Dr Su Corcoran

My profile

Biography

I have been working in education - formally and non-formally for over 25 years. Beginning as a volunteer youth worker in the 1990s on summer activity programmes for children with special needs, at evening meetings of MENCAP gateway clubs, and with young people from all the age sections of GirlguidingUK - the latter of which I am still involved in now - I progressed through over a decade of working as a science (physics 11-18) and Theory of Knowledge teacher in secondary schools in the UK and the International sector. Alongside my formal teaching, and during career breaks, I volunteered or undertook internships as an administrator/project officer and/or educator (non-formal) for a number of non-governmental organisations in the UK, East Africa, Indonesia, and the Czech Republic. 

My research interests in ‘blue sky’ inclusive education and social justice stem from my experiences as a teacher, a masters’ dissertation focused on refugees affected by protracted conflict situations in East Africa, and - over the last ten years - my work in higher education and with street-connected young people in a number of countries. I am interested in notions of liminality and belonging, particularly in relation to transitions: (back) into communities and/or education after experiencing displacement and family separation; between stages of an education system; or into new countries/communities, education systems, training and employment.

More recently my research has also focused on the use of arts-based methods and the ways in which different art forms can encourage dialogue between young people and/or marginalised communities and the policy makers who most often make the decisions that impact up on them directly.

Education

  • HEA Senior Fellowship
  • ESRC-funded PhD Education, University of Manchester
  • MA Development Studies, University of Manchester
  • Undergraduate Diploma in Religion, Open University
  • PGCE (11-18) Science (Physics), Bangor University
  • BSc Physics, Durham University

Expert Reviewer

I review articles for:

  • Global Studies of Childhood
  • International Journal of Inclusive Education
  • British Journal of Visual Impairment
  • The South Africa Journal of Education
  • Pedagogy Culture and Society

I have also reviewed funding applications for the British Academy

Awards

2019 BERA annual conference, Science Education ‘Best in SIG’ prize for my presentation on the role of the Tim Peake Primary Project in encouraging parental and community involvement in schools.

Interests and expertise

Originally employed to support proposal writing across Faculty of Education, I prepared bids for external funding by brainstorming and designing research plans, conducting literature searches and reviews, developing impact strategies, liaising with potential research funders, and more focused preparation and drafting of research proposals, budgets and tender documents. Alongside this role, I develop my own research portfolio, focused on my own research on inclusion and social justice, and contract research work with non-governmental organisations. Other responsibilities include:

  • Ethics lead, School of Childhood, Youth and Education Studies (CYES)
  • Position on the Senior Leadership Group for Research for School of CYES
  • Coordinator of the Early Career Research Peer Support Network, Faculty of Health & Education (2022 – ongoing)
  • Coordinator of the Early Career Network, Faculty of Education (2019-22)
  • Positions on Faculty Ethics Committee and Faculty RKE committee
  • Chair of working party for Navigating Research Ethics with Integrity seminar series

Impact

I am one of very few researchers focused specifically on the transitions of street-connected young people away from the street and more particularly on the interplay of education and street-connectedness. My theoretical contributions to the field focus on the street-connected liminalities or liminal identities and the implications that these have for the development of inclusive communities (Corcoran 2016; Corcoran and Kaneva 2021). Street-connected young people access education of various kinds within many different contexts, as such I work closely with the Consortium for Street Children to develop research that engages with and includes practitioners in their global network of member organisations and have been invited to:

- be extensively interviewed by Robbie Hopper as part of a 2022 UNICEF and Government of Kenya consultation aiming to inform social policy development for street-connected children. I later provided peer review for the Education section of the report, which relies heavily on my publications.

- lead a special issue of Global Studies of Childhood on separated childhoods, for which I developed a cross sectoral team from both academia and practice to ensure that article authors and their reviewers were drawn from various backgrounds. As our editorial (Bhattacharjee et al. 2022) states: I wanted to “create the space to gather and share new findings…that centres on the voices of children and family members with lived experience of separation, and on the practical experiences of social service workforce who are key to providing adequate support to strengthen the capacity of families to remain together and to reunite safely”.

- contribute a chapter on street-connected and homeless childhoods for the SAGE handbook of Global Childhoods, whose novel contribution concerned the importance of consolidating the literature on two often perceived as disparate discourses (Kaneva and Corcoran 2021).

Bhattacharjee, D. Corcoran, S. Underhill, H. Wakia, J. and Walakira, E. (2022) Intersectional yet individual experiences: the importance of acknowledging, conceptualising and contextualising separated childhoods. Global Studies of Childhood 12(1):Editorial

Corcoran, S. and Kaneva, K. (2021) ‘Developing inclusive communities: understanding the experiences of education of learners of English as an additional language in England and street-connected young people in Kenya’ International Journal of Inclusive Education DOI: 10.1080/13603116.2021.1886348

Projects

Recent/current projects include:

Digital Voices of the Future: Children’s visions of future UK treescapes revealed through gaming (Co-I)

This NERC-funded project follows on from the Voices of the future: Collaborating with children and young people to re-imagine Treescapes project. Working with Prof. Simaon Carr from University of Cumbria, the research team will be working with children in schools around Mersey Forest to develop games focused on forests and sustainability. (2023/24)

The impact of hedge laying on personal wellbeing: understanding the transformative effects of learning the art of hedge laying to conservation volunteers (PI)

Working collaboratively with Lancashire Wildlife Trust at Philips Park, Bury, we are using an online survey and semi-structured interviews to explore volunteer engagement with Lancashire style hedge laying. (2022/23)

External Evaluation of the National Literacy Trust’s Represent programme (PI)

I led a team of four researchers on a mixed methods project focused on quantitative pre-and post-intervention psychological measures with students, teacher interviews and qualitative surveys, and creative workshops with students. (2022/2023)  

https://literacytrust.org.uk/programmes/sport-and-literacy/represent-focusing-on-girls-in-alternative-provision/

The interplay of education and Street-Connectedness (£6K PI)

Collaborating with colleagues from Chance for Childhood, Consortium for Street Children and Keep your Shoes Dirty, we are using an online survey and Zoom-based focus groups to explore how education and training are enabled for street-connected young people and the barriers and opportunities that help with the process. (2022/23)

Tugging at the thread: navigating the journey from teacher to academic? (Co-PI)

This project is using autoethnography to explore the transition of schoolteacher to academic of women from various backgrounds. (2022/23)

Home learning(PI)

Using a redirection of project funding from Norwegian Association of Disabled, this online Enabling Education Network survey in 10 languages focused on inclusive home learning during Covid 19 across 26 countries. (2020/21)https://www.eenet.org.uk/inclusive-home-learning/

Corcoran, S., Pinnock, H. and Twigg, R. (in press) Home Learning for Children in Low-Income Contexts during a Pandemic: An Analysis of 2020 Survey Results from Syria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Journal on Education in Emergencies, 8(3):79-110 Available in English, French and Arabic: https://inee.org/resources/home-learning-children-low-income-contexts-during-pandemic-analysis-2020-survey-results

Questioning the Form: Re-imagining identities through zine-making in Kampala, Uganda. I am a CoI on this project, with Kate Pahl (PI). It involves a partnership with StrongMinds and ArtVism in Kampala to conduct workshops focused on the creation of zines with women. The workshops were co-led by Gloria Kiconco and Charity Atukunda. 

Leveraging benefits for young people and wider communities with the Street Child Cricket World Cup. This project follows on from a project - with Jez Oldfield (Manchester Met) and Alice Bloom (Uni of Manchester) that looked at the impact of participating in the Street Child World Cup on the players, their communities and the organisatons who support them. In this Leisure Studies Association-funded iteration I am working with Tom Fletcher (Leeds Beckett), Jon Sibley (Manchester Met) and Alice Bloom (Uni of Manchester). We have extended our focus to find out how the event can be used to leverage impact, interviewing Street Child United staff members, organisational partners, volunteers and trustees.  

Belonging and Learning: Using co-produced arts methodologies to explore youth participation in contexts of conflict in Kenya, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Funded by the GCRF and AHRC, this project explores the potential of art-based methods to enable dialogue between displaced young people and policy makers. In Kenya, street-connected young people, head teachers, and local government officials interacted through dance, in Uganda, young refugees used their visual art to start conversations, and in the Democratic Republic of Congo, street-connected young people displaced by conflict and crisis coproduced poetry and drama with stakeholders from schools, civil society and local government. 

(Re-)Engaging street-connected young people with education in Mombasa

Collaborating with Glad’s House in Mombasa, this project aimed to understand street-connected young people’s experiences of education. Building on my PhD research, it focused on young people who had lived on the street for extended periods of time and were still there at the time of data generation. Both studies generated significant insight into (a) education as motivating initial migrations to the street, (b) the role of fear, embarrassment, and shame in preventing young people from going (back) into formal education, and (c) how acceptance and support are key to overcoming feelings of not belonging and other challenges when transitioning from the street into school. Read more here.

In addition to my research work at Manchester Metropolitan University, I am also programme coordinator at the Enabling Education Network where I co-edit the Enabling Education Review.     

External Evaluation of the Tim Peake Primary Project (PI)

More information on the External Evaluation of the Tim Peake Primary Project, which ran in 1,400 UK primary schools, can be found here

Teaching

I am unit lead for Conceptualise, Critique and Create: Thinking with theory in inclusive education as part of the Masters in Inclusive Education. 

Supervision

I am interested in supervising projects that consider social justice, inclusive education, youth employment, street-connectedness, homelessness and inclusion globally. 

I am also able to supervise projects concerned with STEM education. 

Current students include:

Jayne Mugglestone (2021-)

Queering Queer Equalities Work – Creating Place and Space

EdD Part B

Principal Supervisor: Su Corcoran

Co-Supervisor: Kate Pahl

Margarida Borras (2021-)

Developing Confident and Capable Future Digital Citizens: A Socio-technical Analysis of the role of smartphones in “Bring Your Own Device programs” in Wales and Catalonia.

Principal Supervisor: Cathy Lewin

Co-Supervisor: Su Corcoran

ESRC WRDTP studentship award, 1+3 (£78,000)

Annabel McAreavey (2022 -)

Trauma-Focused and Strengths-Based Classrooms in Education: A multidisciplinary approach to developing a novel, evidence-informed intervention within UK Primary Schools

Principal Supervisor: Jennifer McGahan

Co-Supervisor: Su Corcoran, Claire Fox

Research outputs

My wider research interests focus on the intersections of education and international development, in particular social justice, equity in education, and inclusive education in policy and practice, as well as issues associated with social policy, social justice, and science education.

I am especially interested in:

  • street-connectedness and the implications for effective education provision of being, and having been, street-connected;
  • transition experiences of young people leaving the street and transitioning (back) into home communities, schools and vocational training placements;
  • the policy context with regards to education and street-connectedness;
  • intersections of experience of education of displaced communities (eg conflict-affected and internally displaced; refugees; street-connected…);  
  • visual research methods and/or arts-based methodologies with young people;
  • the theory of liminality, and its interpretation within these the fields of refugee studies, disability studies, and street-connectedness.

As a qualified physics teacher I am also interested in STEM education and have experience of working with teachers to develop action research projects and evaluating education programmes.

Career history

Various

I am a qualified Physics teachers with over a decade’s experience of teaching science, theory of knowledge, PSME and/or English and reading in secondary schools or non-formal education centres in the UK, Czech Republic, Indonesia, Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania.

I often work with civil society organisations that focus on projects focused on inclusion and social justice. As part of my work at Manchester Metropolitan I have worked closely with the Consortium for Street Children, Chance for Childhood, Keep Your Shoes DirtyPEDER in Bukavu, Glad’s House in Mombasa and Project Elimu in Nairobi.

I am very grateful for the participation of the following organisations in the projects I have managed or submitted funding applications for - in the last two years: Fikisha Kenya, Nzumari Africa (Kenya), Kito International (Kenya), Zero Street Children Foundation (Kenya), InterAid (Uganda), Refugee Law Project (Uganda), YADEN East Africa (Kenya).

In addition to having held trustee positions with Acacia UK and Ryde Community Development Centre, I have previously worked with:

  • Enabling Education Network (2012-ongoing)

I am the programme officer at EENET, which includes the co-editing Enabling Education Review.

  • Street Child United 

Exploring the impact of the Street Child World Cup on the young people who participate, their communities, and the organisations supporting them (2018/20)

Rapporteur for Street Child Summit observing and making notes of each session and feed into development of specific outcomes. (2015)

At the Street Child World Cup I facilitated Team of Life methodology with Team Kenya, documenting findings from all 24 teams and completing initial thematic analysis of the data. (2014)

  • Retrak (2012-2017)

I worked with Joanna Wakia to complete the analysis and reporting of wellbeing data to monitor the reintegration of street-connected children - generated using the Child Status Index twith their families. (2012-13)

Corcoran, S. and Wakia, J. (2013) Evaluating Outcomes: Retrak’s use of the Child Status Index to measure well-being of street-connected children. Retrak

I worked with a Retrak partner organisation in Kenya to negotiate their definitions of various indicators and develop systems to ensure interrater reliability for their  use of the monitoring and evaluation tool. (2013)

Joanna Wakia and I evaluated the use of the tool for reintegration concerning the lessons learned in rolling the tool out to small organisations for use in monitoring and evaluation - highlighting the value of a monitoring tool that provides multi-dimensional snapshots of street-connected children’s well-being at different points on the reintegration journey, and the challenges and (un)expected benefits of that Retrak have experienced since it was adopted. (2015/16)

Wakia, J. and Corcoran, S. (2016) ‘Using child wellbeing assessments to track progress in family reintegration’. Global Social Welfare 3(2):137-145; and Corcoran, S. and Wakia, J. (2016) ‘Evaluating Outcomes: measuring children’s wellbeing,’ in S. Corcoran and D. Kaneva Being “on the margins”: Exploring intersections. UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Two months working with the Monitoring, Evaluation, Research and Learning (MERL) team at Retrak’s office in Manchester on the evaluation and analysis of quantitative data to track the progress of children benefitting from their work in Ethiopia and Uganda. Followed by a month with the MERL team in Uganda assisting with the evaluation of qualitative data as they developed new monitoring methods as part of the social work programme. I also facilitated an evaluation of use of the Child Status Index for social work programming. (2016)