Dr Mel Hall

My profile

Biography

I am a Senior Lecturer in Childhood and Education Studies and am based in the School of Education where I teach and research. I joined Manchester Metropolitan University in 2017. I am Programme Lead for our BA (Hons) Early Years and Childhood Studies degree. I teach undergraduate research methods and supervise Masters and doctoral students.  

My research is centred around exploring aspects of children and young people’s lives – their accounts of health and family life and their education - with a view to informing practice. The applied and interdisciplinary nature of my research has enabled me to share young people’s insights within fields where their views have traditionally been silenced. My research emphasises the need to listen to children and young people, involve them in their education and health care and provide greater support to them in difficult circumstances.

I began my career as a researcher on national evaluations of educational and community initiatives at the National Foundation for Educational Research and then Sheffield Hallam University.

I joined the University of Sheffield in 2006 to undertake my doctoral research for which I sought the perspectives of children and young people receiving treatment for cleft lip and/or palate, using narrative and participatory approaches. I was then a Research Associate on projects which explored young people’s perspectives of dental treatment and dental appearance and health care evaluations.

My interests in health and experience of narrative and child centred approaches led me to my role as a researcher on the Alzheimer’s Society funded study, ‘The Perceptions and Experiences of Children and Young People Who Have a Parent With Dementia’, based in the School of Education at the University of Sheffield. I continue to publish in this area and am looking to take this work forward. I previously carried out research on the motivations and barriers to shared reading with pre-school children as part of an ESRC funded project.

Expert reviewer for peer reviewed journals

  • Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal
  • Dementia 
  • Journal of Early Childhood Literacy
  • Journal of Early Childhood Research
  • Families, Relationships and Societies
  • Journal of Illness, Crisis & Loss
  • Literacy
  • International Journal of Paediatric Dentistry
  • Qualitative Research Journal
  • International Journal of Research & Method in Education

Prizes and awards

Personal Tutor of the Year 2019, Student Union awards, MMU

Membership of professional associations

Fellow of the Higher Education Academy

Teaching

How I’ll teach you

My teaching takes an interdisciplinary approach, drawing on sociology, disability studies, education studies, cultural studies and importantly, empirical research as well as contemporary material. I encourage students to reflect on their own experiences and expertise where relevant and appropriate. Delivery centres around interactive sessions.

I am committed to research based teaching and my extensive career has afforded me a wealth of  applied experience to draw upon, as well as knowledge and theory to support student learning and development. My teaching is informed by my substantial knowledge of research design and practice. 

Subject areas

Education and Childhood Studies

Research methods

Social policy 

Sociology 

Supervision 

I supervise doctoral students and am happy to hear from prospective students working in sociology, family and personal life, childhood and education.  

Complete:

  1. Smith, G. 2022: “Listening to my readers”: The internal literacies landscapes of children learning to read. PhD, Manchester Metropolitan University. 2nd supervisor.

Current students:

  1. Algwifly, G. Exploring the community support for mothers of children with different needs: perceptions from Saudi mothers. Expected submission:  Principal supervisor.
  2. Bone, R. Talking to parents about school: a collaborative ethnography in ‘stuck’ schools,  White Rose ESRC PhD studentship. Principal supervisor.
  3. Crosbie, J. Assessment in Higher Education: Teacher and Student Perspectives. Principal supervisor.
  4. Jacques, M. Being an early childhood professional under inspection: exploring workforce perspectives of quality measurement policy in England.  1st supervisor.
  5. Jameson, M. Kinship care and parental substance misuse: Developing more effective and responsive services. 2nd supervisor.
  6. Ormrod, K. Global Citizenship Education in the Food Bank, Expected submission: September 2024. Full-time White Rose ESRC PhD studentship.
  7. Qazi, M. Exploring levels of engagement of trainee police recruits in university based degree programmes. Principal supervisor.

Research outputs

I have published in the areas of:

  • Families and relationships
  • Health
  • Literacies
  • Childhood and youth
  • Life course research
  • Qualitative research
  • Narrative and autobiographical approaches