080/09540253.2021.1893664     Rekis, J. (2023) ‘Religious Identity and Epistemic Injustice: An Intersectional Account.’ Hypatia 38, pp779–800. doi:10.1017/hyp.2023.86     Trinity University (2016) Challenging Race, Religion, and Stereotypes in Classroom Available at: <a href="https://youtu.be/0CAOKTo_DOk" rel="nofollow ugc">https://youtu.be/0CAOKTo_DOk</a> (Accessed on 15.05.25)      UAL (2025) Active Dashboards. Available at: <a href="https://dashboards.arts.ac.uk/dashboard/ActiveDashboards/DashboardPage.aspx?dashboardid=99b2fe03-d417-45d3-bea9-1a65ebc250ea&#038;dashcontextid=638773918741985949" rel="nofollow ugc">https://dashboards.arts.ac.uk/dashboard/ActiveDashboards/DashboardPage.aspx?dashboardid=99b2fe03-d417-45d3-bea9-1a65ebc250ea&#038;dashcontextid=638773918741985949</a> <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=100" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Inclusive Practice_Blog Post Two_Religion&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">f1be7ec8d570f768c0907599d542221f</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 24 Apr 2025 09:40:21 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94" rel="nofollow ugc">Inclusive Practice_ Blog Post One_ Disability</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/04/image.png" /></a> Crenshaw (1991, p.1245) highlights the &#8216;need to account for multiple grounds for identity&#8217; in understanding the construction of the social world and asserts that individuals with ‘multiple targeted identities’ are disempowered through hegemony and systemic inequality. These identities are tied to social group membership (Lukkien, Chauhan and Otaye-Ebede, 2024. p.3), one such group identity being disability. The Social Model of Disability suggests that disability is constructed by barriers in the hegemonic social world and that this world can be (re)designed to include the needs and differences of all individuals (UAL, no date).      What ‘makes people disabled is not their disability,’ rather it is barriers constructed in society; the Paralympics being evidence of an opportunity for ‘people to shine’ when these barriers are removed (Adeptian and Webborn, 2020). Whilst street level discrimination against both race and disability has reduced, the more difficult progress remains in tackling dominant social systems, and although Ade acknowledges his own empowered position as a sports and media personality, he represents both black and disabled identities and articulates the parallel struggle against systemic inequality (Ibid). He draws a comparison between the Paralympics and the Black Lives Matter movement as critical moments which made these struggles visible in the hegemonic social world. Whilst the narrative of his own lived experience alludes to the compounded disenfranchisement of intersectional identities, it was Stoke Mandeville hospital and the disability community where he found his ‘tribe’ (Ibid), this ultimately mitigating the disempowerment of being a Nigerian immigrant with polio growing up in East London.    Chay Brown (2023) explores complex intersectional identities as a trans, gay man, not neuro typical, and having experienced mental health difficulties, whilst acknowledging potential privilege within the trans community, as a white man. He identifies that for trans people, struggling with social situations and anxiety can present significant challenges specific to navigating the codes that exist within the LGBTQ+ community (Ibid). This highlights the complexity of intersecting identities within the membership of a wider disenfranchised group. Brown (2023) asserts that &#8216;If we’re not working for disabled trans people we’re not working for the trans community because we’re missing people out.&#8217;    Christine Sun Kim (2024), in her context as Asian American deaf artist, is driven to force the voice of the deaf community into the everyday lives of the hearing world. This is realized through her insistence on communicating through sign language, signs, symbols, infographics and scaled up captioning of the city – the sky; through creating a greater visibility of useful communications for deaf people she seeks to put deaf lives into the minds of the hearing, and challenge social norms (Ibid).     The common theme of these narratives is that the hegemonic (ableist) world, where the intersection of disability is made invisible, can be reconstructed at both the micro and macro level and provide access through making disabled people visible and included. If the world can be designed to accommodate differences, then it will work in optimizing opportunities for everyone.      In the context of UAL, data suggests that there are improving opportunities for attainment: students with declared disabilities (see fig.1), achieving an overall 3pp higher than those without (Campos-Barbi, 2025a, p14), although completion rates for disabled students are significantly lower (Campos-Barbi, 2025b, p.12), and crucially this data does not take into account the intersection of other multiple identities of disempowerment (Crenshaw, 1991). This lack of an intersectional lens points to positionality (Bayeck, 2022) in the data design, interpretation, and potential impact.        Figure 1. Attainment Rates by Disability (6 way) 1st- 2:1 (Campos-Barbi, 2025a, p.15)     Bayeck (2022, p.7) suggests it is the &#8216;complex interplay of identity, space and context&#8217; that informs positionality. I consider the accessibility to learning spaces as afforded by the design of the university, and the design of my lessons in meeting the needs of complex student identities. However, I also consider this from the perspective of my own context as Language Development tutor. Crenshaw (1991, p.1249) identifies language barriers as a source of intersectional subordination which limit opportunity; language remains invisible in the UAL data. For example, a student asked me whether we could hold a tutorial online, they had disclosed to me that they had some mental health issues which prevented them from being able to attend in person; it was a small adjustment that I was happy to make. However, on reflection, did other aspects of privilege provide the agency for this solicitation? This student was female, white, British and speaks English as a first language. Would a more disenfranchising intersectionality have prevented this request from being made, resulting in a lack of participation? Would this have led to sub optimal attainment?     References     Adepitan, A. and Webborn, N. (2020). Nick Webborn interviews Ade Adepitan. ParalympicsGB Legends [Online]. Youtube. 27 August. Available at: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bnRjdol_j0c " rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bnRjdol_j0c </a> (Accessed on 23.04.25)     Bayeck, R.Y. (2022) Positionality: &#8216;The Interplay of Space, Context and Identity,&#8217; International Journal of Qualitative Methods Volume 21: 1–9: DOI: 10.1177/16094069221114745    Brown, C. (2023) Interview with ParaPride. Intersectionality in Focus: Empowering Voices during UK Disability History Month [Online]. Youtube. 13 December. Available at: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yID8_s5tjc" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yID8_s5tjc</a> (Accessed on 15.04.25)     Campos- Barbi, T. (2025a) UAL Undergraduate Attainment Report 2023-24 Available at: <a href="https://canvas.arts.ac.uk/documents/sppreview/1cdc0ff4-8830-4787-b187-f7db576ab259" rel="nofollow ugc">https://canvas.arts.ac.uk/documents/sppreview/1cdc0ff4-8830-4787-b187-f7db576ab259</a> (Accessed on 23.04.25)     Campos-Barbi, T. (2025b) UAL Undergraduate Completion Report 2023-24. Available at: <a href="https://canvas.arts.ac.uk/documents/sppreview/99c0212e-0eb0-47c0-97e9-2038d9d407cf" rel="nofollow ugc">https://canvas.arts.ac.uk/documents/sppreview/99c0212e-0eb0-47c0-97e9-2038d9d407cf</a> (Accessed on 23.04.25)     Crenshaw, K. (1991) ‘Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color.’ Stanford Law Review 43 (6), pp.1241-1299       Lukkien, T., Chauhan, T. and Otaye‐Ebede, L. (2024) ‘Addressing the diversity principle–practice gap in Western higher education institutions: A systematic review on intersectionality.’ British Educational Research Journal. doi:<a href="https://doi.org/10.1002/berj.4096" rel="nofollow ugc">https://doi.org/10.1002/berj.4096</a>., pp2-7 and pp17-20       Sun, C. (2024). Christine Sun Kim in ‘Friends &amp; Strangers’ &#8211; Season 11 | Art21. [online] YouTube. Available at: <a href="https://youtu.be/2NpRaEDlLsI " rel="nofollow ugc">https://youtu.be/2NpRaEDlLsI </a> (Accessed on 23.04.25)      UAL (no date) ‘The Social Model of Disability at UAL.’ Available at: <a href="https://youtu.be/mNdnjm" rel="nofollow ugc">https://youtu.be/mNdnjm</a> <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=94" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Inclusive Practice_ Blog Post One_ Disability&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">852bda91bbb64b91b6249fda5179f8b7</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=71</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 18 Mar 2025 08:48:59 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=71" rel="nofollow ugc">Reflective Post 4: Reflections on &#039;zines,&#039; &#039;roots&#039; and &#039;routes&#039; in the multicultural university learning space.  </a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=71" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/03/image-24.png" /></a> Here are some reflections on my experience with the Intercultural Communication programme, which offers workshops and resources for developing communication skills and intercultural awareness (UAL, 2025), as well as my interest in the works of Stuart Hall, and how this has informed my thinking about pedagogical approaches with my students at LCF.      ‘The intellectual routes’ taken by Stuart Hall and Paul Gilroy played a major role in transforming our understandings of ‘race, youth, schooling and identity’ (Warmington, 2014, p.91), and the development of cultural studies. I first came across Hall et al. (2013 [1978]) during my own studies in the field of public policy, and I was drawn to the chapter by Warmington (2014) because I wanted to learn more about how Hall and others have influenced the way in which we think, teach and learn about culture and identity.      If you think of culture always as a return to roots — R-O-O-T-S — you’re missing the point. I think of culture as routes — R-O-U-T-E-S — the various routes by which people travel, culture travels, culture moves, culture develops, culture changes, cultures migrate, etc.      (Stuart Hall in Paul, 2005)     This play on the homophone (also see microteach post) resonates with me. The first time I came across this quote was in a Language Development sharing session given by Adam Ramejkis, about a program ‘R-O-O-T-S and R-O-U-T-E-S,’ which explores critical dialogues for more equitable and sustainable practice in art and design education (UAL, 2023).      It was with Adam that I worked on (a separate programme) ‘Zine’ workshops during the UAL welcome week. The basic remit for these workshops was that students arrive, are briefed with how to make a ‘zine’ &#8211; using the materials (pens, paper, cut up magazines), and then are free to create (see figures 1 and 2 below).              Figure 1. Welcome Week Zine workshops at Camberwell College of Arts Autumn 2024         Fig 2. Welcome Week Zine Workshop Chelsea College of Arts Autumn 2024     What I noticed happened in this multicultural space was that people felt relaxed and willing to communicate with each other, but were not under pressure to do so – i.e. they could choose when to communicate and when to focus on the work. The creative work itself expressing thoughts, feelings – and what we can discover in the moment; cultural identities being not only rooted in the histories, language, and culture of ‘who we are’ and ‘where we come from’, but also, and perhaps more importantly being &#8216;part of a process of becoming’ (Van Stipriaan, 2013, pp.206-207); see examples below (fig 4).              Figure 3. Examples of student Zines created at CCW Welcome Week Zine workshops      In the international classroom, I feel that it is my mission to facilitate a greater integration between cultural groups, but I want to explore a methodology where I can create opportunities for learners to find this without pressuring them to integrate. Culture is the process of ‘constructing a relationship between oneself and the world’ (Hsu, 2017) and, as Hall notes, people need to ‘have a language to speak about where they are and what other possible futures are available to them’ (Ibid). This is a language I want to explore in the intercultural fashion business classroom. See extensive feedback and evaluation of Zine workshops in Appendix, and for many more examples of student and staff produced Zines, see link to ual.amaZINES (2025) in references below.       Appendix:     AdamRamejkis_amazinesfeedback2324.pdf     References:     Hall, S., Critcher, C., Jefferson, T., Clarke, J., and Roberts, B. (2013) Policing the crisis, mugging, the state and law and order. London: Springer Nature [originally published by Red Globe Press 1978]     Hsu, H. (2018) Stuart Hall and the Rise of Cultural Studies. Available at: <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/stuart-hall-and-the-rise-of-cultural-studies" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/stuart-hall-and-the-rise-of-cultural-studies</a> (Accessed on 07.03.25)     Paul, A. (2005) Stuart Hall: “Culture is always a translation.” Available at: <a href="https://www.caribbean-beat.com/issue-71/culture-always-translation" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.caribbean-beat.com/issue-71/culture-always-translation</a> (Accessed on 17.03.2025)     UAL (2023) Roots and Routes. Available at: <a href="https://millbankexhibition.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2023/07/19/roots-and-routes/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://millbankexhibition.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2023/07/19/roots-and-routes/</a> (Accessed on 17.03.25)     UAL (2025) Intercultural Communication. Available at: <a href="https://www.arts.ac.uk/study-at-ual/language-centre/intercultural-communication-training" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.arts.ac.uk/study-at-ual/language-centre/intercultural-communication-training</a> (Accessed on 17.03.25     ual.amaZINES (2025) ‘zines from students and staff’ [Instagram] Available at: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/ual.amazines/?igsh=MWk5NHhidDBwd2t3dQ%3D%3D#" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.instagram.com/ual.amazines/?igsh=MWk5NHhidDBwd2t3dQ%3D%3D#</a> (Accessed on 17.03.25)     Van Stipriaan, A. (2013) ‘Roots and the Production of Heritage’ in Contemporary Culture Book Subtitle: New Directions in Art and Humanities. eds: Thissen, J., Zwijnenberg, R., and Zijlmans, K. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press   <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=71" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Reflective Post 4: Reflections on &#8216;zines,&#8217; &#8216;roots&#8217; and &#8216;routes&#8217; in the multicultural university learning space.  &#8220;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">9bdc7cc2109a9d767cb6b95fcd264125</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=63</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 17 Mar 2025 23:18:38 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=63" rel="nofollow ugc">Reflective Post 3: Research Philosophy: The language I’m learning and the language I’m teaching. </a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=63" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/03/image-22.png" /></a> I often tell students that learning vocabulary (lexis) is a little bit like walking towards the horizon, it doesn’t matter how far you go with it, you will never reach completion: it is impossible to learn all the words and phrases in English (or any language). In blog post 2, I reflected on the language that I have learned and how it informs the language I now teach, however, to illustrate the above point re: the horizon – I can now reflect on the language I am learning and the language I am teaching (simultaneously).      Below are some vocabulary items which you may recognize (see figure 1) from the discourse of our PG Cert course, which I have also been teaching on the Advanced Research Methods for Postgraduate Marketing courses at the Fashion Business School at LCF.                    Fig 1. Revision of vocabulary and new vocabulary. Language Development &#8211; Advanced Research Methods – Fashion Business School 20th Feb 2025     This vocabulary I have drawn from a key chapter of Saunders, Thornhill and Lewis (2023) &#8211; which deal with research philosophy and research design – it is this chapter which presents the infamous (in business post grad studies) heuristic the ‘Research Onion’ (see figure 2). As you can see (fig 1) I have also included the word heuristic, which was a lexical item I learned during my own postgraduate studies – and one which I now feel has application for the said ‘Onion’ and other such ideal type models and visualizations. Ontology was also a word I had learned in my own studies, epistemology I acquired through a session given at LCF: Where do you know from, which I went to specifically to learn this word, however, axiology and reflexology and others are new to me.          Figure 2. The Research Onion. (Saunders, Thornhill and Lewis, 2023, p. 13)     The development of research design requires reflexivity in transcending bias and contextualizing positionality (Archer, 2007; Yip, 2024; Creswell, 2013). Both teachers and learners need to explore a level of thinking which allows them to reflect both in (ontologically) and on (reflexively and epistemologically) their practice (Schon, 1983). This is a vocabulary which I am learning myself -and through sharing this with my learners, I can offer insights into my own learning process, whilst participating in theirs. Moreover, it reaffirms my belief that language can be acquired through use, and this is the true value of paraphrasing in academic writing – it helps us synthesize new knowledge until it comfortably becomes a part of our discourse (see fig 3).                 Figure 3. Paraphrasing and summarizing academic texts. Language Development &#8211; Advanced Research Methods – Fashion Business School 20th Feb 2025     References     Archer, M. S. (2007). Making our way through the world: Human reflexivity and social mobility. Cambridge: Cambridge university Press.      Creswell, J. W. (2013) Qualitative inquiry and research design: choosing among five approaches. 3rd ed. London: Sage Publications Ltd.     Saunders, M., Lewis, P., and Thornhill, A. (2023) Research Methods for Business Students. 9th edition. Harlow: Pearson Education     Schön, D. A. (1983) The Reflective Practitioner. New York: Basic Books.       Yip, S.Y. (2024) ‘Positionality and reflexivity: negotiating insider-outsider positions within and across cultures’ Int <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=63" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Reflective Post 3: Research Philosophy: The language I’m learning and the language I’m teaching. &#8220;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">f78373f0440878e9d5a1396b6a78b2c2</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=58</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 17 Mar 2025 20:43:21 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=58" rel="nofollow ugc">Case study 3: Assessing Learning and exchanging feedback/feedforward  </a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=58" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/03/image-15.png" /></a> Background     As PSE and ISPT examiner, I assess both the spoken and written output of ESOL (see appendix 1 for acronyms) students using a framework which has been adapted from IELTS (see appendix 2). As a Language Development tutor, I operate as a mediator of assessment and feedback, i.e. helping students to understand and process both formative and summative feedback received from others.     Evaluation     Written feedback has limited value if learners cannot see the connection between the feedback received (Brooks, 2008), what they have produced and what they need to do next. It is an expectation from course leaders that I can help solve the time pressure problem on the writers of feedback on the main course, I can give them advice about how they can practically make improvements on the next assignment and, in some cases, justify the mark to them (Ibid, p.5). However, what I feel will be the most effective for learners (Watkins, 2002), is developing the meta cognitive skills to process this for themselves.       Going Forward     As Language Development tutor at UAL I have had the opportunity to work with a range of other practitioners and courses and, through these experiences, I have collected procedures for reflection, which, with the aim of fulfilling principles of good feedback (Nicol and MacFarlane-Dick 2006), I have begun using with the aim of helping learners to process their feedback. This I frame as feedback feedforward, an idea inspired by Paul Jackson, course leader of MA Graphic Branding and Identity at LCC, along with the accompanying Back to the Future (n.d.) branding (see figure 1).           Fig. 1. First slide of Processing Feedback/forward session for Bsc_Msc Fashion Management Year 1 (February 2025)     Gibbs (1988) Reflective Cycle (see figure 1) is a useful tool for reflective thinking, which I have learned about through teaching reflective writing for ‘collaborative units’ on a range of courses. It first focuses on how we feel – which is worth reflecting on before moving forward to the evaluative, analytical and action stages. The description stage represents the feedback given.          Fig 2. Gibbs reflective cycle (Gibbs, 1988)     The Hampel Method (ICCA, 2014) (see figure 2) is a system originally devised for legal professionals, which I learned from MA GBI course leader Paul Jackson, and places more emphasis on the action – feedforward.          Figure 3. The Hampel Method – (Adapted by Jackson, 2024)     We can synthesize the two processes – to address: what was the feedback? (description) why did you receive it? (analysis), what can you learn from this (evaluation)– and then, crucially, what will you do about it? (action).      To make it concrete, I introduce learners to the SMART GOALS frame, with which they can articulate their plan of action (see figure 4); the use of this structured approach can be useful for students with ADHD to set and manage goals (Next Steps 4 ADHD, 2024).           Figure 4. SMART GOALS (Next Step 4 ADHD, 2024)     Whilst currently students see me as the only mediator, it is my hope that, through using these models, students can work together socially (Vygotsky, 1987), and communicatively (Nunan, 1991), to help scaffold each other’s understanding of feedback and development.     Action Points:    What: Implement Feedback Feedforward lessons to process Block One &#8211; When: February/ March 2025 &#8211; Develop and reiterate February/ March 2026    What: Gather feedback on this approach from students and peers &#8211; When: March/ April 2025        Appendix 1: Acronyms     ESOL-  English for Speakers of Other Languages     IELTS-  International English Language Testing System      PSE-  Pre-Sessional English      ISPT-  In-sessional Progress Test      Appendix 2: Assessment Descriptors    Writing Band Descriptors.docx    Speaking Descriptors.docx    References:    Back to the Future (n.d.) Available at: <a href="https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQiAUI52_-niASQabl_PqdkJQ-moVziM6ahfiYkZW9NSnhcciNw" rel="nofollow ugc">https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQiAUI52_-niASQabl_PqdkJQ-moVziM6ahfiYkZW9NSnhcciNw</a> (Accessed on 02.02.2025)     Gibbs, G. (1988) Learning by Doing: A guide to teaching and learning methods, Oxford: Further Education Unit, Oxford Polytechnic.     ICCA Inns of College of Advocacy (2014) The Hampel Method. Available at: <a href="https://www.icca.ac.uk/post-qualification-training/cpd/advocacy-training/the-hampel-method/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.icca.ac.uk/post-qualification-training/cpd/advocacy-training/the-hampel-method/</a> (Accessed on 28.02.25)     Jackson, P. (2024) Feedback Feedforward. Unit 3 Major Project Proposal MA GBI UAL_2024     Nicol, D.J., and Macfarlane-Dick, D. (2006) &#8216;Formative assessment and self-regulated learning: a model and seven principles of good feedback practice&#8217;, Studies in Higher Education, 31: 2, 199 — 218      Next Steps 4 ADHD (2024) How to create smart goals, Available at: <a href="https://nextstep4adhd.com/how-to-create-smart-goals/ (Accessed" rel="nofollow ugc">https://nextstep4adhd.com/how-to-create-smart-goals/ (Accessed</a> on 13.03.2025)     Nunan, D. (1991) ‘Communicative Tasks and the Language Curriculum.’ TESOL Quarterly. 25 (2): 279–295.  Available at: doi:10.2307/3587464. JSTOR 3587464. (Accessed on 20.02.25)     Vygotsky, L. S. (1987) ‘Thinking and speech’. In R.W. Rieber &amp; A.S. Carton (Eds.), The collected works of L.S. Vygotsky, Volume 1: Problems of general psychology (pp. 39–285). New York: Plenum Press. (Original work published 1934.)     Watkins, C. (2002) ‘Effective Learning,’ NSIN Research Matters <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=58" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Case study 3: Assessing Learning and exchanging feedback/feedforward  &#8220;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">df1e799ff0cf4b9ec3c641e59470be0b</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=46</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 14 Mar 2025 23:21:17 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=46" rel="nofollow ugc">Reflections on Microteach: Object Based Learning- &#039;rolls&#039; and &#039;roles.&#039;</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=46" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/03/image-6.png" /></a> Objects have the capacity ‘to facilitate deep learning;’ they can be surprising, intriguing and absorbing, and through stimulating learners’ sense of wonder they can provoke a ‘rich, important and fun’ educational experience (Hardie, 2015. p.4). My experience of the Object Based Learning (OBL) microteach on the PG Cert in February 2025 at LCC, both as teacher and as learner, was a joyful one.    For my own microteach I decided to draw on my experience of learning through practice at drama school in the late 1990s. In the theatre of Shakespeare, in its original productions, printing multiple versions of play texts for actors was not an option, plus the limited time for rehearsal necessitated that actors would be presented with only their lines and their cues, sometimes meeting their fellow actors on stage for the first time in performance (Tucker, 2001).     Therefore, a key objective was for participants to learn something of the history of the Elizabethan theatre, or at least a theory of it, through practice. I had chosen a short part of Macbeth which provides opportunity to demonstrate some of the features of this style of theatre work through the replica artefact. Shakespeare&#8217;s plays can be seen in the replica theatre of Shakespeare’s Globe (see fig. 1 below).          Fig.1. Aerial view of Shakespeare&#8217;s Globe performing arts venue on the bank of the River Thames, London, England (Britannica, 2025)     It was the linguistic angle that first drew my attention to the idea of using these objects – with the mind to have learners discover the etymology of the homophone ‘roll’ and ‘role’ through speculating the identity and function of the object.      I decided to tie them up with a ribbon, however, the effect was that the objects appeared to be the scrolls you might receive at graduation – or as one participant commented a ‘Christmas present for a dog,’ as you can/might see from the image (see fig.2 below),         Fig 2. Cue scripts/The roles tied with red ribbon.      This provided a useful reflection for me about my lessons in general: what effects do the design choices have on the perceptions of the learners? Despite this, once the function of the object was revealed through opening the ribbon the roles (see example fig 1, and others in appendix 1) were allocated as the rolls were unrolled; I was able to elicit from the group this homophonic etymology, which was a key learning aim of the lesson.                Fig. 3 &#8211; Banquo cue script.      The plan worked effectively, if not quite to timing, and we managed to achieve the physicalizing of play: the performance of the scene. I wanted to allow participants the time they needed to speculate what the object could be at the beginning without (too much) interference from me as teacher/ facilitator. I also wanted them to have the curiosity to open the object and discover its function (see lesson plan in Appendix 2).      I feel that participants were able to find some joy in this opportunity to perform and play (albeit a small part of) Shakespeare’s Macbeth.      Appendix One &#8211; Cue scripts:    Banquo.docx    Macbeth.docx    First Witch.docx    Second Witch.docx    Third Witch.docx    Appendix 2 &#8211; Lesson Plan    Microteach Lesson Plan.docx    Appendix 3 &#8211; Long form version of this blog post:     Reflections on Microteach- OBL &#8211; &#8216;roles&#8217; and &#8216;roles&#8217;.pdf    References     Brittanica (2025) Globe Theatre, Available at: <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Globe-Theatre" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.britannica.com/topic/Globe-Theatre</a> (Accessed on 14.03.25)     Hardie, K., (2015) ‘Innovative pedagogies series: Wow: The power of objects in object-based learning and teaching,’ Higher Education Academy. York: HEA     Tucker, <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=46" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Reflections on Microteach: Object Based Learning- &#8216;rolls&#8217; and &#8216;roles.&#8217;&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">d8ede8f71e17a5b65775fd37568534c6</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=36</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2025 22:39:31 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=36" rel="nofollow ugc">Reflective Post 2: Reflections on the language I have learned and the language I teach.</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=36" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/03/image-2.png" /></a> The Language Development (LD) programme at UAL is focused on helping students who speak English as an additional language (EAL) to develop the language skills required to be successful on their courses (UAL, 2025). However, LD is available to everyone, and I draw on the often quoted – (and sometimes misquoted as Ding, (2019) notes) assertion that academic language is ‘no one’s mother tongue’ and is remote from the language which is actually spoken by the vast majority of the population in day to day life (Bourdieu and Passerson, 1995, p.8). This is especially true with language required at postgraduate level. From reading around this topic, I am reflecting on the language that I use to communicate threshold concepts, the multiple meanings this language holds and my own socialization into the language of academic discourse as learner (Bond, 2016).     One term that I frequently use with learners is ‘looking for tensions in the literature,’ this I owe to my tutor Paul whose teaching on the MSc International Public Policy at Queen Mary University of London embedded this notion in my understanding of a key purpose of literature review. I include this image (see fig 1) which for me illustrates what to articulate between the schools of thought in a given field of study; a tug of war is meant to represent the friendly nature of this critical discourse – it is a game that we as academics need to play  – the argument is academic not ad hominem.  I also reflect that other lexis I frequently use when referring to framing the literature is illustrating the drama and making a compelling narrative; this lexicon owes more to my background as an actor and writer.          Fig.1 “I will not play tug o’ war; I’d rather play hug o’ war” &#8211; Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends. (Crockett, 2017). #1     Some key lexis that I explore with learners is frame and framing, these are concepts that I learned about myself at postgraduate level study in the field of public policy and International Relations, where a frame can be understood as the definition of a policy’s image (Cairney, 2011) and framing a process of messaging where both producers and receivers ‘transform information into a meaningful whole.’ (Van Gorp, 2002; Fischer, 2003, p.144). However, perhaps the most memorable learning experience for me was an online lecture podcast by Paul Cairney (2015) which explores the different ways that we can understand this meaning through visual representation (see figure 1 and 2 below).          Fig.2 Framing as deciding which part of the world on which to focus. (Cairney, 2015)         Fig 2. A timber frame, to highlight the structure of a discussion which is crucial but often unseen and taken for granted. (Cairney, 2015).      It is from the latter that I draw inspiration in trying to help my postgraduate fashion business learners visualize theoretical frameworks with this image (see fig 4).          Fig 4. Framework of Flatiron Building, Circa 1901. (Designing Buildings, 2020)     To further emphasize this idea, and to help students access the threshold concept of foundations underpinning assumptions I use the illustration of our building at LCF and the steel formwork which underpins it (see slides in Appendix). Reflecting again on this choice of image – perhaps I owe this to my dad – an engineer who worked on designing the steel frame formwork for this kind of construction.     Thinking reflexively: the way I see the things – ontologically #2 &#8211; and how this is manifest in language &#8211; comes via multiple roots and routes, to draw on Stuart Hall, (Hall, Segal and Osbourne, 1997) #3, and this cultural positionality informs my pedagogy. This is a theme that I would like to explore further with fellow practitioners, as well as my own learners, to understand the relationship between the language we learn and the language we teach.      Appendix:     Foundations underpinning a construction.pptx    End notes:     #1. There are many Google images available, but I have chosen one that uses real people, and these people are mainly not white Caucasian, because I believe that the images that I present to my learners should be more representative of the learners themselves.     #2. This language will be explored further in reflective blog 3.    #3. The work Stuart Hall will be explored further in reflective blog 4.     Reference List:     Bond, B, (2016) The importance of language for learning. Available at: <a href="https://teachingexcellence.leeds.ac.uk/opinion-the-importance-of-language-for-learning/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://teachingexcellence.leeds.ac.uk/opinion-the-importance-of-language-for-learning/</a> (Accessed on 13.03.25)     Cairney, P., (2015) Policy Concepts in 1000 Words: Framing. Available at: <a href="https://paulcairney.wordpress.com/2015/11/02/policy-concepts-in-1000-words-framing/" rel="nofollow ugc">https://paulcairney.wordpress.com/2015/11/02/policy-concepts-in-1000-words-framing/</a> (Accessed on 13.03.25)      Cairney, P., (2011), Understanding Public Policy: Theories and Issues, Basingstoke Hamps: Palgrave Macmillan        Crocket, Z. (2017) A History of Tug-of-War Fatalities. Available at: <a href="https://priceonomics.com/a-history-of-tug-of-war-fatalities/ " rel="nofollow ugc">https://priceonomics.com/a-history-of-tug-of-war-fatalities/ </a>    Designing Buildings (2020) Skeleton frame Available at: <a href="https://www.designingbuildings.co.uk/wiki/Skeleton_frame" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.designingbuildings.co.uk/wiki/Skeleton_frame</a> (Accessed on 13.03.24)      Hall, S., Segal, L., and Osbourne, P. (1997) ‘Stuart Hall Culture and Powe,’ Radical Philosophy, 086, Nov/Dec 1997, pp. 24–41. (pdf) Available at <a href="https://www.radicalphilosophy.com/interview/stuart-hall-culture-and-power" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.radicalphilosophy.com/interview/stuart-hall-culture-and-power</a> (Accessed on 13.03.25)     UAL (2025) English Language Development for students. Available at: <a href="https://www.arts.ac.uk/study-at-ual/language-centre/english-language-development-for-ual-students" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.arts.ac.uk/study-at-ual/language-centre/english-language-development-for-ual-students</a> (Accessed on 13.03.25)     Van Gorp, B., (2002), ‘The Implementation of Asylum Policy: Which Frame Dominates the Debate,’ European Consortium for Po <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=36" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Reflective Post 2: Reflections on the language I have learned and the language I teach.&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">87f85204c0caa251639633a816684952</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=29</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 10 Mar 2025 18:47:32 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=29" rel="nofollow ugc">Record of Observation/ Review of Teaching Practice &#8211; Tutor Observation</a></strong>      Session/artefact to be observed/reviewed:      Language Development _MA Fashion Design Management     Unit: Advanced Res <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=29" rel="nofollow ugc"><span>[&hellip;]</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">4289bb96573cd80a8b67f20d39808ca1</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=28</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 10 Mar 2025 17:03:57 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=28" rel="nofollow ugc">Record of Observation/Review of Teaching Practice &#8211; Peer Observation (Ian Holmes as Observer)   </a></strong>Session/artefact to be observed/reviewed: Masterclass: Studio Industry 2 (Still Life Editorial)      Location: LCF <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=28" rel="nofollow ugc"><span>[&hellip;]</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">74c97f7b3be751c46df6a2378a141e7f</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=27</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 10 Mar 2025 16:55:29 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=27" rel="nofollow ugc">Record of Observation/ Review of Teaching Practice 1 Peer Observation (Ian Holmes as Observee)</a></strong>      Session/artefact to be observed/reviewed:      Language Development BSc_MSc_(Strategic) Fashion Management Year On <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=27" rel="nofollow ugc"><span>[&hellip;]</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">dd646918c423ccd8350c3a8d6cd98d68</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=20</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 06 Mar 2025 23:41:20 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=20" rel="nofollow ugc">Case Study 2: Planning for effective learning &#8211; Product vs Process oriented learning.</a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=20" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/03/image-9.png" /></a> Introduction and Background    Effective learning requires outcomes that are focused more on collective knowledge generation than individual knowledge acquisition; learners having gained cognizance of the processes necessary to become effective – i.e. learning to learn (Watkins, 2002, p.4).      However, this requires the motivation of the individuals to engage in this practice. My EAP (English for Academic Purposes) challenge is to navigate the tension between the paradigms of education and training (Widdowson,1983); educate students a capacity to manage a range of disciplinary possibilities and not purely train them to meet defined specific outcomes (Tibbets and Chapman, 2023).     Evaluation    Learning Outcomes enable students to know what they must do, through which activities, with what resources and how and when they will be assessed; however, since they were imposed in late 1990s there has been a question mark over their efficacy (Addison, 2014, p.314). I devise LOs for each session, however, I also work with other people’s LOs for units – deconstructing them and encouraging learners to analyse them from a linguistic approach so that they more fully understand what is required- the product.       My current procedure is, at the beginning of each unit, asking learners to identify the instruction (imperative) verbs in the LOs – and then, to understand what they mean in terms of cognitive domain, we explore (the revised) Bloom’s Taxonomy (Anderson and Krathwohl, 2001). Next, we break down the other components – using a frame originally designed for analysing essay questions (Gillet, n.d.) &#8211; to identify the topic – the aspect on the topic – and any restrictions or expansions on the topic (see examples 1 and 2 in appendix).      Learners&#8217; ability to do this varies and reflects (in my view) how well they are written, and sometimes it is also necessary to verbalize the abstract nouns that are sometimes used by course leaders for instruction.    Moving Forward    My rationale for showing learners how to use these tools is firstly so that they can more effectively visualize the product offered via the learning outcomes – however, as I have begun to reflect on (and verbalize to students) is how these tools might also be used to analyse their own writing – especially those students at post graduate level who need to devise working titles, aims – objectives and research questions of their own.        I have taken a more collaborative approach to working in recent lessons – whereby the ideation in the design of possible avenues for research can be explored through language and ‘collective disruption’ (a term that emerged through the experience of a colleague’s microteach). This is an approach which is essentially more process focused, although it begins with the deconstruction of product.     A new procedure that I have applied recently (see Teaching Practice &#8211; Tutor observation) is to analyze previous student example aims for their components &#8211; (see fig 1 and  Advanced Research Methods &#8211; ARM2 in Appendix) &#8211; then removing this content leaving only the frame. Before returning to the frame &#8211; students then generate other possibilities (as freely as possible) &#8211; this is done on a Padlet wall &#8211; and an actual wall (see figures 2 and 3). Once we have generated lots of potential content students work together to create a new example aim from the newly generated possibilities of content. The intended purpose here is to develop greater flexibility with the generic language and, through a &#8216;collective disruption,&#8217; with the possibilities for research.         Fig.1 Analysis of who, what, where, how, why of student example research aim.        Fig.2 Padlet Student Aims example generator        Fig.3 Post Graduate Fashion Marketing students generating content ideas using same categories as Padlet wall above- LCF classroom.         Fig. 4. Frame for students to apply generated ideas.     We are experimenting with this approach of foster the capacity of students to co-construct knowledge, which Freire (2005 [1970], p.72) defines as that “hopeful inquiry human beings pursue in the world, with the world, and with each other,” and restore those affective relationships underpinning social learning (perhaps) denied by LOs (Addison, 2014, p.325). Below is some useful student feedback on the lesson helps me understand how future iterations of this lesson might be designed.         Figure 5. Student Feedback on Lesson Padlet.     Action Points:    What: Implement &#8216;collective disruption&#8217; approach to research aim and question development lessons    When: February/ March 2025    What: Gather feedback from students and peers &#8211; PG Cert and Language Development departmental observations &#8211; to evaluate efficacy of approach    When: March/ April 2025        Appendix    EXAMPLE 1_Analysing LOs_BSc_MSc_(S)FM_Product Management.pptx    EXAMPLE 2_Analysisng LOs_PG Marketing_Advanced Research Methods.pptx    2_ARM.pptx    References    Addison, N. (2014) ‘Doubting Learning Outcomes in Higher Education Contexts: from Performativity towards Emergence and Negotiation,’ The International Journal of Art and Design Vol 33- Issue 1- pp.313-325      Anderson, L. W. and Krathwohl, D. R., et al (Eds..) (2001) A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.     Friere, P. (2005 [1970]) Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Continuem     Gillet, A. (n.d.) Understanding the question Available at: <a href="https://www.academia.edu/122158876/Understanding_Essay_Questions (Accessed" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.academia.edu/122158876/Understanding_Essay_Questions (Accessed</a> on 6th March 2025)    Tibbets, N.A., Chapman, T. (2023) A Guide to In-sessional English for Academic Purposes, New York: Routledge      Watkins, C. (2002) ‘Effective Learning’ NSIN Research Matters Institute of Education. Issue 7 London: University of London     Widdowson <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=20" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Case Study 2: Planning for effective learning &#8211; Product vs Process oriented learning.&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">f889d6674e6c13f25c2479cc235abaff</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=18</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 23 Feb 2025 01:22:48 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=18" rel="nofollow ugc">Case Study 1: Scaffolding interactions and learning – diversifying task outcomes and media </a></strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=18" rel="nofollow ugc"><img loading="lazy" src="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/files/2025/03/image-28-1024x578.png" /></a> Introduction and Background    This case study focuses on learners at LCF in Language Development, which aims to support speakers of English as an additional language. However, first language (L1) English students also find it useful for communicating at an advanced academic level. I aim to address diversity of linguistic and communicative ability as well as cultural and neurological diversities. My approach in general is based on the paradigm of communicative language teaching (Nunan, 1991) and although this can be interpreted to mean a variety of strategies (Thornbury, 2016), this has been the architecture of my prior teacher training (CELTA and DELTA- see appendix for acronyms) and practice.     Evaluation    My strategy currently relies on assumptions about providing a range of tasks (in a range of media) – which have differentiated points of production (even to the extent that learners may not do the tasks at all and simply observe others doing it). Peer learning leverages the knowledge and skill of the L1 learners. I draw on a mediation between what Vygotsky (1987) defines as the more knowledgeable other (MKO) and the zone of proximal development (ZPD) for the learner (a space in which I also facilitate scaffolding). I aim to foster a community of practice and learning based on the assumption that all knowledge acquisition begins through engagement in social interaction (Wenger, 2000). This approach is easier to measure regarding specific speaking lesson aims than it is for academic research and writing lesson aims.     Moving Forward    The media for materials is predominantly digital, however responding to feedback from peer observation regarding accessibility, I have increased haptic tasks that can also be done with paper handouts and whiteboards. Rather than black and white on slides and materials, I use pastel colours and avoid contrast issues (BDA, 2023). Despite dyslexia being the most common specific learning difficulty, intersectionality makes it difficult to differentiate dyslexia from other general learning issues and to design effective strategies for different cultural contexts (Davies, 2022). The multilingual classroom presents challenges for teaching and learning in respect of dyslexia in the context of a ‘super-diversity’ of learning needs (Peer and Reid, 2016), where data on students is not always available or reliable.      Aside from development of reading and writing skills, students also need to develop their interactive speaking and listening skills for seminar work (this has been identified by both learners and course leaders). My approach to this is to scaffold conversation by allowing space for preparation thinking time (Kerr, 2017), but also by making learners cognizant of cultural differences in turn taking (Frendo, 2005, pp.115-116) and allowing them to reflect on the possible impacts for intercultural communication.                 Figure 1. Selected Lesson Slides using text and diagram (source: Frendo, 2005, p.117)    Learners then have the opportunity for semi-controlled practice in pairs before freer practice in a larger group. – Feedback from observation (see appendix) of this approach reports that:      L1 students were first to speak, but the L2 students were paying close attention and soon joined in. The L2 students brought their cultural perspectives, and experiences of the global fashion market into the discussion. The conversation grew organically, everyone participated, and it is clear that they had grown in confidence and conversational ability thanks to tasks. (see Appendix 2)    This is a procedure which I aim to employ and test for efficacy with other Language Development groups. Regarding reading and writing tasks, deciding which strategy to use and when (Deunk et al., 2015) and not knowing which combination of students will be in each (non-compulsory) session presents the differentiation problematic, and a strategy for mediating the issues of complexity raised above (Davies, 2022; Peer and Reid, 2016) needs to be developed through further research of literature and more accurate profiling of learners, which can more effectively identify complex needs.     Action Points:    What: 1:Trial this lesson approach with Bsc_Msc_Fashion Management class- (gather feedback from observation). 2: Implement this lesson approach with new groups April May &#8211; and 3: with all groups for new academic year     When: 1:January (February) 2025, 2: April/May 2025, 3: October/November 2025    What: Gather data from admissions and course leaders on neurodiversity of students who may attend my classes in new academic year &#8211; and design lessons to support these students.    When: September 2025    Appendix 1: Acronyms:    CELTA- Certificate in English Language Teaching to Adults     DELTA &#8211; (Level 7) Diploma in English Language Teaching to Adults    Appendix 2: Peer Observation Notes     Holmes_20.01.25.docx    References    BDA _British Dyslexia Association (2023) Creating a dyslexia friendly workplace. Available at: <a href="https://www.bdadyslexia.org.uk/advice/employers/creating-a-dyslexia-friendly-workplace/dyslexia-friendly-style-guide" rel="nofollow ugc">https://www.bdadyslexia.org.uk/advice/employers/creating-a-dyslexia-friendly-workplace/dyslexia-friendly-style-guide</a> (Accessed: 20.02.25)     Deunk, M., Doolaard, S., Smale-Jacobse, A., and Bosker, R. J. (2015) Differentiation within and across classrooms: A systematic review of studies into the cognitive effects of differentiation practices. RUG/GION     Frendo, E. (2005) How to Teach Business English, Harlow: Pearson    Kerr, P. (2017) ‘How much time should we give to speaking practice?’ The Cambridge Papers in ELT series. [pdf] Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.     Nunan, D. (1991) ‘Communicative Tasks and the Language Curriculum.’ TESOL Quarterly. 25 (2): 279–295.  Available at: doi:10.2307/3587464. JSTOR 3587464. (Accessed on 20.02.25)     Thornbury, S. (2016) ‘Communicative language teaching in theory and practice.’ In Hall, G. (ed.) The Routledge Handbook of English Language Teaching. Abingdon, Oxon.: Routledge, pp. 224–237.     Wenger, E. (1998) ‘Communities of practice: Learning, meaning and identity.’ Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education 6(2):185-194 Available at DOI: 10.1023/A:1023947624004 (Accessed 23/02/25)     Vygotsky, L. S. (1987) ‘Thinking and speech’. In R.W. Rieber &amp; A.S. Carton (Eds.), The collected works of L.S. Vygotsky, Volume 1: Problems of general psychology (pp. <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=18" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Case Study 1: Scaffolding interactions and learning – diversifying task outcomes and media &#8220;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">bf51693b8daa4ad8eb3afaafc58d5c98</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=11</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jan 2025 19:21:52 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=11" rel="nofollow ugc">Reflective Post 1: Reflections on &#039;moral goods&#039; and the critique</a></strong>McDonald and Michaela (2019) explore ‘moral goods’ and ‘the critique’ – from the perspective of what matters for studio instructors. This provoked me to reflect – what matters to me?  – how does this affect my instruction and the diverse students I teach.      The term critique is not unproblematic &#8211; the emphasis is on the critical, and outside of the academic context, this is perhaps something which humans try to avoid being, in day-to-day life. The crit’ can range from the traditional presentation of a student’s work, followed by an interrogation, to one-to-one feedback. It is with the former that I first had experience, as both tutor and assessor, on the UAL Pre-sessional English (PSE) in 2021.     The crit forms the primary speaking element of the PSE assessment, for which students who speak English as an additional language need to reach a threshold grading to progress to their main courses at UAL. It is this participation which often causes the greatest anxiety, especially for those more introverted learners. The students develop a creative project and then present their work, followed by a Q&amp;A by 2 tutors (and sometimes students). Over the 4 years that I have been doing this course, the time allocated for the presentation has been incrementally reduced and vis-a-vis the time for critique has increased. This is presumably because it is the most exposing of communicative ability – presentations can be learned by rote – or read from script. I encourage students to move away from this rote learning to make it as live as possible, both for pragmatics – passing the course, and perhaps for fostering something more moral- developing a fundamentally human skill in the age of machines.      From the position of ‘moral realism,’ how we take part in the world is manifest as ‘participation in practice,’ and this practice involves (normative) ‘real moral reference points’ (Yanchar and Slife, 2017, p.165). Using this frame, McDonald and Michela (2019) investigate three types of ‘moral goods’: student development; teacher/practitioner self-cultivation; and for other stakeholders, through investigating how instructors talk about critiques. The paper finds that these moral goods can both reinforce and pull against each other – and that instructors are often mistaken in their view of a good and that this can interfere with actually achieving it (Ibid, p.28).      AI has already revolutionized the way in which we can produce text and is therefore becoming a less reliable measure of communicative, academic and professional capacity. In future, the viva – currently reserved for Phd students &#8211; may become part of the method for assessment for written papers at other levels. This would increase the need for students to embrace the critique, however how instructors should approach this regarding diversity is another point for reflection. My point of departure here, drawing on Harris (2022. P101), is to investigate how I can help make this form of participation meet the historically underrepresented needs of introverted learners, whilst building skill and confidence through practice.      Harris, K. (2022), ‘Embracing the silence: introverted learning and the online classroom’ Spark: UAL Creative Teaching and Learning Journal, 5 (1) 101-104     McDonald, J. and Michela, E. (2019), ‘The design critique and the moral goods of studio pedagogy,’ Design Studies 62 (2019) 1- 35      Yanchar, S. C., &amp; Slife, B. D. (2017), ‘Theorizing inquiry in the moral space of practice’, Qualitative Research in Psychology, 14(2)146 -170. Available at: h <a href="https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=11" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;Reflective Post 1: Reflections on &#8216;moral goods&#8217; and the critique&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">b94a1899a2ddb7258c7868c3ff34c88f</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes changed their profile picture</title>
				<link>https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/activity/p/556677/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jan 2025 16:26:53 +0000</pubDate>

				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">52af6563611f77695fbd7f736a34e8c6</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes&#039;s profile was updated</title>
				<link>https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/activity/p/556676/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jan 2025 16:25:14 +0000</pubDate>

				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">42b50ea478afd1c0387f70ad02770d2c</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes wrote a new post on the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=1</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 11 Dec 2024 11:50:50 +0000</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="http://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=1" rel="nofollow ugc">About Me</a></strong>I&#8217;m Ian I <a href="http://pgcertianholmes2025.myblog.arts.ac.uk/?p=1" rel="nofollow ugc"><span><span>[&hellip;]</span></span> <span>&#8220;About Me&#8221;</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
					<item>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">32d270ad702c5dcaec1ae4dcd728bc79</guid>
				<title>Ian Holmes created the site iholmesPGCert_2025</title>
				<link>https://myblog.arts.ac.uk/activity/p/555679/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 11 Dec 2024 11:50:50 +0000</pubDate>

				
									<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
				
							</item>
		
	</channel>
</rss>