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[ecrea] AHRC funded PhD studentship at the University of Glasgow in collaboration with BBC Scotland: “Children with Learning Disabilities as Digital Audiences”
Thu Apr 21 13:10:39 GMT 2016
*_AHRC funded PhD studentship at the University of Glasgow in
collaboration with BBC Scotland:_*
*_“Children with Learning Disabilities as Digital Audiences”_*
*Applications are invited for a full PhD studentship in Film and
Television Studies at the University of Glasgow to work in collaboration
with the Children’s Department at BBC Scotland. The aim of the project
is **to explore the provision and design of digital media by the BBC for
older children with learning disabilities.**This exciting opportunity
will require the researcher to divide his or her time between the
University of Glasgow and the Children’s Department within BBC Scotland
(situated in the Pacific Quay in Glasgow). **The student will have
unique access to the Children's Department, working amongst BBC staff to
capture a sense of the existing provision of digital content for
children with learning disabilities and the ways in which BBC Scotland
engage with this audience. The project will then continue through a
small scale qualitative study that will capture how, why and when
digital media is used, interpreted and enjoyed by members of this
specific audience. The student will then return to the BBC with their
research findings and work alongside colleagues to develop a 'pitch' for
the design or redesign of digital content that will allow the BBC to
respond directly to the needs and desires of their targeted audience.*
The specific question this project poses is how we might re-imagine
content for differently-abled audiences that is appropriate to both
their cognitive abilities and their personal/social needs and desires.
A supervisory team from across both institutions will oversee this work
and full research training (including audience research skills if
required) will be offered. The team will include Dr. Amy Holdsworth and
Professor Karen Lury from the University of Glasgow and Ms. Sara Harkins
(Head of Children’s BBC Scotland) with relevant support from
professional colleagues within BBC Scotland.
The studentship is funded for three years to commence in October 2016
and covers tuition fees at the Home/EU rate. Home students and EU
students who have lived in the UK for 3 years prior to the award will
also receive a maintenance bursary (stipend) of approx. £14,296 for
16-17 plus an additional £550 travel allowance. In addition, the student
is eligible to receive up to £1,000 a year from the BBC to support
travel or other expenses directly related to the doctoral research, and
will be given use of a desk and computer at the University of Glasgow
and appropriate access and resources at the BBC. All AHRC Collaborative
PhD students automatically become part of the UK-wide Collaborative
Doctoral Partnership development scheme which will provide training in a
range of skills needed for research within museums, archives, galleries
and heritage organisations.
*Informal enquiries are welcome*.
Please write to Dr. Amy Holdsworth ((Amy.Holdsworth /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)
<mailto:(Amy.Holdsworth /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)> ) in the first instance.
*Candidates ideally should have:*
• A good 2.1 Honours (or B.A.) degree in a relevant Arts or Social
Science discipline.
• A Masters degree in a related discipline *or* appropriate professional
experience within children’s media, digital media, audience development,
working with children and young people with disabilities.
• A good understanding of contemporary Children’s Television, digital
media and issues and debates within disability studies
• An interest in, or first-hand knowledge of, audience research.
• Applicants should be able to demonstrate strong research capabilities
and be fluent in spoken and written English.
*Applications should include:*
• A statement of no more than 1,000 words indicating what skills and
experience you have that will be relevant for the project.
• A current CV
• Degree transcripts (this may be an interim transcript if you are still
studying)
• An example of writing – e.g. academic essay, professional report - up
to 3000 words in length
• 2 academic/professional references (these may be sent directly from
your referees if they would prefer)
*Applications to be sent to (Jeanette.Berrie /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)
<mailto:(Jeanette.Berrie /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)> (Research Administrator, School
of Culture and Creative Arts, University of Glasgow) with the subject
line BBC CDA.*
**
*Closing Date: Wednesday 15th June 2016*
***Interviewees will be notified by Thursday 23^rd June and interviews
will take place at the University of Glasgow on Friday 1^st July 2016.*
**
***The Project:*
Through initial audience development work, colleagues at BBC Scotland
have already observed the ways in which digital content designed for a
young (‘pre-school’) audience is being used by older children with
learning disabilities. They have recognized that while these young
people may have less sophisticated ‘operational’ abilities their desire
and interest in age appropriate content is not necessarily affected. In
simple terms, games or interactive challenges aimed at 4-7year olds may
represent an appropriate operational challenge (how to work the game,
how to move about and between different parts of the page) but are
inappropriate in terms of content (older children and young people are
more likely to respond positively to content such as /WolfBlood /rather
than /In the/ /Night Garden /or ‘Mr. Tumble’). The project will
therefore focus on this particular issue and ask how we might re-imagine
content for differently-abled audiences that is appropriate to their
cognitive abilities and their personal/social needs and desires.
*Aims and objectives.*
**
The aims and objectives of this collaborative project are designed to
both reflect upon /and /develop the BBC’s relationship with its
differently abled child audience.//
*/Aims/*
1. To explore the provision of content for children with learning
disabilities: Initial stages of the research will explore the existing
provision of digital content for children with learning disabilities and
the ways in the children’s department at BBC Scotland engage with this
audience (through audience development initiatives, for example). This
initial ‘snapshot’ accompanied by critical investigation of academic
literature on children, disability and media will form a building block
for the student to design and implement a qualitative audience study.
2. To conduct a small-scale qualitative audience study of children with
learning disabilities as digital audiences/users: Utilizing the
appropriate methodologies (see below) the student will capture how, why
and when digital media is used, interpreted and enjoyed by children with
learning disabilities. This fieldwork will importantly also offer the
child the opportunity to reflect upon and discuss their use of digital
media (e.g. their preferences, desires, likes and dislikes).
*/Objectives/*
3. The student will disseminate research findings through traditional
academic outputs and through partnership with the BBC: One of the
principle objectives of the project is for the research to have an
avenue of dissemination within the BBC to allow the institution to
reflect upon and develop their own practices and forms of audience
engagement. The links with BBC Scotland and its contacts present
opportunities for the research to be accessed by other stakeholder
communities and organisations (such as ‘for Scotland’s Disabled
Children’ (fSDC)).
4. To implement research findings through the production of a BBC
‘pitch’: Through the student’s involvement at BBC Scotland he or she
will utilise their research on this specific child audience in the
development, design or redesign of games, applications or website
provision for this audience.
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