The Learning Development Project

LDProject

In the Learning Development Project, conversation is the key to unlocking disciplinary scholarship. We interview the writers and thinkers whose work has shaped and continues to influence the Learning Development field today. Join us in discovering the people behind the ideas - because publication isn’t the end of the story.

  1. 18 de jun.

    Bilal Nazir: inclusive assessment

    Why do we have exams? The idea of the memorisation and narrative regurgitation of facts being a measure of learning is, in many ways, quite absurd. The exam system can also be excluding of students with different linguistic, cultural and social capital from those for whom the system was originally developed (nearly 200 years ago, for Oxbridge candidates, if you’re interested). We know that authentic, practical assessment can remove some socially-embedded hierarchies, but changes to the operational mechanics alone will not resolve these issues of inclusion: the social space has to be changed as well, through our pedagogical dynamics, through our language and through our assessment processes. The awarding gap is all about what can be measured or counted, but inclusion is about how students feel in, belong to and navigate through the educational space. Students who feel included, to whom assessment can really speak, will do better and achieve more. When we aim for the transformative over the transactional, everybody wins.  The resources we mentionedNazir, M. B., Johnson, K., Greenhalgh, J., Aston, L., & Pedley, N. (2026). Exploring student assessment literacy: how undergraduate students actualise and transform their assessment strategies. Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, (39). https://doi.org/10.47408/jldhe.vi39.1798  An article that explores the relationship between intellectual knowledge and transmitted knowledge in Islam.  And the publication we talked about Nazir, M. B. (2025). Understanding inclusive assessment: how British Pakistani male graduates engage with university assessments. Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, (36). https://doi.org/10.47408/jldhe.vi36.1478

    1h 1min
  2. 28 de mai.

    Chahna Gonsalves: the rise of interpretive load

    When is ‘transparency’ not transparent? When it comes in the form of policy that carries different levels of risk for staff and students. For Chahna Gonsalves, the biggest issue with institutional AI policies is that it adds what she terms ‘interpretive load’ to students: the idea that they have to weigh up the risk of declaring their uses of generative AI in an environment that doesn’t adequately or explicitly set clear boundaries. For AI policies to be useful, they have to speak in pedagogical language to everyone, rather than punitive. It’s the quality of our feedback and the clarity of our expectations that counts, and staying true to the criteria we say we’re assessing. We’re looking for effort from our students so perhaps we can ensure that our own effort is clear too, in the form of understanding what these tools are capable of. And they are capable of much, but perhaps we need to embrace slow learning and failure as our dominant pedagogies in this new fast-paced world of instant gratification. Let’s all give ourselves a break and take the time to think! The resources we mentioned Illingworth, S. (2026). What UK university AI policies actually do: A study of 96 institutions. Available from: https://www.hepi.ac.uk/reports/what-uk-university-ai-policies-actually-do-a-study-of-96-institutions/  And the publication we talked about Gonsalves, C. (2026). The transparency trap: Generative AI and the rise of interpretive load. Review of Education 14(1), https://doi.org/10.1002/rev3.70139

    54 min
  3. 27 de abr.

    Nurun Nahar: student-staff partnerships

    Student-staff partnerships (SSPs) offer multiple benefits to all participants. While we might most often think about the pedagogic, employability or experience gains for students, SSPs can also help staff think through various issues from new perspectives, for example the potential gains brought by technology enhanced learning and AI advances and developments. There are a healthy set of challenges too, not least the unavoidable power dynamics. Sharing power does not come naturally, and participants will bring their own cultural experiences with them into an SSP. We can’t remove power or avoid it, so how best to manage these dynamics? For our guest Nurun Nahar, communication is key, specifically around expectations: what do we expect of our students? What are their roles in the project, and what value do we see them adding? And what are they expecting from us? Then together the team can agree the aims and objectives of the project, and the principles by which it will run. So far, so pragmatic (and wise!). But SSPs are also relational and personal, and Nurun recommends reflecting on the emotional journey as a participant, as part of the evaluation of impact.  The resources we mentioned Margaret Atwood - Canadian novelist and poet Bengali writers: Satyajit Ray - filmmaker and novelist Sarat chandra Chatterjee - novelist Rabindranath Tagore - Nobel Prize winner in Literature for Geetanjali Mike Sharples - Emeritus Professor of Educational Technology TIRIgogy CPD resources - and Alicja’s podcast episode with Nurun! And the publication we talked about Nahar, N., Storey, T., Azhar, A., Lomas, V., & Jabbar, K. (2024). From Collaboration to Transformation: A Reflective Exploration of Student-Staff Partnerships for Technology Enhanced Learning in Higher Education. Student Engagement in Higher Education Journal, 5(2), 76–91. Retrieved from https://sehej.raise-network.com/raise/article/view/1213

    1h
  4. 24 de mar.

    Joy Igiebor: doing Learning Development

    Remember when you started as a Learning Developer? What it was like to welcome a student into a tutorial for the first time, and stand in front of your first class ready to run a workshop? Do you remember what it felt like to flounder? For Joy Igiebor, that feeling of floundering and unknowing, and the questions it prompted – who am I as an LD? what does the job mean? – came to seem like a rite of passage, a process of drawing on our prior knowledge and experiences as we gradually build our identities in this field. As we build our confidence and competence, so do we become more able to advocate for the role, our work, and our students. And when we bring theory and practice together, in a deep understanding of praxis, we are able to speak with so much more authority. Getting there, though – that can take time. So for any new or early career Learning Developers who’ve stopped to wonder what on earth they’re doing, here are Joy’s top three pieces of advice: You’re not alone. We are a strong and vibrant community, waiting to hear from you. Making mistakes is part of the role. Failure is learning. Reflect, revise, and try again. Join a professional association, whether ALDinHE or ScotHELD (or SEDA, CILIP or ALT), and access information and knowledge on wider contextual issues and values, to ground your individual practice and give it meaning. And our own advice: get yourself a copy of this book! The resources we mentioned Abegglen, S., Burns, T., Sinfield, S. (2021) Supporting Student Writing and Other Modes of Learning and Assessment. A Staff Guide. Calgary: University of Calgary. http://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/6970/1/Writing-guide-2021_2021.05.25.pdf  Arthur, R. (2023) “‘Conscious’ learning development: towards a pedagogy of race-consciousness ”, Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, (26). doi: 10.47408/jldhe.vi26.928. Burns, T. & Sinfield, S. 2022. Essential study skills: The complete guide to success at university (5th ed.). Sage. Dhillon, S. (2018) “Whose wellbeing is it anyway?”, Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education. doi: 10.47408/jldhe.v0i0.460. Igiebor, J. (2023). What the learning developer needs to know. Take5 #84, available from https://aldinhe.ac.uk/take5-84-what-the-learning-developer-needs-to-know/  Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education Lamott, A. 1995. Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. Anchor Books. Syska, A. and Buckley, C. (eds.) (2023) How to be a Learning Developer in higher education: Critical perspectives, community and practice. Routledge.   Webster, H. 2019. “Towards a Signature Pedagogy of Learning Development.” Rattus Scholasticus blog. Accessed 2 July 2022. https://rattusscholasticus.wordpress.com/2019/07/28/towards-a-signature-pedagogy-of-learning-development/.  Zinsser, W. 2016. On writing well: The classic guide to writing nonfiction. New York: Harper Perennial. And the publication we talked about Igiebor, J. (2026). Doing Learning Development in Higher Education: a practical guide for new and early career learning developers. Routledge

    51 min
  5. 26 de fev.

    Laura Dyer: humanistic pedagogies

    We talk about wanting to empower our students, but what does that really mean? For Laura Dyer, it means that we are the ones holding the power and we extend it to our students – whereas what we could and should be doing instead is helping students to tap into the power that they already have. This makes power such an important outcome of the humanistic pedagogy model she has developed, which brings together People, Place and Compassion to support students in accessing their power. A humanistic approach aims to teach the whole person, not the subject. It also acknowledges that emotions are central to the learning process and can impact its outcomes both positively and negatively. And what is it like for us, as teachers? As people in a learning environment, we also want to enjoy what we do and have self-compassion as we do it. Content might be king, but perhaps it’s time that the people teaching and learning it took its place! The resources we mentioned Mihalyi Csikszentmihalyi’s ideas about flow and its contribution to happiness Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs The Montessori method Pekrun, R. (2014). International Handbook of Emotions in Education. Routledge Rogers, C. ‘The Interpersonal Relationship in the Facilitation of Learning’, In M. Thorpe, R. Edwards and A. Hanson (eds.), Culture and Processes of Adult Learning, London and New York: Open University, (1993 (first published in 1967)), pp. 228-242.  Shahjahan, R. A. (2015). Being ‘lazy’ and slowing down: Toward decolonizing time, our body, and pedagogy. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 47(5), 488-501, https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2014.880645 And the publication we talked aboutDyer, L. (2025). A humanistic approach to English for academic purposes pedagogy: people, place, compassion, power. Springer Nature.

    48 min
  6. 18/12/2025

    Jason Eyre: the philosophy of Learning Development

    What has philosophy got to do with learning development? And why should learning development be concerned with philosophy? For Jason Eyre – indeed, for all philosophers – philosophy gives us new ways to think about things and new concepts we can work with, to understand not necessarily the answer to a question (such as, What is LD?) but alternative ways we can engage with that question. Jason (with some help from his cat, Peppercorn, who you might hear in this episode) wants LD to consider its tendencies more than its boundaries, its connectedness more than its categories. When we don’t pin something down, we can focus instead on our commonalities. The world is ever changing and higher education changes with it; rather than be left behind in our rigid definitions, by situating ourselves in our contexts we can stay responsive. And by keeping our emphasis on relationality, and the communities in which we work, we can find resilience in each other, boost each other’s agency, and discover joy. Surely such a gift is worth spending some time with Deleuze? Failing that, spend it with Jason; you won’t regret it.  The resources we mentioned Dhillon, S. (2025). Book review: Eyre, J. (2025) Learning Development in higher education: crisis, practice, and power in the 21st century university. Singapore: Springer. Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, (38). https://doi.org/10.47408/jldhe.vi38.1819 Didion, J. (2021). Why I write. Literary Hub. Available at: https://lithub.com/joan-didion-why-i-write/  Spinoza: a useful introduction is available from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. You might find the section on Virtue and Happiness particularly useful.  For an introduction to the concept of the virtual vs the actual, as conceived by Bergson and developed by Deleuze, this short article in Epoche Magazine will give you plenty of text to dwell with! And the publication we talked about Eyre, J. (2025). Learning Development in Higher Education: Crisis, Practice, and Power in the 21st Century University. Springer, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-96-8802-9

    1h 16min
  7. 28/11/2025

    Edward Venn: building a sense of belonging

    Belonging is one of those abstract concepts that seems to be something whose meaning we can all relatively easily grasp, but when we come to look at it more closely, actually appears to be much more slippery and elusive. Belonging itself is an objective fact about an individual’s membership of a group or community. A sense of belonging – that mysterious element that occupies us in this conversation – is that individual’s subjective relationship with the group or community to which they belong. So before we can measure or even examine someone’s sense of belonging, we must first ensure we know what we are talking about, and that that person shares that understanding. And what would we do with that measurement, anyway? A lack of sense of belonging is not an easy fix, and not something that everyone would want fixed, anyway; a sense of belonging is not obligatory, nor is its lack necessarily a problem. Why worry about it, then? Because the Venn diagram of sense of belonging and engagement has a large intersection, and therefore, in the eyes of this particular Venn, a problem worth solving.The resources we mentioned Booth, W.C. (1995). The craft of research. The University of Chicago Press. NB 1st edition recommended - try World of Books! Kaminski, R. (2025). The gift of not belonging: How outsiders thrive in a world of joiners. Scribe. Chapters specifically mentioned by Ed from his book are those by: Stacey Mottershaw, Rachael O'Connor, Nadine Cavigioli: A collaborative autoethnographic reflection on social class and student belonging in higher education Kathleen Quinlan: Belonging and engagement in higher education literature Ayoola Johnson: Seeking belonging in higher education Terrell Strayhorn: Social engagement and students’ sense of belonging Edward Venn, Karen Burland, Boroka Javor: Challenging dominant discourses And the publication we talked about Ahn, M.Y, Venn, E. and Lowe, T. (Eds.) (2025). Student Belonging in Higher Education: Perspectives and Practice. Routledge.

    1h 10min

Sobre

In the Learning Development Project, conversation is the key to unlocking disciplinary scholarship. We interview the writers and thinkers whose work has shaped and continues to influence the Learning Development field today. Join us in discovering the people behind the ideas - because publication isn’t the end of the story.

Você também pode gostar de