Practice As Research

Nicole Brown

Practice As Research aims to bring together the many different strands of practice-led/based research across all disciplines so as to not be limited by disciplinary conventions, but instead to benefit from cross-disciplinary fertilisation. In the wider academic communities, there are many terms in use to describe the research-practice nexus. For the sake of consistency we adopt the term 'practice as research'. Fundamentally, we consider practice as research any practice that is underpinned by scholarship and academic rigour. The primary aim of Practice As Research is sharing practices, providing constructive feedback and thus enabling the mutual development of understanding around practice as research.

  1. Jun 11

    Sonic ways of knowing: researching life using sound

    In this session Richard Longman explores how sonic practices can serve as creative modes of organisational inquiry. Richard begins with the Organising Songs series, where he approached popular music not as cultural backdrop but as a way of knowing organisations – their tensions, atmospheres, and affective architectures. Treating each track as an analytic site allowed questions of voice, power, conflict, and emotion to emerge through the grain of sound rather than through thematic reduction. As this work evolved, Richard widened the listening field to include everyday sonic textures such as the hum of data servers, the background noise of open-plan offices, the chants of protest in the street, and the crackle of poor phone reception. These sounds reveal how organisational life is shaped, disciplined, and occasionally disrupted by the sonic environments it produces. Alongside these textures, Richard approaches silence as an active presence: a material through which refusal, exclusion, and organisational power can be heard. Drawing on sound studies and creative research traditions, he considers how writing itself becomes a form of sonic practice: a method for tracing atmospheres and affective residues that rarely surface in managerial accounts. The session proposes songs, sounds, and silences as relational methods that unsettle dominant ways of understanding organisations and open space for more nuanced, sensory, and politically attentive forms of analysis. Richard is a researcher, educator, and academic leader working at the intersections of critical management studies and the humanities. His work explores how organisations are shaped by the ethical, political, and sensory conditions of contemporary life. Trained originally as a classical musician, he brings an embodied and affective sensibility to organisational inquiry, using sound, silence, and listening as ways of unsettling dominant managerial assumptions and tracing the atmospheres through which power circulates. His research spans critical organisation studies, cultural and creative industries, and emerging conversations on sonicity in organisational life. Through projects ranging from opera companies to open-plan offices, he investigates how practices of listening, rhythm, noise, and refusal open questions of voice, authority, and inclusion. This work informs his public scholarship, including Organising Songs, a Substack series that uses music and the unsounded world as analytic and political method. Richard currently serves as Associate Head of School at The Open University Business School, where he his responsibility is for the taught postgraduate programmes. Across his roles, he works to cultivate epistemic plurality, inclusive pedagogy, and organisational spaces capable of engaging with the complexities and contradictions of polycrisis.

    55 min
  2. May 22

    Creative writing as analysis in research with children: putting a light in the window

    In this session Luci Gorell Barnes presents on how she has used creative writing within analysis in her doctoral research. Luci presents a creative writing method that she developed as part of her PhD analysis, in which she produced ‘portraits’ of individual children. Arundhati Roy (2009, p.134) reminds us to ‘never simplify what is complicated’ and this creative analysis process came out of her desire to deepen her understanding of what she had learned from her encounters with each child rather than homogenising her data into broad themes. She discusses how being immersed in her data informed her writing as she considered the issues the children had explored, drew on metaphors and images they used, and remembered how they had interacted with her and each other. She saw each ‘portrait’ as a ‘light in the window’, guiding her through ‘the woods’ of her analysis and findings, and supporting her to write embodied interpretive accounts that foregrounded the relational nature of the study. Couceiro (2024, p. 304) challenges the idea that being creative is ‘antithetical to being systematic or structured’ and she found that engaging with her data in this highly subjective and ‘interruptive’ way (Clark, 2024, p. 3) meant she brought a level of accuracy and relationality to her analysis that she might not have otherwise found. Luci Gorell Barnes is a socially engaged artist and artist-researcher. Her practice is concerned with developing creative participatory inquiries with people who find themselves on the margins for one reason or another, and issues of inclusion and access are central concerns in her work. She is interested in finding flexible and responsive processes that allow us to think imaginatively with each other and ourselves and her practice contributes to a community of disciplines that embraces academic research, family support, community development, health services, and education. She is currently a full-time PhD student on the Postgraduate Research Programme in the School of Education and Childhood at UWE Bristol. Her study explores how relationally engaged arts-based methods can support minoritised children to express, reflect on, and amplify their lived experiences and perceptions.

    49 min
  3. Mar 27

    Theatre of the Oppressed: Reflections and Provocations from an Artist/Researcher

    In this session Olivia Maurer presents her experience using practice as research working with participatory theatre in a traditional policy and social science context. Drawing on her ongoing doctoral research, Olivia shares insights on conducting practice as research and how the duality of the artist/researcher identity has impacted her positionality, duty of care, and outcomes of the project. The challenges and potentialities of engaging in PAR within a PhD process are also evaluated.  This session also discusses how practice as research is not just a “nice to have” in an urban studies and cultural geography research landscape, but a needed contribution to the field. We consider how the body is a vital source of knowledge of place and a crucial lens through which we can gain a better understanding of place-based experiences. We also examine how creative practice facilitates a space where this embodied knowledge is able to be teased out and reflected upon. Olivia Maurer is a postgraduate researcher in Urban Studies and Social Policy at the University of Glasgow, with a background in public policy and arts-based community engagement. Her PhD works in partnership with the AHRC Place-Based Research Programme to build an evidence base of methodologies that are able to surface the “felt experience of place,” specifically focused on using Theatre of the Oppressed as both a research method and a policy engagement tool. Olivia is also a community theatre practitioner, with her work recently being showcased at the UK Parliament as one of 100 Creative Agents of Climate Change.

    51 min
  4. Feb 16

    Social Fiction as a means of ‘unflattening’ disabled children’s educational childhoods.

    In this session Jill Pluquailec presents her use of Social Fiction when researching disabled children. This seminar presents a methodological reflection on the use of social fiction as a means of ‘unflattening’ disabled children’s educational childhoods. Jill argues there is a critical need for new ways of exploring the lived experiences of neurodivergent and disabled children to complicate ‘flat’ understandings that deny the embodied, affective, socio-spatially mediated experience of school life. She does this by making a case for social fictions as an ethical methodology and reflecting on techniques she used in developing a short story social fiction. She makes the case for why and how fiction-based methods destabilise dominant ways of knowing, seeing, teaching, and intervening with disabled children. Jill concludes by offering a series of ‘what if’ questions about the future development of social fiction as a methodology in Disability Studies and Education, one which brings greater nuance and a sense of three-dimensionality to understandings of neurodivergent bodies and minds in school spaces. Dr Jill Pluquailec, Senior Lecturer in Autism, Sheffield Institute of Education, Sheffield Hallam University. Jill’s teaching and research is concerned with social justice for disabled children and families with a particular interest in the ways bodies and spaces in education are both produced and reproduced within matrices of power and surveillance. Her work sits within Critical Disability Studies, Disabled Children’s Childhood Studies, and Critical Autism Studies centring on destabilising dominant knowledges in relation to what it means to be, and be understood, as marginalised. Jill has a specific commitment to social justice and ethics for groups that have been historically excluded or oppressed in both research design and practice.

    50 min
  5. 12/04/2025

    Stitches of Self: Restorative textile-based approaches to define the lived experience

    Stitches of Self: Restorative textile-based approaches to define the lived experience. Stitches of Self was and is an inclusive, textile-based research project exploring the restorative and empowering potential of textile work for those experiencing displacement. Through sensory and somatic approaches, the project engaged teacher education students working with children, young people and families with forced migration experiences, using art-engaged, non-verbal activities to prompt hidden stories of resilience and identity. By creating safe, listening-friendly spaces, the project explored how textile methods can support healing, amplify voices, and open dialogue where words may falter. Developed in acknowledgement of Refugee Education UK’s work, Stitches of Self highlights the power of creative research to foster dignity, hope and collective understanding. Dr Suzy Tutchell is Associate Professor in Art Education at the Institute of Education, University of Reading. As an artist-researcher-teacher, she explores diverse, sensory and creative methods at the intersection of art and social justice. Suzy leads the art specialism on the BA Primary Education programme and the creativity pathway on the master’s in education, whilst also serving as School Director for Racial Equity and Justice. With a background as an art subject leader and consultant in London schools, she brings over fifteen years’ experience in higher education to her work in shaping inclusive and imaginative practices in education.

    52 min
  6. 11/14/2025

    Embodied knowing: Foregrounding the multi-sensoriality of the body as epistemological site

    In this session Dr Elsa Urmston will consider the body as a site of knowledge as well as a tool for generating knowledge. Embodiment is a complex construct with varied meanings in different fields. What unifies research on embodiment is its emphasis on the body, where embodied knowledge production challenges Cartesian privileging of mind over body as the locus of knowledge. Drawing on phenomenological understandings of embodiment where the body is proposed as an epistemological site, and movement, alone and with others is the “originating ground of our sense-makings” (Sheets-Johnstone, 1999), this presentation is grounded in research exploring students’ and teachers’ embodied pedagogical experiences in vocational dance education. In this session, participants will be invited to consider filmic data gathering and analysis approaches which move beyond documentation and (re)presentation, to instead evoke complex, multi-sensorial, subjective positions and experiences. To do this, we will explore the visual, sonic and sensory affordances of data gathered from body-mounted cameras as a means to get close to research participants’ embodied experiences. There will also be time to reflect on whether such data can be analysed without an over-reliance on reductive written and linguistic documentation, to question whether embodied knowledge can ever adequately capture and reflect its ontological position when it is disseminated. Sheets Johnstone, M. (1999). The primacy of movement. John Benjamin Publishing.   Dr Elsa Urmston is a UK-based dance educator and researcher with interests in vocational education, community practice, dance science, and the impact of arts participation. Her PhD in Education focussed on the implications of periodisation for dance education. Elsa is artist-in-residence at Copperdot Studio, Norwich and works at numerous Higher Education Institutions including London Contemporary Dance School (LCDS). She consults on educational change, having written several UK dance degree programmes, and recently supported LCDS’s curriculum development. She co-leads the institution’s health and wellbeing research, and co-facilitates the institution’s Learning Exchange Programme for teaching artists. Elsa is also an evaluator, exploring dance participation and its impact on people’s lives from social, psychological and health perspectives with companies such as Dance Umbrella, Royal Ballet and Opera and East London Dance. Elsa is Editor-in-Chief of the Bulletin for Dancers and Teachers published by the International Association of Dance Medicine and Science (IADMS). She is also Chair of Dance Network Association, a dance for health organisation based in Essex. Elsa was the winner of the IADMS Dance Educator Award in 2025.

    50 min

About

Practice As Research aims to bring together the many different strands of practice-led/based research across all disciplines so as to not be limited by disciplinary conventions, but instead to benefit from cross-disciplinary fertilisation. In the wider academic communities, there are many terms in use to describe the research-practice nexus. For the sake of consistency we adopt the term 'practice as research'. Fundamentally, we consider practice as research any practice that is underpinned by scholarship and academic rigour. The primary aim of Practice As Research is sharing practices, providing constructive feedback and thus enabling the mutual development of understanding around practice as research.