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Stories of Hope: Reimagining Education

  • Sandra Abegglen(editor)
  • Tom Burns(editor)
  • Richard F. Heller(editor)
  • Rajan Madhok (editor)
  • Fabian Neuhaus(editor)
  • John Sandars(editor)
  • Sandra Sinfield(editor)
  • Upasana Gitanjali Singh(editor)
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  • ONIX 3.1
  • ONIX 3.0
    • Thoth
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    • OverDrive
  • ONIX 2.1
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    • ProQuest Ebrary
  • CSV
  • JSON
  • OCLC KBART
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Metadata
TitleStories of Hope
SubtitleReimagining Education
ContributorSandra Abegglen(editor)
Tom Burns(editor)
Richard F. Heller(editor)
Rajan Madhok (editor)
Fabian Neuhaus(editor)
John Sandars(editor)
Sandra Sinfield(editor)
Upasana Gitanjali Singh(editor)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0462
Landing pagehttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
CopyrightSandra Abegglen; Tom Burns; Rajan Madhok; Richard F. Heller; Fabian Neuhaus; John Sandars; Sandra Sinfield; Upasana Gitanjali Singh. Copyright of individual chapters are maintained by the chapter author(s).
PublisherOpen Book Publishers
Publication placeCambridge, UK
Published on2025-07-02
ISBN978-1-80511-571-7 (Paperback)
978-1-80511-572-4 (Hardback)
978-1-80511-573-1 (PDF)
978-1-80511-575-5 (HTML)
978-1-80511-574-8 (EPUB)
Short abstractBringing together a diverse range of educators and practitioners, this collection showcases real-world innovations that challenge the status quo and offer glimpses of a more humane and inspiring educational future. From rethinking systems and curriculum design to fostering imaginative collaboration and exploring the role of technology, the book highlights practical, hopeful interventions that are already making a difference.
Long abstractHigher education is in crisis. Students are disengaged, lecturers are burned out, and universities seem more preoccupied with rankings and revenue than with knowledge and wellbeing. But rather than dwell on the problems, this book focuses on solutions—on hope. Bringing together a diverse range of educators and practitioners, this collection showcases real-world innovations that challenge the status quo and offer glimpses of a more humane and inspiring educational future. From rethinking systems and curriculum design to fostering imaginative collaboration and exploring the role of technology, the book highlights practical, hopeful interventions that are already making a difference. This is not a manifesto of complaints but an invitation to reimagine education. The contributors offer fresh perspectives from around the world, illustrating how small but meaningful changes can transform learning spaces, empower educators, and inspire students. For academics, teachers, administrators, and anyone invested in the future of education, this book serves as both a source of inspiration and a call to action. It is an evolving ecosystem of ideas—grounded in practice, rich with possibility, and rooted in radical hope. Now is the time to create the change we wish to see.
Print length659 pages (liv+ 605)
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Dimensions156 x 46 x 234 mm | 6.14" x 1.81" x 9.21" (Paperback)
156 x 49 x 234 mm | 6.14" x 1.93" x 9.21" (Hardback)
Weight1231g | 43.42oz (Paperback)
1421g | 50.12oz (Hardback)
Media41 illustrations
8 tables
OCLC Number1526646204
LCCN2025465554
THEMA
  • JNM
  • JNF
  • JNT
  • JNA
  • JKS
BISAC
  • EDU015000
  • EDU034000
  • EDU040000
  • EDU051000
  • EDU032000
  • EDU046000
LCC
  • LB2806.23
Keywords
  • Higher Education Reform
  • Student Engagement
  • Innovative Teaching
  • Educational Leadership
  • Learning Transformation
  • Radical Hope in Education
Contents

Foreword

(pp. 1–2)
  • Mary O’Kane

Introduction: Reimagining education

(pp. 3–10)
  • Sandra Abegglen
  • Tom Burns
  • Richard F. Heller
  • Rajan Madhok
  • Fabian Neuhaus
  • John Sandars
  • Sandra Sinfield
  • Upasana Gitanjali Singh

Examples of system change: Introduction

(pp. 13–16)
  • Rajan Madhok

1. Inverting the distribution of Higher Education: From top-down to student-led

(pp. 17–26)
  • Richard F. Heller
  • Stephen Leeder

2. A critical pedagogy for a critical time

(pp. 27–40)
  • Jane Booth

3. Serious fun: Reimagining Higher Education from a humane perspective

(pp. 41–48)
  • Sarah Honeychurch

4. Fostering hope and humanity through transformative education: A call to reimagine mentorship

(pp. 49–60)
  • Shivaani Chugh
  • Anurag Mishra
  • Aashima Dabas
  • Chandini Chugh

5. Creating hope through T-shaped values

(pp. 61–70)
  • Earle Abrahamson
  • Nina Namaste
  • Corinne Green
  • Mayi Arcellana-Panlilio
  • Lisa Hatfield
  • Michelle Eady

6. The human and nothing but the whole human: With head, heart, and hand

(pp. 71–84)
  • Nathalie Tasler

7. Becoming wildly nomadic with the Nomadic Detective Agency-Assemblage

(pp. 85–94)
  • Mark Ingham

8. Playful Higher Education futures: Hopeful and utopian thinking in pedagogy

(pp. 95–106)
  • Kim Holflod

How technology can shape the future: Introduction

(pp. 109–110)
  • Upasana Gitanjali Singh

9. The emotional impact of nature seen through the lenses of virtual reality (VR) and revealed through the power of expressive art

(pp. 111–124)
  • Gabriella Rodolico
  • Fiona McGregor

10. CanadARThistories: Collaboratively designing an open-access course

(pp. 125–134)
  • Johanna Amos
  • Alena Buis

11. PhDForum: An online quiet study room providing a public space that nurtures the personal experience of being part of a global community

(pp. 135–140)
  • Donna Peach

12. “The art of conversation”: Educational guidance practitioners and support for distance-learning students

(pp. 141–154)
  • Oliver Burney
  • Jennifer Hillman
  • Mark Kershaw
  • Stephanie Newton
  • Elizabeth Shakespeare
  • Sean Starbuck

Creative curriculum design: Introduction

(pp. 157–162)
  • Tom Burns
  • Sandra Sinfield
  • Sandra Abegglen

13. Hope Street: Reimagining learning journeys

(pp. 163–172)
  • Laura Bissell
  • David Overend

14. The other F word: Re-storying student failure in Canadian Higher Education

(pp. 173–182)
  • Victoria Fritz

15. “Armed love”: A case study in cultivating a pedagogy of hope

(pp. 183–192)
  • Chris Cachia

16. The XXXX game: A character based tool for learning

(pp. 193–200)
  • Louise Sheridan

17. Reimagining the sage–guide dichotomy: A life-long learner’s story of teaching and learning in Higher Education

(pp. 201–210)
  • Katherine Herbert
  • Yeslam Al-Saggaf

18. Playing with learning: Adopting a playful approach to Higher Education learning and teaching

(pp. 211–218)
  • John Parkin

19. Making plants cool again: Re-introducing botany as a beacon of hope and innovation in our educational systems

(pp. 219–228)
  • Geyan Surendran
  • Adam Bromley
  • James Connorton
  • Lian X. Liu
  • Paul A. Townsend
  • Michael Heinrich
  • Shelini Surendran

20. Putting theory into (proposed) action: The significance of campaign planning as an assessment task

(pp. 229–236)
  • Luke Ray Di Marco Campbell

21. Freedom to learn: Developing autonomous critical learners through self-assessment in Higher Education

(pp. 237–246)
  • Agnese Di Domenico
  • Aidan Harvey
  • Beth Karp
  • Elizabeth Shakespeare
  • Ingeborg van Knippenberg
  • John Cowan
  • Zack Moir

22. Hope in an art school

(pp. 247–258)
  • Simone Maier

Imaginative collaboration and co-creation: Introduction

(pp. 261–266)
  • Sandra Abegglen
  • Tom Burns
  • Sandra Sinfield

23. Embracing compassion: Nonviolent communication for transformative teaching and learning in higher education

(pp. 267–282)
  • Anna Troisi

24. Better Together: Towards a new organising principle and mindset for co-creation

(pp. 283–294)
  • Nikita Asnani
  • Inca Hide-Wright
  • Jess Humphreys
  • Bo Kelestyn
  • Jean Mutton

25. Peer review: No crime no punishment

(pp. 295–304)
  • Debbie Holley

26. Co-creating networks of hope in an interdisciplinary degree for mature students

(pp. 305–314)
  • Catherine Bates
  • Tracy Campbell
  • Colin Webb
  • Lucy Yeboa

27. A quiet hope: Enhancing institution-wide inclusive assessment practices

(pp. 315–330)
  • Siobhán O’Neill
  • Laura Lee

28. The moongazers: A creative vision of Higher Education

(pp. 331–342)
  • Sandra Abegglen
  • Tom Burns
  • Sandra Sinfield

Beyond the curriculum: Introduction

(pp. 345–348)
  • John Sandars

29. Learning vs education: A view beyond the divide

(pp. 349–362)
  • Akitav Sharma

30. Belonging through compassion: Supporting hope through the design of a website for educational development and social justice

(pp. 363–376)
  • Vikki Hill
  • Liz Bunting

31. Humanising student and instructor experiences to nurture relationships and improve engagement

(pp. 377–384)
  • Umme Mansoory

32. The ten wellness spheres to support student and staff health and wellbeing in a modern, post-1992 university in, though, and outside of the study lifecycle

(pp. 385–398)
  • Michelle Morgan

33. Unlocking a new generation of leaders: How universities can support students’ inner development goals

(pp. 399–414)
  • Nayiri Keshishi

34. The pedagogy of joy and engaged presence

(pp. 415–422)
  • Phoenix Perry

35. “Resilience Finders”: Flourishing in life through immersive game experiences

(pp. 423–432)
  • Rachel Delta Higdon
  • Hilary Thomson

36. Storying the silences of social mobility

(pp. 433–444)
  • Karen Arm

37. How can you know what you don’t know? Changing the narrative around the “successful learner”

(pp. 445–458)
  • Stephanie Jury

38. An imperfect practice? What barriers are there to providing outdoor education opportunities for primary-aged children?

(pp. 459–468)
  • Megan McGee

39. Moving, making, and mingling: Moving towards an embodied pedagogy

(pp. 469–480)
  • Susannah McKee
  • Marie Stephenson

40. Food for thought: Pandemic hope

(pp. 481–492)
  • Hilda Mulrooney

41. “It’s a bit like academic me-time”: Can virtual mini writing retreats contribute to a more joyful, creative, and humane Higher Education?

(pp. 493–504)
  • Aspasia Eleni Paltoglou
  • Alison Williams
  • Arriarne Pugh
  • Rossella Sorte

42. The opportunity of constraint: How beating one’s head against the wall can open a door

(pp. 505–512)
  • Joshua Thorpe

Focus on the teachers: Introduction

(pp. 515–518)
  • Richard F. Heller

43. Addressing the challenges of the new, internationalised Higher Education ecosystem by applying successful teacher adaptation strategies: Promoting the human side of teaching in the Central European context

(pp. 519–528)
  • Rita Koris
  • Marta Folmeg
  • Imre Fekete
  • Ágnes Pál

44. If the tomatoes don’t grow, we don’t blame the plant: A reflection on co-created CPD sessions for staff reimagining education and the impact on their daily practice

(pp. 529–544)
  • Mâir Bull
  • Stephanie Aldred
  • Sophie Bessant
  • Sydney Duignan
  • Eileen Pollard

45. Embracing compassion and self-care: Educator wellbeing amidst the chaos

(pp. 545–554)
  • Lee Fallin

46. Decoloniality and nonviolence as a pedagogy of hope: Chilean pre-service teachers and their reconceptualisation of inclusive classrooms

(pp. 555–564)
  • Gaston Bacquet

47. Avengers Assemble!: Working together and valuing professional services staff expertise in programme design

(pp. 565–578)
  • Zak Liddell
  • Leigh Kilpert

48. “If you know, you know”: Creating lightbulb moments through reverse mentoring

(pp. 579–592)
  • Rachael O’Connor

Conclusion: Steps toward hope

(pp. 593–594)
  • Sandra Abegglen
  • Tom Burns
  • Richard F. Heller
  • Rajan Madhok
  • Fabian Neuhaus
  • John Sandars
  • Sandra Sinfield
  • Upasana Gitanjali Singh
Locations
Landing PageFull text URLPlatform
Paperbackhttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462Landing pagehttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462Full text URLPublisher Website
Hardbackhttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462Landing pagehttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462Full text URLPublisher Website
PDFhttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462Landing pagehttps://books.openbookpublishers.com/10.11647/obp.0462.pdfFull text URLPublisher Website
https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/103992Landing pagehttps://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/103992/obp.0462.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=yFull text URLOAPEN
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/162596Landing pageDOAB
https://thoth-arch.lib.cam.ac.uk/handle/1811/895Landing pagehttps://thoth-arch.lib.cam.ac.uk/bitstreams/d72ad298-18f6-46c1-b507-88cb32dd036e/downloadFull text URL
https://archive.org/details/cfe3c298-00e0-4cc1-b67e-795bbda94665Landing pagehttps://archive.org/download/cfe3c298-00e0-4cc1-b67e-795bbda94665/cfe3c298-00e0-4cc1-b67e-795bbda94665.pdfFull text URLINTERNET ARCHIVE
HTMLhttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462Landing pagehttps://books.openbookpublishers.com/10.11647/obp.0462/Full text URLPublisher Website
EPUBhttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462Landing pagehttps://books.openbookpublishers.com/10.11647/obp.0462.epubFull text URLPublisher Website
Contributors

Sandra Abegglen

(editor)
Researcher in the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape at University of Calgary
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1582-9394

Sandra Abegglen, PhD, is a Researcher in the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape at the University of Calgary, where she explores online education and learning and teaching in the design studio. Sandra has extensive experience both as a social researcher and lecturer/programme leader. She is the project lead for TALON, the Teaching and Learning Online Network, and Playful Hybrid Higher Education. Sandra has published widely on emancipatory learning and teaching practice, creative and playful pedagogy, and remote education. She has been awarded for her work with the Collaborative Award for Teaching Excellence (CATE) 2022 by Advance HE, and the Team Teaching Award 2020 by the University of Calgary. Find her personal website at: https://sandra-abegglen.com/

Tom Burns

(editor)
London Metropolitan University
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1280-0104

Tom Burns (1959–2024) was an Associate Teaching Professor in the Centre for Teaching Enhancement at London Metropolitan University, developing innovations with a special focus on praxes that ignite student curiosity, and develop power and voice. Always interested in theatre and the arts, and their role in teaching and learning, Tom developed theatre and film in unusual places, set up adventure playgrounds, events and festivals for his local community, and fed arts-based practice into his learning, teaching and assessments. Tom was a University Teaching Fellow and has received a Collaborative Award for Teaching Excellence (CATE) 2022 by Advance HE. He co-authored Teaching, Learning and Study Skills: A Guide for Tutors and Essential Study Skills: The Complete Guide to Success at University (5th Edition, 2022), https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/essential-study-skills/book278189.

Richard F. Heller

(editor)
Emeritus Professor of Medicine at University of Newcastle Australia
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3161-5967

Richard Heller, Emeritus Professor of Medicine, University of Newcastle, Australia and of Public Health, University of Manchester, UK, has a medical degree and doctorate from the University of London, United Kingdom. He was Professor of Clinical Epidemiology and Community Medicine at the University of Newcastle, Australia and Professor of Public Health at the University of Manchester, United Kingdom. Richard was also the founder and coordinator of the People’s Open Access Education Initiative (Peoples-uni, https://www.peoples-uni.org/), which aimed to provide Public Health capacity building in developing countries at low cost, through e-learning using open-access resources on the Internet and leading to an MPH degree. He is author of The Distributed University for Sustainable Higher Education (2022, https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-16-6506-6).

Rajan Madhok

(editor)

Rajan Madhok is a public health doctor who worked in senior medical management positions in the NHS. Alongside his service work he took a major interest in capacity building throughout his career. He is retired and lives in North Wales, and is keen to share his own learning with others. Rajan was Chair of the Trustees of Peoples-uni—https://www.peoples-uni.org/—holds honorary academic appointments at the University of Salford, UK, and Indian Institute of Public Health, Shillong, India, is a non-executive director of Llais (https://www.llaiswales.org/dr-rajan-madhok) and a governor on the Council of Coleg Cambria. He is the author of RaMa Reflections (https://www.ramareflections.com/).

Fabian Neuhaus

(editor)
Associate Professor at University of Calgary
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5297-4163

Fabian Neuhaus, PhD, is an Associate Professor at the University of Calgary in the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape. His research in the urban environment focuses on the topics of habitus, type, and ornament. He has worked in Switzerland, Germany, Canada, and the UK. He is passionate about the scholarship of learning and teaching, and design pedagogy. He is the Principal Investigator for the Richard Parker Initiative and its associated projects, including NextCalgary (https://nextcalgary.ca/).

John Sandars

(editor)
Edge Hill University
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3930-387X

After training in hospital medicine, John Sandars entered the world of general practice. John was also a GP trainer, GP tutor, Macmillan GP Facilitator in Palliative Medicine, and part-time lecturer in general practice at the University of Manchester. He developed his academic career in medical education as Associate Professor in the Leeds Institute of Medical Education, University of Leeds and was appointed Professor in Medical Education at the University of Sheffield before moving to Edge Hill University in 2016 as Professor of Medical Education. John is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Educators and Higher Education Academy. He has received major funding for national and international projects and has over 200 peer-reviewed publications and was a Visiting Professor at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. He is an Associate Editor for Medical Teacher and a member of the editorial board for the International Journal of Medical Education. Find out more about John via: https://www.edgehill.ac.uk/person/professor-john-sandars/staff/

Sandra Sinfield

(editor)
Associate Teaching Professor in Education and Learning Development in the Centre for Teaching Enhancement at London Metropolitan University
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0484-7623

Sandra Sinfield is an Associate Teaching Professor in Education and Learning Development in the Centre for Teaching Enhancement at London Metropolitan University and a co-founder of the Association for Learning Development in Higher Education. Sandra is a University Teaching Fellow and has received a Collaborative Award for Teaching Excellence (CATE) 2022 by Advance HE. She has co-authored Teaching, Learning and Study Skills: A Guide for Tutors and Essential Study Skills: The Complete Guide to Success at University (5th Edition, 2022), https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/essential-study-skills/book278189. Sandra is interested in creativity as a liberatory and holistic practice in Higher Education; she has developed theatre and film in unusual places—and inhabited SecondLife as a learning space.

Upasana Gitanjali Singh

(editor)
Academic Leader and Associate Professor in Information Systems and Technology at University of KwaZulu-Natal
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9943-011X

Upasana Gitanjali Singh, PhD, is the Academic Leader and Associate Professor in Information Systems and Technology at UKZN and holds academic appointments in Australia and Malaysia. She is an NRF C2-rated researcher in Educational Technology, achieving this distinction on her first application. With over fifteen years of teaching experience, she specialises in IT and has a strong passion for digital teaching and learning. Her prolific research includes four edited books and over sixty scholarly outputs, with numerous international keynote addresses. She founded and chairs the digiTAL2K conference, promoting global collaboration in digital education innovation. Prof. Singh has received several awards and led UKZN’s global engagements through MoUs with institutions across three continents.

UK registered social enterprise and Community Interest Company (CIC).

Company registration 14549556

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