Professor teams up with museum to share microplastic research
A Staffordshire University Professor is among the first to receive new British Academy funding to engage the public with her research.
Working with the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery (PMAG), Professor Claire Gwinnett has been awarded pilot funding from the British Academy, the UK's national body for the humanities and social sciences, to engage the public with her research into microplastic pollution.
The Professor of Forensic and Environmental Science is one of fourteen researchers across thirteen projects to receive funding via the British Academy’s new SHAPE Involve and Engage Awards, a pilot scheme designed to support creative methods of engaging the public in cutting edge SHAPE research (social sciences, humanities and the arts for people and the economy).
Each award, worth up to £8000, is in partnership with a regional cultural organisation, including galleries, libraries, archives and museums. The projects will inspire and connect local communities and audiences with SHAPE research topics and meaningfully involve them in the creation of new research outputs.
Professor Gwinnett and the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery (PMAG) aim to engage and educate families in Staffordshire about the impact of human activities on our planet and the resulting microplastic pollution.
Professor Gwinnett said: “We’re thrilled to receive this funding and are excited to begin sharing our research with people across Staffordshire in fun and creative ways.”
“These hands-on activities will be designed to be a positive and educational experience for families; devoid of guilt and instead celebrating human ingenuity and brilliance in designing and creating objects, products and solutions in industry and using the same ingenuity to now solve the plastic waste problem.”
Their projects will be delivered between October 2023 and October 2024, with more details of public activities and events to be revealed soon.
Professor Julia Black, President of the British Academy, said: “ I know that the review panel were struck by the sheer creativity, innovation, diversity and variety held not only within our disciplines, but in how researchers feel they can meaningfully engage with audiences through arts and culture institutions which sit in the hearts of communities. On behalf of the Academy, I offer my warmest congratulations to those who have received awards. We hope that their partnerships will inspire and spark new meaningful connections between communities and the humanities, social sciences and arts.”
NOTES TO EDITORS
The British Academy is the UK’s national academy for the humanities and social sciences www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk @BritishAcademy_
Maria Scrivens
Communications Manager
t: 01782 294375
m: 07766 520339
e: m.c.scrivens@staffs.ac.uk
Staffordshire University’s ambition is to become the UK’s best modern university. An institution with a strong civic mission, it has committed to being a ‘catalyst for change’ for students and businesses, positively impacting wider society and the regional economy.
Staffordshire University was named a Top 5 university in the UK and ranked Top 10 for job prospects in the StudentCrowd University Awards 2022 – based entirely on student reviews. It also ranked Top 10 for Social Inclusion in The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2023.
The 2021 Research Excellence Framework (REF) classed 68% of the University’s research as world leading or internationally excellent and 87% of its ‘research impact’ was judged to be outstanding or very outstanding.
Substantial investment in innovative technologies and teaching environments ensure next generation courses and education are delivered across all three campuses in Stoke-on-Trent, Stafford and London.