Dr Christopher Hanley

My profile

Biography

I am a former English teacher and current senior lecturer in the Faculty of Health and Education. I taught in schools and colleges in the North West for eleven years before moving to a full-time teaching and research post at MMU.  

I am interested in professional learning in practical contexts, including teacher education and doctoral study. As co-investigator in a research project about the experiences of young people in treescapes and green spaces, I am researching place-based curriculum making in English and Science.  

Interests and expertise

I have expertise in the fields of English Studies, pedagogy, research methodologies in education and teacher education. 

My research draws on range of interdisciplinary fields, including social and philosophical theories, and focusses on critical analysis of professional knowledge and practice. Recent books include Research on becoming an English teacher: Through Lacan’s looking glass (Routledge, with Mike Dore and Tony Brown, and George Orwell and Education. Learning, commitment and human dependency (Routledge).

Projects

Selected projects and grant income

2022: Re-thinking secondary English through place: The Story of the Manchester Poplar. [Funded by: Manchester Metropolitan University], £ 6000, Principal Investigator

2021:Voices of the future: Collaborating with children and young people (CYP) to re-imagine treescapes. [Funded by: NERC, AHRC, ESRC, Defra, Welsh and Scottish Governments], 2021, £ 2 million approx, Co-Investigator

https://www.mmu.ac.uk/research/research-centres/esri/projects/voices-of-the-future

2018-19: A project of applied philosophical inquiry into conceptualisations of doctoral work across institutions. [Funded by: Philosophy of education society of Great Britain], 2018, £561, Principal Investigator

2018-19: A project of applied philosophical inquiry into how doctoral supervisors conceptualise writing at doctoral level. [Funded by: Manchester Metropolitan University], 2018, £815, Principal Investigator

2016: Whose values? The discursive construction of the civic role of teachers in Teacher Education Programmes [Funded by: Manchester Metropolitan University], 2016, £9,000, Principal Investigator with Edda Sant of MMU

2016: Global citizenship education. A live project [Funded by: Centre For Excellence in Learning and Teaching], 2016, £4,000, Principal Investigator with Edda Sant of MMU

2012-2016: Introducing a research dimension to the English PGCE. Unfunded. Principal Investigator with Professor Tony Brown of MMU

2014-2015: An exploration of criticality with international students from different knowledge cultures studying in the UK. Unfunded. Principal Investigator with Dr Linda Hammersley-Fletcher of MMU

Teaching

How I’ll teach you

I will help you to be confident in your personal experience, to explore the issues that matter and encourage you to innovate and be creative. I will introduce you to methodological thinking that will help you to be systematic and rigorous in your studies. My seminars will require you to be critically reflexive, to scrutinise your ways of making sense of the world, to make arguments that are strong and persuasive. Using a range of different tasks, methods and resources, intended to stimulate your imagination and curiosity, I will encourage you to be inquisitive about the nature of educational experience and professional practice. My aim is always to enable a space for debate and discussion, allowing thought and creativity to flourish. I will help you to become a skilled and committed education practitioner.   

Why study…

Learning to teach English is about reading with interest. This means interrogating how and why texts address their readers as they do. 

English teaching is about unlocking potential. When readers think critically and independently, they establish a sense of autonomy within the reading process.

Teaching English is about creativity and joy. A word combines with other words, creating a world of meaning. Stories are not confined to pages. They are re-told, in different ways, again and again.

Doctoral studies is the most incredible journey you can ever undertake. As a doctoral student in education, you will be asking searching questions about how we think, learn and live, and imagining how it can be done differently in the future. You will be trained in research methods and taught how to think rigorously and creatively, so you can undertake real-world projects that are meaningful and impactful. 

Postgraduate teaching

I currently teach on the Doctor of Education course (phase A) and supervise doctoral students in phase B. I also teach on the English PGCE course (subject pedagogy and professional practice).

Subject areas

English and doctoral studies

Supervision

Previous supervision

As Principal Supervisor

Sackville-Ford, Mark (2017) Affective school atmospheres: an adventure through lively matters. Doctoral thesis (PhD), Manchester Metropolitan University.

As co-supervisor

Alhamroni, Ramadan (2017) How higher education leaders learn to lead – the shaping of professional identities: a comparison of senior academic leaders in Libya and the UK.  Doctoral thesis (PhD), Manchester Metropolitan University

As second supervisor

Evans, Stephen (2021) Emergent educational practice in community settings. Doctoral thesis (PhD), Manchester Metropolitan University

Pawlik, Peter (2020) The discursive construction of the mastery curriculum in mathematics. Doctoral thesis (PhD), Manchester Metropolitan University

Dubsky, Rachel (2015) Professional boundaries in teacher-pupil relationships: does the model of professional conduct in regulatory standards and codes of conduct impose teacher-pupil relationships that are pedagogically and personally limiting? Doctoral thesis (PhD), Manchester Metropolitan University

Harrison, Michaela (2014) Travelling through written spaces: a nomadic enquiry into the writing of student teachers. Doctoral thesis (PhD), Manchester Metropolitan University 

Current supervision: Principal Supervisor

Lisa Brooks. A Psychoanalytical Examination of the Impact of the Role of the Specialist Leader of Education (SLE) in Secondary Schools

Kirsteen Aubrey. Title TBC. 

Richard Dunston. An exploration of stakeholder perceptions towards continuous professional development and its design, purpose and impact within Further Education through theoretical and experiential lenses.

Current supervision: First Supervisor

Clare Halfpenny. Quality in Higher Education: a comparison of commercial and traditional undergraduate programmes

Research outputs

My latest book, George Orwell and education, takes a philosophical approach to literature studies, while other recent papers are concerned with innovative practitioner research and citizenship education.  

Published Books

  • Hanley, C. (2019) George Orwell and Education. Learning, commitment and human dependency. (London: Routledge)
  • Brown, T., Dore, M. Hanley, C (2019) Research on becoming an English teacher: Through Lacan’s looking glass. (London: Routledge)

Chapters

  • Hanley, C. & Dore, M. (2021). Modelling curriculum design. A conceptual approach. In Hulme, M., O’Sullivan, R. & Smith, R. (Eds.) (2021) Mastering Teaching: Thriving as an Early Career Teacher, Buckingham: Open University Press.
  • Hanley, C. & Olson-Rost, A. (2020) Working with texts: Behaviour challenges and possible solutions, in Overland, E., Barber, J. & Sackville-Ford, M. (2020) Behaviour Management for Trainee Teachers, A practical and theoretical guide for secondary education. (Routledge)

Professional Journal

  • Hanley, C. (2018). Teacher-as-researcher: Shaping the curriculum for pupil learning. Impact (3). Chartered college of teaching.