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Impact Awards

Celebrating outstanding engagement and impact

Our Research Engagement and Impact Awards, give us the opportunity to celebrate the excellent research taking place across the University that addresses real world problems and changes the world around us.

In 2022 we received 28 entries from across a wide spectrum of our research and from colleagues at different stages of their careers. Eleven outstanding projects were shortlisted in 2022 and from these four winners were 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 screenings and workshops that inspire, participatory research that empowers, and projects that are informing changes in policy and practice.

A photographer sets up their camera facing a mirror, reflecting themselves in the image.

We Make Film: Filmmaking, Creativity And Disability In Urban India

Shweta Ghosh

Through a series of screenings and discussions of her feature-length documentary We Make Film, Shweta Ghosh is informing important conversations about creativity and disability, including the need for more accessible working practices in the film industry of contemporary urban India.

Hear Shweta talk about her film project.

In creating the film, Ghosh employed a unique interview-workshop method, working with disabled filmmakers as both research crew and participants to explore their experiences of creative expression while actively experimenting with more inclusive filmmaking practices.

This approach, together with subsequent engagement by industry professionals and wider audiences with the themes and issues explored in the film, has led to the development of new networks and opportunities for disabled filmmakers in India and connected creative perspectives across India and UK.

Since 2021, the film has been shown at various international film festivals and events and has received awards including Best Accessible/Inclusive Film at the Together! 2021 Disability Film Festival. It was also selected for Good Pitch Local Deccan (India), a documentary impact programme run by Doc Society UK and Indian Documentary Foundation.

The inclusion of the film in this programme led directly to the introduction by Good Pitch Local Deccan (India) of measures to improve the accessibility of their events and accompanying video material, including audio description, sign language interpretation, and live captioning.

Funded by: the University of Reading and crowdfunding.


Read more
Men inspecting large pipes going into a lake in a rocky, glacial landscape.

Reducing Risk Of Glacial Floods In Central Asia

Maria Shahgedanova

As climate change intensifies, a dangerous type of flood known as a ‘glacial lake outburst flood’ is becoming increasingly common. Caused by the failure of a dam of ice containing a huge pocket of water within a glacier, these floods can cause an enormous amount of damage in a very short time.

Listen to Maria explain her work on floods.

In Central Asia, the approach being taken by risk reduction agencies to managing glacial lakes has been transformed in recent years, as a result of research by a team of Reading scientists. Led by Professor Maria Shahgedanova, the team developed a new technique to predict the formation and expansion of glacial lakes using an existing technical model.

Shahgedanova and her colleagues used the Glacier Bed Topography (GlabTop) model – typically used to measure the thickness of glacial ice – to predict the future size and shape of glacial lakes. This enabled agencies in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to focus their risk-reduction activities on the lakes with the strongest potential for growth.

In 2022, the project was expanded to enable better prediction of ‘debris-flow’ events. The researchers developed an interactive GIS database of the meteorological contexts of past debris-flow events, alongside an app to facilitate real-time risk assessment.

In partnership with the Central Asian Regional Glaciological Centre, the Kazakhstan Institute of Geography, the Kazakhstan State Agency for Mudflow Protection, Al-Farabi Kazakh State National University, Uzbekistan Institute of Geology and Geophysics, and the Uzbekistan Hydrometeorological Institute.

Funded by the Newton Fund, UKRI and the University of Reading.


Read more
An artist's hands moulding wet clay.

Destigmatising Self-Injury Through Art

Alanna Skuse and Tina O’Connell

Seventeenth-century representations of self-injury in literature and art suggest that modern attitudes towards what is now considered a pathological behaviour are very different from those of the early modern period.

Hear Alanna discuss the impact of the team’s work.

By encouraging exploration and discussion of how the motivations, representations, and social attitudes surrounding self-injury have changed throughout history, a project led by Dr Alanna Skuse is informing new models of patient engagement with at-risk groups.

In collaboration with Associate Professor Tina O’Connell who runs Reading’s ArtLab, Skuse devised a series of workshops to bring together co-researchers from different academic backgrounds, cultures, and age groups, all of whom had a professional interest in – or lived experience of – self-injury.

Skuse and O’Connell worked with psychiatry professionals to create an atmosphere of trust during the workshops, facilitating open discussion between participants as they reflected on their personal experiences of self-injury through a range of artistic and creative techniques from clay modelling to digital animation.

The findings from the project are being used as the basis for a new academic monograph by Dr Skuse, while the artworks created during the workshops are being displayed as part of a digital exhibition to demonstrate how art-led, humanities-informed models can be used to discuss and destigmatise self-injury in both clinical and community settings.

In partnership with The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust.

Funded by Wellcome Trust.

 

Read more
Adults accompanying a small group of children as they walk to school.

Tackling air pollution through citizen science

Hong Yang and Marta O’Brien

More than three million children across the UK are exposed to harmful levels of air pollution while travelling to and from school, with those in the South of England at particular risk. A project led by Dr Hong Yang and Marta O’Brien is now tackling air pollution in Reading and beyond, by engaging school pupils, parents, and teachers as citizen scientists.

Hear Hong and Marta talk about their project.

The team monitored the air quality in and around the playgrounds and classrooms of four schools to determine levels of air pollution throughout the day. By distributing hand-held equipment to pupils and their parents to use during journeys to and from school, they were also able to track air pollution levels in real time on relevant travel routes.

Using this data together with questionnaire and interview feedback from parents, students, and teachers at the schools, the researchers developed a practical toolkit to help communities consider how to manage and invest in infrastructure that promotes cleaner air.

By working in partnership with local organisations including Reading Borough Council, the team was able to influence policies and practices across the town, while creating new opportunities to extend the project to several other areas in the South of England.

In partnership with The Museum of English Rural Life, Reading Borough Council, Alfred Sutton Primary School, Hemdean House School, Oxford Road Community School and Geoffrey Field Junior School.

Funded by Research England, Natural Environment Research Council and the Community Fund (a joint initiative between John Sykes Foundation and University of Reading).

Read more
Screengrab of a video call with four participants discussing diversity.

CHANGING PERCEPTIONS OF DISABILITY THROUGH FILM

Jenny Chamarette, Rachel Garfield, Henry Miller

With cinemas and galleries across the UK forced to close during successive COVID-19 lockdowns, many have adapted to new models of digital engagement. A project led by Dr Jenny Chamarette in Reading’s School of Art has demonstrated the powerful opportunity this presents for establishing accessibility at the core of arts provision.

As part of the wider Dwoskin Project, Dr Chamarette, Professor Rachel Garfield and Dr Henry Miller used material and expertise from Reading’s Stephen Dwoskin Archive to curate a series of accessible online film screenings and discussion events using LUX’s online platform and publicity, featuring the work of disabled Jewish-American experimental artist and filmmaker, Stephen Dwoskin.

The events brought together disabled artists and policymakers to discuss disability, accessibility, and inclusion through screenings of three of Dwoskin’s films, each chosen to highlight Dwoskin’s complex relationships with disability, accessibility, and sexuality.

To facilitate engagement and participation by disabled audiences and creative practitioners, closed captions were produced for each of the films, while the panel discussions included live captioning and BSL interpretation by experts specialising in arts events. The series attracted a large, international and diverse audience from both academia and industry, with most respondents reporting that the events had changed their attitudes towards disability.

In partnership with Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image, The British Film Institute and LUX Artists’ Moving Image Agency.

Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the University of Reading (Centre for Film Aesthetics and Cultures, Arts Committee and Diversity and Inclusion Initiatives Fund).

Read more
A man and woman examine a derelict, overgrown building in Kochi, India.

DISCOVERING LAND FOR HOUSING MIGRANT WORKERS IN KOCHI, INDIA

Angelique Chettiparamb, Anil Ravindranathan (SCMS School of Architecture), Rajan Chedambath (Centre for Heritage, Environment and Development), Benoy Peter (Centre for Migration and Inclusive Development)

Kochi is the most densely populated city in the Kerala region of India. High demand for affordable housing means that workers who migrate to the city from other parts of India are often forced to live in unhygienic and unsafe conditions.

Listen to Angelique discuss the impact of her work.

A project led by Professor Angelique Chettiparamb has resulted in an evidence-based strategic action plan accompanied by an urban vacant land inventory with the potential to improve the lives of thousands of people.

Chettiparamb and her team developed partnerships with academics and organisations at international, national and local levels, to access state of the art knowledge, and secure contacts required for rapid field studies to evaluate current issues in providing adequate rental housing for migrants in the city.

The strategic action plan to deliver rental housing for internal migrants in Kochi was formally adopted by the Local Government Council. Further partnerships led to the first ever rapid urban vacant land inventory carried out in a city of Kerala incorporating local academic and professional institutions.

This work has attracted interest of national and international development agencies with a view to formulating broader, city-wide planning strategies.

In partnership with Kochi Municipal Corporation, The Centre for Heritage, Environment and Development (C-HED), The Centre for Migration and Inclusive Development (CMID) and SCMS School of Architecture.

Funded by Research England.

Read more

Rainfall rescue: crowdsourcing for improved climate data

Ed Hawkins & the Rainfall Rescue team

With extreme weather events becoming increasingly common as a result of climate change, it is more important than ever to understand where and when floods and droughts will occur, especially in places such as the UK, where rainfall is notoriously variable from year to year.

But until recently, UK rainfall data from before 1960 was largely inaccessible, with much of it stored within 66,000 sheets of hand-written paper in the National Meteorological Archive.

This data has now been given a new lease of life through an online citizen science project, led by Professor Ed Hawkins in collaboration with the Met Office, in which members of the public were invited to transcribe measurements from scans of the archived records.

Over the course of 16 days, 16,000 volunteers transcribed 66,000 pages containing 5.28 million numbers. With each of these numbers transcribed four times for quality control, a total of 21 million observations were recorded by the volunteers in just over two weeks.

This extraordinary response enabled Hawkins and his team to produce a comprehensive digital record of UK-wide rainfall variations dating back to 1836, developing invaluable insight into how the UK’s climate is changing and significantly expanding the Met Office datasets available for use by scientists around the world.

In partnership with the National Meteorological Archive and the Met Office National Climate Information Centre.

Funded by the National Centre for Atmospheric Science.

Read more
A nurse speaking on the phone in a hospital ward.

Reducing missed outpatient appointments and health inequalities through AI

Weizi (Vicky) Li, Nicholas Berin Chan, Muhammad Dashtban and Eghosa Bazuaye, Toluwanimi Akinola and Kiki Kontra (Royal Berkshire Hospital)

Around 7% of all outpatient appointments at Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust hospital (RBH) are missed by patients every year. With each one costing the NHS around £100, both the clinical and the financial consequences of these missed appointments are significant.

Hear Vicky talk about her work using AI in healthcare.

A team led by Dr Weizi (Vicky) Li from the Informatics Research Centre at the University of Reading and Eghosa Bazuaye from the RBH Informatics Department have co-developed a tool that has been successfully used by RBH to reduce missed outpatient appointments by 40%.

The tool uses AI to predict the probability of a patient not attending an appointment, based on factors such as travel distance, level of deprivation, and attendance history, before presenting tailored suggestions to hospital staff for interventions to encourage attendance.

Following an initial pilot, which achieved a 30% reduction in missed appointments at RBH by high-risk patients across three departments, improvements were made to the way that risk data was presented to staff. A subsequent pilot using the improved model was conducted in 2021 and resulted in a 40% reduction in patient groups with high risks of missing appointments and the tool has been implemented across all departments.

The project has attracted significant interest from the healthcare sector, including an invitation from NHS England and NHS Improvement to present proposals to scale up the application for use in other hospitals.

In partnership with the Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust.

Funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, the University of Reading and the Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust.

Read more
Composite image of people and landmarks in Oxford Road, Reading.

Uncovering hidden stories from Oxford Road

Sally Lloyd-Evans, Alice Mpofu-Coles, Robyn Woronka, Toby Barlow

With more than 70 languages spoken by its residents, Oxford Road in Reading has been fondly described as being ‘like the United Nations’. Now the rich and vibrant cultural history of this unique urban space is being celebrated and preserved through a participatory community storytelling project involving a team of student researchers from Reading.

Hear Alice and Robyn talk about their project.

Led by Professor Sally Lloyd-Evans as part of Historic England’s High Street Heritage Action Zone programme, the team behind the Oxford Road Project: Reimagining the High Street Through Your Stories used participatory action research methods to explore the lived experiences of the people and communities who live, work and play on Oxford Road.

Through a series of structured interviews, Alice Mpofu-Coles, Robyn Woronka and Toby Barlow, gathered information about the social history of the area along with photographs, memories and stories from local residents, to co-create a multimedia online storytelling exhibition for Reading Museum.

Three local artists were also commissioned to create artwork inspired by the stories, highlighting how each generation has contributed to enrich the history and culture of Oxford Road.

This project has significantly strengthened Reading’s existing community networks, while providing the foundation for further student-community research training and collaboration with local organisations and the arts sector.

In partnership with Reading Borough Council, Baker Street Production, UNTOLD, Lifespring Church and Reading Museum.

Funded by Reading Borough Council, Historic England and the University of Reading.

Read more
Three female students studying together in the University library.

Improving ethnic diversity in higher education

Ciara McCabe, Kizzi Keast, Siyabend Kaya, Niamh Bull

While there has been a concerted effort in recent years to widen access to higher education (HE) in the UK, very little practical information is available on how those in the HE sector can encourage, facilitate, and support applications by black and minority ethnic students.

Listen to Ciara explain the project and its future.

 

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

Using cultural heritage to empower women and alleviate poverty in Jordan

Steven Mithen, Fatima al-Namari (University of Petra), Obyda Hummas and Nebras Maslamani (Future Pioneers for Empowering Communities)

With a rich history of human habitation stretching back more than 500,000 years, the Faynan region in southern Jordan is an area of great archaeological wealth. But for many of the Bedouin tribes who live in Faynan and its main village of Greigra, poverty is a daily reality.

An innovative project designed to alleviate this poverty has been developed by Professor Steven Mithen, who saw first-hand the challenges faced by the local population while he was excavating a Neolithic settlement in Faynan and developing a local museum to support heritage-based eco-tourism into the region.

Working with Professor Fatima al-Namari from the University of Petra, and with Obyda Hummas and Nebras Maslamani from ‘Future Pioneers for Empowering Communities’, a Jordan-based non-profit organisation, Professor Mithen secured funding to create a small business, owned and managed by Bedouin women. The business makes and sells handicraft products based on archaeological finds from his excavations: the translation of academic research into a commercial initiative to alleviate poverty.

Professor Mithen and his team brought together women from each of the five tribes in Faynan and Greigra to form the Faynan Heritage Women’s Cultural Association (FHWCA). The women received two years of intensive support, including business training and professional advice on product design and manufacture to supplement their traditional craft skills.

In March 2022, FHWCA successfully launched Faynan Heritage Home, a physical and online shop selling jewellery, pottery, and a range of hand-woven products. The project has already had a major impact on the self-esteem and status of the women, and some have used the training to find employment elsewhere. Establishing the business is only the end of the beginning – the aim is for the business to be sustainable over the long term.

In partnership with the University of Petra and Future Pioneers for Empowering Communities.

Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Newton Fund.

Read more

About the Research Engagement and Impact Awards

The Research Engagement and Impact Awards aim to recognise and reward those who undertake high-quality engagement and impact activities, and/or have contributed to capacity building in this area. All University of Reading researchers and professional staff are eligible to enter, and can be nominated by another member of staff or can nominate themselves. Entrants can be at any level in their careers, and activities of any scale are welcome. Entries are assessed by a panel including academics, communications professionals and engagement experts from within the University.

Award winners receive £1000 towards their next engagement activity. 

Read about the 2020 shortlisted projects

Read about the 2019 shortlisted projects 

Read about the 2018 shortlisted projects

Read about the 2017 shortlisted projects

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