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Research Awards

Celebrating outstanding engagement and impact

Our Research Awards celebrate the excellent research taking place across the University that addresses real-world problems and improves academic practice.

The Awards build on the success of the Research Engagement and Impact Awards which began in 2017 and include four categories: External Collaboration and Partnerships, Openness in Research, Public Engagement with Research and Research Impact.

We received over 50 strong entries from across a wide spectrum of our research. Eleven outstanding projects were shortlisted in 2023 and a winner in each of the four categories was chosen.

Read on to find out more about these projects which address significant challenges and engage individuals, organisations or communities to bring about positive change: from helping smallholder farmers in India improve fruit and vegetable yields, to developing diversity and inclusion training for use in policing.

External Collaboration and Partnerships


Images of Deepa Senapathi and Mike Garratt in farm

Flower-powered farming boosts biodiversity and YIELDS

Deepa Senapathi and Mike Garratt

Planting insect-friendly flowers alongside crops is helping smallholder farmers in India improve fruit and vegetable yields while using fewer damaging agrochemicals, thanks to research co-developed by Reading ecologists, alongside Indian researchers and smallholder farmers. This win-win approach for both nature and sustainable food production is changing local practices, and informing national and international policy on biodiversity.

Around 40% of India’s population works in farming. Many smallholders rely on using unsustainable and costly fertilisers and pesticides to eke out a living. But this degrades the environment and harms biodiversity.

Reading ecologists Dr Deepa Senapathi and Dr Mike Garratt worked closely with the M S Swaminathan Research Foundation and 64 smallholder farmers in Tamil Nadu, India to co-design and test solutions to show that planting insect-friendly flowers in orchards and fields boosts the numbers of beneficial insects that contribute to pollination and pest regulation in crops and reduces agrochemical use.

From marigolds sown in okra crops, to sesame blooms among mango orchards, the flowers chosen, with help from the farmers, are home to beneficial insects like bees and other insect pollinators as well as spiders and ladybirds which prey on crop pests such as stem borers and other caterpillars. since followed suit, reaping the rewards of the partners’ so-called ‘ecological intensification’ approach.

Senapathi and team are raising awareness through a local language farmers’ handbook and pollinator wall calendars. Their short films aimed at policy-makers and farmers are pushing the findings to a national level. Working with collaborators at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and Promote Pollinators, the films will inform policy briefs for the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, bringing flower-powered farming to international attention.;

In partnership with M S Swaminathan Research Foundation

Funded by Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) and 色狗导航

Read more
Teacher sharing skills with hospital staff

TEACHERS SHARE SKILLS WITH HOSPITAL STAFF

Helen Bilton, Nicky McGirr, Anastasia Rattigan, and Andrew Jacques, Dana Kelly (Royal Berkshire Hospital)

Teaching specialists have teamed up with the Royal Berkshire Hospital (RBH) to create a unique Healthcare Education programme for all staff who teach: doctors, nurses, allied health professionals and pharmacists. By strengthening teamwork and mutual understanding as well as improving teaching skills at the hospital, the collaboration is driving improvements in patient care and patient safety.

Healthcare educators at the Royal Berkshire Hospital (RBH) have expanded their teaching skills to benefit patients’ care through a fruitful collaboration between the Institute of Education’s Professor Helen Bilton and the RBH’s Dr Andrew Jacques.

The University partnership with educators at the hospital has co-created a PGCert Healthcare Education programme. It is open to all healthcare practitioners who teach others, covering a wide range of learning episodes from the ad hoc to structured classroom experiences, using a variety of educational tools including simulation.

Now in its third year, an impact survey shows that mutual understanding is now stronger between the different professionals who’ve completed the course – from anaesthetists to midwives, working across specialisms from oncology to intensive care.

Getting ‘under the bonnet’ of what makes a good educator has been key to its success. First attendees consider what works for them as learners before considering how to change others’ behaviour. They work in multidisciplinary teams, utilising bespoke learning materials funded by the Health Innovation Partnership, including video materials, simulations and case studies, gaining mutual understanding along the way.

This collaboration combines the expertise of teachers, healthcare educators and the online courses team. Their next mission is to improve communication in healthcare, spurred by the conclusion of a recent UK government maternity service review that ‘staff who work together must train together’. New research will look to boost communication via simulations of good and bad practice and conversation-provoking materials to drive change.

In partnership with the Royal Berkshire Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and 色狗导航 Online Courses Team

Funded by the Health Innovation Partnership

Read more
Image of a woman teaching children

HELPING MULTILINGUAL CHILDREN FIND THEIR VOICES

Naomi Flynn

US and Reading teacher educators have joined forces with UK multilingual primary schools to improve teaching for children whose home languages are not English. By coaching teachers to talk less, and let their children talk more, teaching has become more intentionally conversational and multilingual children have found their voices.

Listen to Naomi talk about her work

Children whose first language is not English may make less progress than their English-speaking peers but there is limited professional development to support teachers in the practices that address this.

A unique partnership between Professor Naomi Flynn, Indiana University’s Professor Annela Teemant, and Aspire Community Trust schools in Southampton tackled both challenges. With PhD student Aniqa Leena and Reading’s Professor Suzanne Graham, they adapted and tested Teemant’s Enduring Principles of Learning (EPL) approach which encourages teachers to design classroom activities which are talk-rich and culturally sustaining.

After a pilot EPL professional learning project in 2019/20, Flynn observed improved teaching and pupil engagement in Headteacher partner Emma Kerrigan-Draper’s Southampton school of 98% multilinguals. This fostered the four-school 2022 Talk-Rich Teaching Project, where test results showed that where teachers used the UK adaptation of the EPL this boosted multilingual children’s English speaking, listening and reading skills.

Involving schools’ staff as equal partners was critical to the project’s success because schools need professional learning bespoke to their settings. Project outcomes will inform the design of a toolkit for upscaling rollout of school-led, sustainable change for enhancing multilingual children’s educational success. Internationally the project continues as a two-way trans-Atlantic collaboration seeking solutions to shared educational challenges.

In partnership with Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis, Mount Pleasant Junior School, Southampton and Aspire Community Trust, Southampton

Funded by the Fulbright US/UK Commission and 色狗导航 Research Fellowship

 

Read more

Openness in Research


Five volunteers around a table reading books and letters from the archive.

VOLUNTEERS SHED LIGHT ON MODERNIST PUBLISHING

Helena Clarkson, Nicola Wilson and MAPP virtual volunteers

The public have joined forces with academics and archivists to transcribe letters written between twentieth century book publishers and authors from The Hogarth Press publishing house, created by Virginia and Leonard Woolf. This co-created digital archive shines a light on this fascinating period, opening up a sample of Reading’s Special Collections to wider audiences.

To address this issue, Professor Ciara McCabe (School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences) and Kizzi Keast (University Access and Outreach Manager) conducted inclusive studies involving students from under-represented ethnic backgrounds as both researchers and participants.

A cohort of 200 students from the Reading Scholars widening participation programme took part. The students were taught to conduct and present research using semi-structured qualitative interviews on how ethnicity affects university access in the UK.

Based on analysis of the resulting data, the research team, which included MSc and PhD students, published the Pioneers Report and a peer reviewed research article in the Journal of Further and Higher Education. The publications contain a series of recommendations for HE institutions and outreach practitioners, with a view to improving and facilitating access by black and minority ethnic students.

The recommendations have influenced policy and practice across the UK, both at Reading itself – where documents for parents of prospective students have now been translated into different languages – and via changes to the policies of the Study Higher partnership, which includes universities and colleges across Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, and Swindon.

In partnership with and funded by Study Higher.

Read more
World map showing areas of oceanic carbon in colours of red, orange, yellow an pale blue.

MEASURING OCEAN BIOLOGICAL CARBON FROM SPACE

Shovonlal Roy

Climate scientists have a clearer picture of how much carbon is absorbed by our oceans and its implications for climate change, thanks to a new way to measure ocean carbon from satellite images. Its Reading developers have made their code and data freely available for research, doing a good turn for science, society and the planet.

Oceans are Earth’s most important carbon sinks. This is down to phytoplankton: tiny, green, marine organisms which carry planet-warming carbon from the ocean’s surface to its depths, locking it away. So-called oceanic biological carbon is of great interest to climate scientists, policy-makers and the fishing industry, but getting hold of specific information about it from satellites is not easy.

Reading environmental scientist Dr Shovonlal Roy has developed new algorithms and computer code that use the varying colours of the ocean as it appears in satellite images to generate data on how much phytoplankton there is, and therefore how much carbon.

Roy has also worked with NASA and European Space Agency-funded scientists to generate new datasets which show how oceanic biological carbon is distributed on a global scale. They’ve made these tools and datasets freely available to be re-used by anyone for the common good, in any programming language.

The work has met climate scientists and policy-makers’ long-held need for more accurate ocean carbon estimates for studying how climate change is affecting the oceans, the global carbon cycle and net zero.

This much-in-demand data has now been used in many publications worldwide, underpins NASA-funded research, and is central to a proposed major new Plymouth Marine Laboratory-led project on how ‘blue carbon’ contributes to the world’s carbon budget.

In partnership with California State University San Marcos, University of Pennsylvania and Plymouth Marine Laboratory

Funded by the Royal Society, European Space Agency and NASA .

Read more

Public Engagement with Research


Night shot of Stonehenge

A million explore the world of Stonehenge

Duncan Garrow 

The British Museum’s World of Stonehenge exhibition, co-curated by a Reading archaeologist, has given a million people a window into the lives of prehistoric people, through artefacts, soundscapes and events. Its legacy of online lectures, research and an exhibition book continues to link us with our distant past.

Over a million people have gazed into prehistory through the British Museum’s ’World of Stonehenge’ exhibition and its outreach activities, co-curated by Reading archaeologist Professor Duncan Garrow and the Museum’s Dr Neil Wilkin.

Using Stonehenge’s global fame to draw visitors into the wider prehistoric world, the highly acclaimed 2022 exhibition explored the travel and technologies of prehistoric people, how beliefs and materials were shared across Europe and their links with the natural world – from stone and wood to sea and sky. Soundscapes, projections and artefacts came together to transport visitors across the millennia.

Over 179,000 people came through the Museum’s doors, and hundreds of thousands more have been to events and watched online lectures. One talk, ‘Stonehenge’s Richest Man’ has been enjoyed 182,000 times. Others attended events for schools, families and other groups, including sign language tours and community previews for homeless charities.

World of Stonehenge’s legacy continues. Garrow and Wilkin’s critically acclaimed exhibition book has sold over 20,000 copies. The pair are collaborating on new UKRI-funded research, using the exhibition as a research site to re-think symbols of power at the time of Stonehenge, and exploring innovative, alternative ways of presenting our prehistoric past within museums in future.

In partnership with the British Museum

Funded by the 色狗导航/British Museum joint development fund and Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)

 

Read more
Image of a flooding

EXPLAINING FLOOD FORECASTS TO SAVE LIVES

Hannah Cloke, Liz Stephens & Water@Reading research group

Hundreds of people died from disastrous floods in Europe in 2021, despite scientists alerting the authorities days ahead. Reading hydrologists, who designed Europe鈥檚 flood warning system, spoke out immediately about the lack of action. This led to widespread discussion with politicians and the public through parliaments, media, and a major museum show, spurring better flood preparedness.

When catastrophic floods killed 243 people across Europe in July 2021, some politicians and media outlets incorrectly claimed the size of the floods had been impossible to foresee. In fact, the European Flood Awareness System (EFAS), designed by Reading hydrologists, had accurately forecast the disaster and scientists had alerted the authorities, days in advance.

The Water@Reading research team spoke out via media briefings and interviews explaining the science behind flood forecasting, generating hundreds of articles. Professor Hannah Cloke’s description of authorities’ ‘monumental system failure’ to warn people became front page news across Europe. Dr Liz Stephens explained how flood warnings should work, and Dr Jess Neumann described how intense summer rainfall caused the floods. PhD researcher Jeff Da Costa criticised the Luxembourg government’s response and lost his job at an environmental consultancy. His sacking led to questions in parliament and accusations of political interference and undue pressure on scientists.

The team’s expertise is influencing policy in Germany to keep people safe. Cloke twice gave evidence at German parliamentary inquiries assessing the disaster response. Germany now has a national mobile phone alert system for emergencies, an action called for by the Reading team.

Cloke’s ongoing commentary on better communicating forecasts, including in New Scientist, have propelled her to appear on BBC Radio 4’s The Life Scientific and to collaborate with the Science Museum on an exhibition, explaining flood forecasting to fresh audiences.

In partnership with the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts and Science Museum

Funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)

Read more
A rural landscape featuring large hedgerows, and trees and villages in the distance.

LET鈥橲 TALK ABOUT HEDGES

Alice Mauchline and Close the Gap project team

Our beautiful hedgerows support biodiversity, prevent flooding and counter climate change, but half have been lost in recent decades. A team of Reading researchers are informing the public about their benefits through educational resources, videos, webinars and a National Hedge Week, getting people talking and creating thousands of new hedgerow enthusiasts.

The UK needs bigger, healthier and better-connected hedgerows to help our flagging biodiversity. Humble hedgerows are homes for bats, dormice and pollinating insects as well as crop pest-munching insects like spiders. They can also help prevent flooding, keep soil healthy, cool the air on hot days, mop up pollution and absorb carbon. But over the past 80 years we’ve lost half what we once had.

As part of the Green Recovery Challenge Funded Close the Gap project, Reading ecologists Dr Alice Mauchline, Dr Mike Garratt and the team are educating and enthusing people about hedgerows’ vital importance. They’ve led interactive workshops to understand what different people value about hedgerows and brought together the scientific evidence for hedgerows’ benefits. Education and training materials they’ve created and collated are tailored to different audiences, from town-dwellers to farmers.

This has culminated in Hedge Hub, the go-to online resource for all things hedge, from how to lay them to hedge-related laws. Hedge Hub’s hundreds of resources and papers have had over 20,000 visits from members of the public in its first year.

The Reading team continue to work with key partners including the Tree Council and Hedgelink to reach wider networks. Their free HedgeTalks webinar series has been enjoyed by more than 1,000 people and they helped to launch National Hedgerow Week, now into its third year, which is starting new conversations about hedges everywhere.

In partnership with The Tree Council, Farming & Wildlife Advisory Group, People’s Trust for Endangered Species, Moor Trees, Future Gardeners (Worshipful Company of Gardeners) and Hedgelink

Funded by the Green Recovery Challenge Fund

Read more

Research Impact


Netta Weinstein stood outside with a police officer from the Hampshire and Isle of White Constabulary and Nicole Legate.

SERVING AND PROTECTING, EVERYONE

Netta Weinstein, Maya Al-Khouja, Florencia Santana (Hampshire Constabulary), Nicole Legate (Illinois Institute of Technology)

A fresh, evidence-based take on police diversity and inclusion training is tackling prejudice at its root, exploring what motivates staff to change their views and prompting open conversations and understanding. A testament to the project’s success, it has inspired thousands of police officers and staff.

The thorny problem of prejudice in policing affects staff wellbeing and undermines public trust. Police forces are trying hard to tackle it within their ranks, but have few research-informed tools to do so.

Reading Professor of Psychology Netta Weinstein has gathered data from police forces to discover what motivates officers to change their views. Armed with the evidence, she worked with Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary to develop the first evidence-based police training programme on inclusion, drawing on behaviour change science. It includes strategies, conversation prompts and education which motivate staff to care about diversity and inclusion in ways that are meaningful to them, helping them to align their values with inclusion.

Reviews from the 3,300 course attendees have been glowing. Almost 90% agreed that the content was engaging and that they’d learned new and useful things; 95.6% felt that trainers had tried hard to understand them; and 98.9% agreed that they were free to talk openly about their true feelings.

Weinstein’s findings fed into the first UK policing national wellbeing report, nationally distributed by the College of Policing. Her research has appeared in high profile international journals, bringing the approach to wider audiences.

In partnership with Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary Inclusion Matters team

Funded by Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary and the 色狗导航 Rapid Response Scheme

Read more
Flexible working

Shaping thought on flexible working

Rita Fontinha and James Walker

Henley Business School research on how the pandemic has changed uptake of the four-day working week has reached around 82.5 million people through a hugely successful media campaign, establishing Reading as the go-to place for media commentary on flexible working.

Insightful research on how the pandemic affected UK businesses’ uptake of the four-day working week has made Henley Business School the first port of call for journalists seeking expert comment on flexible working.

Dr Rita Fontinha and Professor James T. Walker surveyed 2,000 employees and 500 business leaders in 2019 and 2021 and their in-depth report showed that the pandemic saw a 15% rise in businesses bringing in a four-day work week. The research also showed that the combined savings to UK businesses adopting a four-day work week was almost £104 billion in 2021, or 2.2% of total annual turnover, up from £92 billion before the pandemic.

Fontinha and Walker’s findings have exploded across the global stage, reaching an estimated 82.5 million people across 12 countries through 146 pieces of coverage, including in The Times, The i and BBC online. The research has also featured in high profile business publications on the topic by Forbes, MIT Sloan Management and Microsoft.

Commentary has now turned to action on a national scale: Fontinha is coordinating a Portuguese national trial of the four-day week. This partnership - between the Portuguese government, research institutes and the non-profit 4 Day Week Global - looks set to keep the research in the media spotlight in Portugal and beyond.

In partnership with (on the Portuguese pilot) Four Day Week Global, Birkbeck, University of London and the Portuguese Institute for Work and Employment

Funded by Henley Business School and the Ministry of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security, XXIII Portuguese Government

Read more
A woman stood with a shopping trolley reading the ingredients on a food packet at the supermarket.

IN FOOD WE TRUST

Anna Macready

If we are to eat more healthily and sustainably, we have to be able to trust the food system. Reading consumer behaviour experts have worked with an EU body and the food industry to better understand people’s trust in farmers, manufacturers, retailers and the authorities, with the findings shaping international policy.

Trust plays a big part in people choosing healthier, more sustainable foods, research has shown – yet less than half of Europeans say they trust the food system.

Reading Consumer Behaviour expert Dr Anna Macready has developed TrustTracker®: an evidence-based model of what drives consumer trust in the food system. Working with EU knowledge innovation community EIT Food, TrustTracker® has generated over 81,000 surveys and is now part of its Consumer Observatory programme.

Openness and care are the most important qualities when it comes to trust in our food, findings show, and farmers are the supply chain’s most trusted people. Our trust in food has also increased over the past five years, according to annual surveys across 18 European countries and Canada. Macready’s data has been seen by policy-makers and food industry representatives at key conferences and appears in EIT Food’s annual Trust Report, informing its trust-building activities. A successful PR campaign has reached 1.2 million readers.

What is more, the Reading team has advised seven food start-ups on consumer trust and launched a Top 50 Trusted Brands competition in Denmark to engage top brands and understand and boost trust. The OECD commissioned an extension of the annual survey to Canada in 2022, bringing the benefits of better trust in food systems to many more people worldwide.

In partnership with Aarhus University, European Food Information Council, KU Leuven and University of Warsaw

Funded by EIT Food

Read more

About the Research Awards

The Research Awards celebrate the work of both research and professional services staff that showcases research excellence. Research engagement, collaboration and impact take many forms and applications are encouraged from all research themes and associated functions across the University. Entrants can be at any level in their careers, and activities of any scale are welcome. Entries are assessed by a panel including academics, engagement experts and communications professionals from within the University. Award winners receive £1000 towards their next engagement activity.  

Read about the 2022 shortlisted projects

Read about the 2020 shortlisted projects

Read about the 2018 shortlisted projects

Read about the 2017 shortlisted projects

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Subjects A-B

  • Accounting
  • Agriculture
  • Ancient History
  • Anthropology
  • Archaeology
  • Architectural Engineering
  • Architecture
  • Art
  • Biochemistry
  • Biological Sciences
  • Biomedical Engineering
  • Biomedical Sciences
  • Bioveterinary Sciences
  • Building and Surveying
  • Business and Management

Subjects C-E

  • Chemistry
  • Classics and Classical Studies
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  • Computer Science
  • Construction Management
  • Consumer Behaviour and Marketing
  • Creative Writing
  • Criminology
  • Drama
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Subjects H-M

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  • Philosophy
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  • Politics and International Relations
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  • Sociology
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We are in the process of finalising our postgraduate taught courses for 2026/27 entry. In the meantime, you can view our 2025/26 courses.

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