2020-21 | Language Education Research and the Department for Education
'Language Education Research and the Department for Education'
Knowledge Exchange Fellow:
Dr Arlene Holmes-Henderson | Faculty of Classics | University of Oxford
Partner Organisation:
Department for Education
Dr Arlene Holmes-Henderson is a TORCH Knowledge Exchange Fellow 2020-2021 working with the Department for Education. This partnership allows officials with responsibility for humanities and languages curriculum policy in England to engage with the research evidence on the likely benefits of teaching ancient languages in primary schools, given these are part of the national curriculum. In considering the long-term impact that the study of an ancient language can have on subsequent language study, this knowledge exchange partnership has the potential to inform future policy development on both the teaching of ancient and modern foreign languages in schools in England.
This partnership connects research evidence to policy enactment and contributes to the co-production of tools and resources that facilitate solutions for 1) better teaching of the KS2 languages curriculum in schools; 2) improved transition in languages between KS2 and KS3; and, ultimately, 3) the EBacc ambition at KS4.
Via her Knowledge Exchange Fellowship, Dr Holmes-Henderson is sharing the strength of the existing evidence from her award-winning Classics in Communities project, and wider research, on the impact of learning ancient languages on KS2 children's cognitive development. The feedback, insight and questions from policy colleagues will directly contribute to Dr Holmes-Henderson’s evolving research agenda, for example by making it more responsive to gaps in policy delivery.
Knowledge will be shared widely throughout this Fellowship. Dr Holmes-Henderson is the Outreach Officer of the Classical Association (the national subject association for Classics), she sits on the British Academy’s National Languages Advisory Group alongside colleagues representing modern languages, she chairs the Classics Development Group (the umbrella body for learned societies in Classics), she is a member of the British Curriculum Forum, a member of the OCR Classics consultative forum and a Schools’ committee member of the Roman Society. She aims to improve communication between these organisations as part of this Fellowship, and will help to connect the Department for Education with a more diverse network of stakeholders in language and humanities education.
2020-21 | Language Education Research and the Department for Education
- Suzie Leighton, Co-Director, The Culture Capital Exchange and the National Centre for Academic and Cultural Exchange
- Dr Sara Jones, Director, Centre for Creativity in Professional Practice, City University
- Professor Lizzie Jackson, Director of Research of the School of Arts and Creative Industries | London South Bank University
- Adele Roberts-Hunt, Head of Business Engagement, Kingston University
- Matthew Guest, Policy Manager, Guild HE
- David Sweeney, Executive Chair of Research England (a council within UKRI) opened the event by highlighting the importance of knowledge exchange to society, the economy and the arts.
- Professor Trevor McMillan, Vice-Chancellor of Keele University and Knowledge Exchange Champion for Research England, spoke about the development of the Knowledge Exchange Framework.
- Other members of the NCACE ‘Sounding Board’ gave presentations about the importance of sharing expertise beyond academia, showcasing examples including from the Crafts Council.
- education - both primary and secondary10
- research - education, applied linguistics and cultural studies
- policy
- translation
- access & outreach
- Arlene Holmes-Henderson
- Helen Small, Merton Professor of English Language and Literature
- Rana Mitter, Professor of the History and Politics of Modern China
- Charlotte Medland, the Innovation, Impact & Evaluation Facilitator for the Humanities Division
- Welcome and introduction to Transforming Evidence | Professor Annette Boaz | Co-lead Transforming Evidence
- Introductions | Jonathan Breckon | Chair
- What more can social scientists do to provide relevant and high-quality news content? | David Walker | Contributing editor Guardian Public, and ex-ESRC Board Member
- The role of academic expertise in media debates on Europe in post-Brexit Britain | Professor Catherine Barnard FBA | Deputy Director, UK in Changing Europe
- Educational research for the media; how best to inform policymaking for schools? | Fran Abrams | Chief Executive, Education Media Centre
- Academic rigour and journalistic flair: what role can intermediary organisations play between journalist, academics and policy makers? | David Levy | Trustee, The Conversation UK and Senior Research Associate, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford
- Chair led a discussion with speakers & audience Q&A
- Reflections on Class as an Analytical Category in Discussing Classics and its Reception, Edit Hall, King’s College, London
- The Aberrant Antiquity of Jack Lindsay and Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Henry Stead, University of St. Andrews
- Nativism vs. class denigration: Athenian autochthony between exclusion and inclusion, Mirko Canevaro, University of Edinburgh
- The Ancient Prince: Searching for the Subaltern History of Augustus, Richard Alston, Royal Holloway, London
- Arthur Rosenberg: Ancient History and People’s Education in the German Revolution, Vittorio Saldutti, Università degli Studi di Napoli, “Federico II”
- Ancient Greece and Marxist Pedagogy in Mario Alighiero Manacorda’s Thought, Luca Silvestri, Università degli Studi Roma Tre
- Resisting Romanisation in 1970s Paris, Federico Santangelo, Newcastle University
- Cultural Hegemonies: Subaltern Agency through Greek and Roman Texts, Lorna Hardwick, The Open University
- The End of Eternity: a Short History of Long Classics, Christopher Stray, Swansea University
- Classics Poverty: the Unequal Access to Classical Subjects in Schools in England, Arlene Holmes-Henderson, University of Oxford/University of Sussex/King’s College, London
- The Public System Is Not (Necessarily) Enough: Material Obstacles to Classical Education in Italy, Gramsci Research Network
- Melike Berker, Business Manager to the Chief Scientific Adviser, Department for Culture, Media and Sport
- Edward Hicks, Committee Specialist, House of Commons Housing, Communities and Local Government Select Committee
- Alasdair Love, Clerk, House of Lords Communications and Digital Select Committee
- Stefano Pozzi, Assistant Director, Department for Education, EBacc and Arts Unit
- Matthew Flinders, Chair of UPEN and Professor of Politics at the University of Sheffield
- Kathy Sylva, Honorary Research Fellow (Department of Education).
- Ian Thompson, Associate Professor of English Education and Director of the PGCE course (Department of Education).
- Arlene Holmes-Henderson, Senior Research Fellow in Classics Education (Faculty of Classics).
- Naomi Eisenstadt, Honorary Research Fellow (Department of Education).
- Professor Jennifer Ingleheart (Durham University, UK)
- Dr Naoko Yamagata (Open University, UK)
- Dr Marchella Ward (University of Oxford, UK)
- Serafina Nicolosi (PhD Candidate, University of Liverpool, UK)
- Dr Fiona Hobden (University of Liverpool, UK)
- Professor Peter Kruschwitz (University of Vienna, Austria)
- Dr Arlene Holmes-Henderson (King’s College London/University of Oxford, UK)
- Anna McComish (Aldridge School, UK)
- Peter Wright (Blackpool Sixth Form College, UK)
- Ray Cheung (Undergraduate and President of the Christian Cole Society, University of Oxford, UK)
- Vijaya-Sharita Baba (Petroc College, UK)
- Sanjay Sharma (Heinz-Brandt-Schule, Berlin, Germany)
- Professor Kunbi Olasope (University of Ibadan, Nigeria), Dr Monica Aneni (University of Ibadan, Nigeria), Dr Idowu Alade (University of Ibadan, Nigeria) in conversation