EPISTEM PODCAST

Geraldine Simmie and Michelle Starr

The EPI•STEM podcast comes to you from EPI•STEM The National Centre for STEM Education at the School of Education, University of Limerick. The co-hosts, Professor Geraldine Simmie and Dr. Michelle Starr, chat with their guests about the Research and Partnership projects at the Research Centre in STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) and STEAM education in UL for inclusive STEM practices with the Arts (e.g. Ethics, Music, & Politics). The focus is on supporting teachers' knowledge and CPD within a need for Social Justice, Climate Justice and Sustainability.

  1. 2D AGO

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 40

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine Simmie PhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Professor Sibel Erduran as their special guest. Professor Sibel Erduran is the Professor of Science Education in the Department of Education at the University of Oxford in the UK. Professor Erduran is an internationally renowned science educator and researcher and the Editor and member of the Editorial Boards of an impressive number of Science Education journals. Prior to taking up this position in the University of Oxford, Sibel was a former Director of EPI·STEM at UL. Professor Erduran started her career as a biochemist, qualified in the US, and later became a science and chemistry teacher. Here Sibel explains how she always carried a deep interest in the interdisciplinary nature of science and its relation to science and society. While evidence-based reasoning in science education continues to be a key skillset for young people, Sibel noticed the importance of opening broader questions of how we need to support science teachers and students differently in what has become a post-truth world. A world where there is a loss of trust in experts, where doubt can be socially engineered by different vested interests and power brokers, and where theimportance of science-in-society is nowadays more important than ever. Professor Sibel Erduran explains why science educators can no longer ignore the ethical and political dimensions of teaching science to young people and in science teachers’ continuing professional learning. Do we need to embrace our humanity in the science classroom or leave ourselves open to becoming reduced to an algorithm in this new world of AI. Young people will clearly need access to a multiplicity of knowledge(s), skillsets and values to navigate the complex social and environmental issues of our time, and to do this in ways that areempowering and imbued with hope and social justice. This new imaginary will need to open a new dialogue in the science classrooms, hold tensions in play, have new competences moving beyond critical thinking and problem solving and newskillsets such as, probabilistic thinking and critical appraisal of the power and limits of science. Working closely with Professor Olivia Levrini and others, Professor Sibel Erduran is one of the founding members of a new Special Interest Group (SIG No 8) in the European Science Education Research Association (ESERA) called, Futures-Oriented Science Education. The SIG aims to open these new debates within the community of science education researchers in relation to the multiplicity of futures needing to be reimagined for science education. Sibel speaks to the urgency to open the debate on AI and how it influences all aspects of science education, the need to stay with the pros and cons,questions of regulation and the potential for inbuilt biases in these modelling tools. The problem of AI in science educators and teachers’ practices will need to be framed as more than technical competence and will need to include new skills, ethical sensibilities and critical capacities. The musical performance today is by Rosemary O’Malley andEstaban Flores, graduates of the Master’s in Traditional Music in the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance in UL. Rosemary is from Chicago and works in the European Centre for the Study of Hate in the School of Law in UL. Esteban, from France works in SAVINS music store in Limerick city. Rosemary and Esteban play a waltz by Brian O’Leary called I’ll Meet You On A Day That Never Ends and a reel called Kit O’Connor.

    44 min
  2. APR 14

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 39

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine Simmie PhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Liam Maquet as their special guest. Liam Maquet is an Assistant Professor in Technology Education in the School of Education and an EPI·STEM Affiliate. Liam’s most recent resource on polymers for engineering teachers and students can be found in the Engineering section of our EPI·STEM Academy of STEM Teachers (https://epistem.ie/resources/). Here we regularly upload free research-led CPD resources for teachers to adapt in their classroom and school contexts. In the podcast today, Liam recalls his experiences growing up in Ardara in County Donegal and going to St Columba’s Comprehensive School in nearby Glenties. Liam speaks to the fishing and weaving lifestyles and their impact on the culture and heritage of the area. During his teen years, Liam designed a working loom using a process of reverse engineering from an older wooden loom and today continues to enjoy weaving on this loom whenever he visits Donegal. This rich background was inspirational in shaping Liam’s passion for teaching and research in engineering, graphics and technology. In the University of Limerick, Liam not only completed an undergraduate teacher education degree in this area but was enabled to remain on as a university teacher to influence the next generation of student teachers in these subjects. Currently, Liam Maquet is in the final phase of his PhD study in Technology Education exploring productive pedagogies that enable the teaching of spatial reasoning, skills and spatial intelligence. His research is undertaken in the Technological University of the Shannon (TUS) under the supervision of Dr Jeff Buckley and Dr Ronan Dunbar from TUS and Dr Sheryl Sorby from the US. In the podcast, Liam teases out the complexity of his research problem and the multiple approaches to framing this teaching and learning problem, especially from an intersectional perspective of gender, social class, race and ethnicity. Finding a productive framework that holds the tensions in play clearly matters, given that engineering and technology education aim to make a difference to the public-interest and sustainability needs of a future-oriented economy, society and environment. The music today is performed by Aisling Kearns, from Castlebar and a third-year student in the BA in World Music in the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance. Here Aishling plays a piece written by the contemporary traditional composer, Liz Carroll from Chicago, called ‘The Island of Woods’.

    32 min
  3. APR 6

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 38

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine SimmiePhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Eamonn Stack Mulvihill as their special guest. Eammon is an Associate Teacher in the School of Education at the University of Limerick (UL) and an EPI∙STEM affiliate. Eamonn is from Moyvane in North Kerry. Eamonn explains how his interest in Engineering and STEM subjects began with his family, in his early years in the Comprehensive Secondary School in Tarbert and later through completion of an engineering teacher educationdegree in the School of Education in UL. Today, Eamonn is teaching engineering topics to teacher education students in the School of Education in UL and completing a PhD study in the Technological University of the Shannon (TUS) under the supervision of Dr Clodagh Reid, Dr Rónán Dunbar and Dr Richard Kimbell (UK). Eamonn is studying integrated-STEM for students and teachers in post-primary schools in Ireland. This is a topic of national and international interest in an increasingly technological world.STEM education, and integrated-STEM education remain a contested question in the literature and a live policy issue in national reports – especially in relation to the post-primary sector. How to do this integration of the four subject matter areas well, Science, Engineering, Mathematics and Technology for secondary school pupils and teachers is the live issue today and requires deciding on which lenses need to be brought to bear on the topic. Here Eamonn touches ontwo of these lenses, such as, the interdisciplinary lens and the culture-ethics-gender lens. Eamonn is deeply interested in social justice, on democratising knowledge and the value of social outreach from the university to make a real difference in community life. His podcast with Dr Dan O’Sullivan from the School ofEducation entitled ‘ON THE MARGINS’ does just that. The podcast provides a platform for people on the margins to have a voice (e.g. prisoners, travellers), to challenge mainstream biases while aiming for a social celebration ofdifference, plurality and diversity rather than seeking to assimilate everyone inside some unified pedagogy of indifference. We conclude today with a poem read and composed by Aisling Kearns, a 3rd year student in the BA in World Music in the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance in UL. This original poem, called Déanta Briste was published in 2025 in the collection of contemporary poems called The Story Thursday Book 50 by the Limerick Arts Office to celebrate their 50th Anniversary.

    29 min
  4. APR 1

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 37

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine SimmiePhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Manus McDyer as their special guest. Manus McDyer is a University Teacher in technology education in the School of Education and an EPI∙STEM Affiliate with expertise in teaching student teachers’ subjects, such as, engineering, process technology, graphics and design & technology. In the EPI·STEM podcast today, Manus shares his passionfor teaching and research in technology education and explains how he was drawn to exploring the variety of attributes and expertise of designers across different livelihoods. Manus hails from Glenties in Co. Donegal, an area famous for fiddle players and a strong creative and musical tradition in traditional music and culture. Manus first began his journey into technology education when he selected engineering and graphics, in junior cycle and senior cycle in his local comprehensive school. Later, he achieved a first-class honour, grade 1, in a four-yearundergraduate Bachelor-in-Technology-Education (B Tech Ed) degree in Initial Teacher Education (ITE) in the School of Education at UL. Manua Mc Dyer works today as a University Teacher in Technology Education in the School of Education (UL) and is currently completing his PhD study in Technology Education. His PhD supervisors include Dr Jeff Buckley, Dr Ronan Dunbar, and Dr Niall Seery from the Technological University of theShannon (TUS), and Dr Niekie Blom from the School of Education in UL. Manus is deeply interested in researching the topic ofdesign and deign thinking in technology education from multiple directions. His doctoral study draws from grounded theory as the most suitable approach to mapping this complex ontological and epistemic puzzle. Manus’ study is already yielding interesting findings into how best to support learners with productive pedagogies, including how best to include the technical, creative, affective and reflective dimensions.  Manus McDyer continues to avail of new learning andnetworking opportunities, including engaging with the touchstone of research to better support his teaching of technology education and at the same time he regularly presents at national and international research conferences intechnology and STEM education, including in Ireland, UK, Canada, China and Sweden. ​​​The music selection today is performed by Eoghan Collins,from Newport, Co. Tipperary, a first-year student in the BA in World Music in The Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at UL. Eoghan is a singer, songwriter and guitarist. Here he performs an original composition called ‘Refugee Woman’. ​

    37 min
  5. MAR 26

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 36

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine SimmiePhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Eoin McNamara as their special guest. Eoin is a Technical Officer and Outreach Officer in the Department of Chemical Sciences at the University of Limerick (UL) and an EPI∙STEM affiliate. Eoin hails from Corbally and was a past pupil of Gael Coláiste Luimnigh. Eoin went on to complete his undergraduate bachelors’ degree in the School of Education in UL in the Biological and Chemical Sciences. Here Eoin McNamara shares the pathway he took into hiscurrent role in the Department of Chemical Sciences. Eoin discuss his current research master’s study, under the supervisor of Dr Aishling Flaherty, a science teachereducator in the School of Education and EPI∙STEM affiliate. Eoin masters’ study, entitled ‘Sensory mapping of anundergraduate laboratory against student perspectives’, not only takes account of issues, such as, technical, health and safety, and ergonomics, it also takes the question of human need into account. Here Geraldine, Michelle and Eoin discusswhat that might mean in relation to current thinking emerging from STE(A)M education, especially the need for a humanising discourse of Science and STEM education that can be grounded in dialogue and reflexivity and more in a co-equal fusion with the Arts and Humanities. Geraldine, Michelle and Eoin discuss the contested spacetoday of the Arts in STEM education referring to the national policy report on the Arts in STEM education conducted by the Department of Education and Youth (DEY), and the rich variety of approaches at play today in European policy reports, innovation projects and in the research literature. Today we want to welcome Dr Vo Van De starting his post-doctoral fellowship this week in EPI∙STEM in a new STEAM education study – as a school-university-enterprise partnership jointly funded by the Irish Research Council and Eli Lilly Limerick. Our plan is to work with interested science teachers to make a difference in science and chemistry classrooms and schoolsin Ireland. We also have three PhD students in the second year of their STEAM education studies. They will present policy analyses at the upcoming ESAI 2026 Conference in the University of Galway later in May. Their studies take a relational and transformative worldview of STEAM Education that allows for co-equal fusion of the sciences and the arts for a rich interplay between different knowledges and ways of knowing.  The music selection is performed by Eoghan Collins fromNewport, Co. Tipperary. Eoghan is a first-year student in the BA in World Music in The Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at UL. Eoghan is a singer, songwriter and guitarist. Eoghan performs his original composition called ‘Don’t Wait’.

    29 min
  6. MAR 16

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 35

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine SimmiePhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Dr Michaela Hayes as their special guest. Dr Hayes is a University Teacher in technology education in the School of Education and an EPI∙STEM Affiliate with expertise in teaching student teachers’ subjects, such as, construction studies, graphics and wood technology. In the EPI·STEM podcast today, Dr Michaela Hayes shares her passion for teaching and research in technology education andpedagogy and explains how deliberative democracy in the classroom can support paying attention to the common good of society and the environment. Dr Hayes traces her passion and research interest in technology education from good beginnings as a pupil in Coláiste Mhuire in Ennis to her four-year undergraduate degree in UL in Initial Teacher Education (ITE) in technology education. Dr Hayes’s research expertise in relation to pedagogy and teacher learning in technology education is underpinned by her doctoral study - completed in 2025. Dr Hayes’ doctoral study involved a deep dive into a conceptual framework that drew from the theorisations of Habermas and Foucault and examined the problem involved in seeking to establish a democratic classroom experience for all young people. Dr Hayes explains the need to acknowledge the rich interplays between technology, ethics and power. This needs to include the heart work embedded in good teaching and the necessary struggle for students to experience a democratic learning environment in technology education. Michaela explains that the overall aim here is to make a difference to breathing life into the United Nation’s sustainable development goals. Dr Michaela Hayes is currently working on a European projecton active learning methodologies with her colleagues, Dr Niekie Blom and Dr Donal Canty. This coming week they are travelling, along with final year students to Murcia in Spain to meet their European partners and to visit schools. The music selection today is performed by Caoimhe Doherty, athird-year student in the BA in World Music in The Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at UL. Here Caoimhe plays two jigs on the fiddle, The Rolling Wave and Banished Misfortune.

    26 min
  7. MAR 10

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 34

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine SimmiePhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Professor JJ Leahy as their special guest. Professor JJ Leahy is Head of the Department of Chemical Sciences in the University of Limerick, a world-renowned expert on environmental chemistry who is working on large scale research projects and in an advisory role in relation to European directives. In the EPI·STEM podcast today, Professor JJ Leahy shares the changing face of the scientific research and higher education taking place in the Department of Chemical Sciences today, especially with the new emphasis on finding innovative and sustainable solutions to issues of waste management, climate change, biomedical issues and renewable energies. This has resulted in former disciplinary teams in higher education nowadays working more across multiple disciplines, in interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary spaces sharing these ethical and epistemic puzzles, including chemical engineering, industrial biochemistry, pharmaceutical chemistry and environmental sciences. Professor JJ Leahy shares his passion for scientific research and innovation and what it can do when coupled with the foundational and ethical principles of education and good governance to inspire mindset change and lifelong learning among a scientifically informed general population, with an increasing critical awareness of the necessity for a care-based, sustainable and cooperative future. The music selection today is performed by Caoimhe Doherty, a third-year student in the BA in World Music in The Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at UL. Here Caoimhe plays a jig written by Junior Crehan called Misty Covered Mountain.

    21 min
  8. 12/19/2025

    EPI∙STEM PODCAST EPISODE 33

    In this episode of the EPI·STEM podcast, Geraldine SimmiePhD and Michelle Starr PhD welcome Associate Professor Keelin Leahy as their special guest. Associate Professor Leahy is a Lecturer in Wood, Technology & Design in the School of Education and an EPI∙STEM Affiliate. In the podcast Associate Professor Leahy recalls how herresearch interest and passion for the subject happened through inspiration from a female teacher of woodwork in her school days in Coláiste Mhuire in Ennis, Co. Clare and through working in the medium of wood with her father. Keelincompleted her undergraduate studies in UL in Construction Studies. Later Associate Professor Keelin Leahy spent a sabbatical year in the University of Michigan in the US. There Keelin worked with a multidisciplinary team in ‘designheuristics’ including researchers interested in psychology and in design. While Design Thinking, both in the US and Ireland was focused more on the output there was less interest shown in the process, and especially in the ways thatyoung people could be inspired to think as creative designers. Today, Keelin has written textbooks for student teachers, for teaching design thinking in the post-primary curriculum in Ireland. Associate Professor Keelin Leahy goes on to explain the thinking tools, steps and skillsets that can nowadays be provided to young people when engaging in ‘domain readiness’ for problem-based learning. These includecognitive and metacognitive thinking tools and strategies that help students to push past ‘fixation’ and that can open minds and hearts to innovative approaches. This ‘heuristic design’ approach not only enriches competence in design thinking skills, it helps student wellbeing and has capacity for all involved to seek ways to make a difference to people, place and planet.  Finally, Associate Professor Leahy speaks to a recentresearch paper published with colleagues in UL who formed an online community of practice during covid-19. The platform supported the colleagues to reflexively engage in relation to their efforts to teach young people online and to learn with and from one another. Keelin speaks to the power of dialogue, the felt sense of collegiality, and the deeper, more meaningful and contextually significant learning arising from this encounter. We will now draw the podcast to a close from this semesterand plan to return when our spring semester starts again in January 2026. We are delighted to announce that the Irish Research Council have awarded us in EPI·STEM with a research fellow for Dr Vo Van De to work in a school-university-enterprise partnership with Eli Lilly and chemistry teachers in schools in Ireland. A special word of thanks to all our guests this semester and to Assistant Professor Matthew Noone for his support from the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance. Finally, thanks to the Digital Hub in UL for hosting our podcast and to our producer, Grzegorz Rogola for his expertise, skill and constant care. The music selection today is by Nora Gowran from Ennis inCounty Clare. Nora is a first-year student in the BA in World Music in The Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at UL. Here Nora sings a beautiful sean-nós song, Grá Mo Chroí (Love of My Heart).

    29 min

About

The EPI•STEM podcast comes to you from EPI•STEM The National Centre for STEM Education at the School of Education, University of Limerick. The co-hosts, Professor Geraldine Simmie and Dr. Michelle Starr, chat with their guests about the Research and Partnership projects at the Research Centre in STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) and STEAM education in UL for inclusive STEM practices with the Arts (e.g. Ethics, Music, & Politics). The focus is on supporting teachers' knowledge and CPD within a need for Social Justice, Climate Justice and Sustainability.