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Ep. 5: Curiosity and Curriculum: Innovation, Equity, and Autonomy in University Learning

20 Jan, 2026 | Blended Learning, Global Learning, Podcast Episode | 0 comments

Hosts: Julie (Australia) & Jim (UK)
Guests: Dr Mark Childs and Julie Usher from the Durham Centre for Academic Development
Date: 20 January 2026
Length: Approx. 73 min
Themes: Hierarchies in Higher Education, Student Autonomy and Readiness, The Impact of AI on Assessment, Inclusive Pedagogy, Pedagogy via Pop Culture.

Guests:

Dr Mark Childs is a Senior Learning Designer at the Durham Centre for Academic Development and has worked at the University since 2020. His particular areas of expertise are pedagogic design for online and blended learning and learners’ collaboration in online environments. Mark is also the co-host of Pedagodzilla, a podcast about learning and teaching explained through the lens of pop culture examples. His latest book, based on the podcast, explores basic learning and teaching principles, and is available at: https://www.pedagodzilla.com/

Julie Usher is a Digital Learning Developer at the Durham Centre for Academic Development, and has worked in digital education since 2002. She has experience in developing and supporting blended and online learning, as well as in academic staff development, project management and pedagogic research. She has provided learning design consultancy for flagship online programmes, published research on approaches to learning design, and facilitated co-design projects including students, industry stakeholders and service users. Her areas of interest include critical pedagogy and inclusion, and generative AI.

Episode Summary

In this episode, hosts Julie and Jim are joined by Mark Childs and Julie Usher from Durham University (UK) to discuss the complexities of learning design within a high-ranking, research-intensive institution. The guests describe the unique “Oxbridge” vibes and college system of Durham while addressing challenges such as classism, the need for widening participation, and the struggle to balance world-class research with pedagogical innovation. A significant portion of the conversation focuses on the “top-down” implementation of the Durham Educational Framework (DEF 27), which aims to reconstruct undergraduate curricula to prioritize active pedagogy, inclusive assessment, and student autonomy.

The discussion further explores the concept of “flat learning,” an approach that seeks to lower institutional hierarchies by fostering peer-to-peer knowledge sharing and shared power between educators and students. The guests and hosts examine how Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and the integration of AI are reshaping the educational landscape, forcing a move away from traditional essays toward more reflective and authentic assessments. The episode concludes with a look at “Pedagodzilla,” a podcast co-hosted by Mark Childs that utilizes pop culture references to make complex pedagogical theories more accessible and engaging.

Tune in as Julie, Jim, Mark and Julie explore:

  • The Durham Educational Framework (DEF 27) and its goal to reconstruct the undergraduate first-year experience.
  • How learning design acts as a “critical friend” to busy researchers who may lack pedagogical expertise.
  • The “Garage approach” and “Skunk works” models for fostering democratic, ego-free collaboration.
  • The transition from PGCE qualifications to the Higher Education Academy (HEA) fellowship route for academic staff.
  • The five-minute university concept and why teaching students how to find information is more vital than rote memorization.

Key Themes

  • Hierarchies in Higher Education: Challenging the “sage on the stage” model through flat learning and shared authority.
  • Student Autonomy and Readiness: Scaffolding the first-year experience to prepare students for independent study in later years.
  • The Impact of AI on Assessment: The shift from traditional essays to reflective journals and critical analysis of AI-generated content.
  • Inclusive Pedagogy: Implementing UDL and addressing the digital divide exacerbated by paid AI subscriptions.
  • Pedagogy via Pop Culture: Using familiar narratives (like Star Wars or The Sound of Music) to anchor learning theories.

Key Quotes

In some cases they succeed almost in spite of the teaching rather than as a result of it.

Julie Usher

Curiosity, if they come out of university with nothing else, what we really want them to come out with is curiosity.

Julie Usher

Content is pretty much not entirely meaningless, but we should not be focusing on it to this extent.

Mark Childs

The kindest people I know are also the most curious people.

Mark Childs

The power gets left at the door… Leave the ego at the door.

Jim Harris

Infographic

Infographic titled 'Designing for the Future: Innovation, Equity, and Autonomy in University Learning' divided into two main sections. Left section shows 'Innovation in Pedagogical Design' with illustrations of collaborative learning spaces including a garage-style workshop, students working at tables, and group discussions. Three key concepts are highlighted: 'Garage Approach' depicting democratic design where power and egos are left at the door; 'Transitioning to Flat Learning' showing students and teachers co-creating knowledge as peers in a circular arrangement; and 'Designers as Critical Friends' illustrating pedagogical experts partnering with researchers. Right section displays 'Equity, Autonomy, and Future Skills' featuring a bridge illustration showing 'Scaffolded Autonomy (Years 1-3)' with students progressing from supported guidance in Year 1 to full independence by Year 3. Below are two additional concepts: 'The AI Digital Divide' shown with a balance scale representing equitable access to AI tools, and 'Curiosity Over Content' depicting students reading and exploring, emphasizing critical thinking over memorization. The infographic uses warm colors (orange, yellow, green, blue) in a modern, friendly illustration style.

Interesting facts, quotes, ideas, side chats (eg jokes) etc

  • Durham’s Ranking: According to The Times, Durham was recently ranked above Oxford and Cambridge, being the third oldest university in the UK.
  • The Christmas Mouse: Jim notes they never found the “Christmas mouse” from the previous year, though his cats had a good time regardless.
  • The Five-Minute University: A sketch mentioned by Mark where a graduate is taught only what they will actually remember five years later (e.g., Economics = “Supply and Demand”).
  • Pop culture as Pedagogy: Mark discusses analyzing Yoda’s effectiveness as a supply teacher and using the Council of Elrond to explain social constructivism.
  • The AI Loop Joke: Julie shares a joke about a 2030 strategic plan getting stuck in a loop because AI keeps suggesting “AI-ready graduates” while faculty ask, “What about deep learning?”.
  • The “CAIeRO” Acronym: Jim references a learning design process called CAIeRO, which stands for “Creating Aligned interactive Education Resource Opportunities”
  • The HEA “Lure”: Mark admits that he uses podcasting workshops as a way to “lure” academics into learning design consultations; once they are interested in the medium, he can help them with broader curriculum changes.

Resources & Mentions

What’s Next?

In future episodes, Julie and Jim will explore student voice, asynchronous design, micro-credentials, academic freedom, and what happens when universities prioritize outcomes over discovery.

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