Dr Ryan Bramley

BA, MA (English Literature), MA (Social Research), PhD, SFHEA

School of Education

Lecturer in Education

Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy

Academic Lead for Student Support

Widening Participation Coordinator

Dr Ryan Bramley
Profile picture of Dr Ryan Bramley
r.bramley@sheffield.ac.uk
+44 114 222 8103

Full contact details

Dr Ryan Bramley
School of Education
The Wave
2 Whitham Road
ºù«Ӱҵ
S10 2AH
Profile

I am a lecturer, filmmaker, and arts-based researcher currently based at ºù«Ӱҵ’s School of Education. My work primarily explores how minoritised groups are represented in film, TV, media, education, and beyond. I also enjoy training people - from primary school pupils to doctoral students - in creative, non-traditional modes of qualitative inquiry, such as filmmaking, documentary techniques, and creative writing. 

In 2021, whilst completing my PhD, I was recognised as a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (SFHEA), demonstrating my long-standing commitment to learning and teaching within a higher education setting - with a particular focus on my role in introducing a brand new PGR degree programme, the ‘PhD-by-Practice’, across the Faculty of Social Sciences (as of 2020/21). 

I hold two Master's degrees in English Literature and Social Research respectively, and my research routinely explores ways in which artistic practice (especially filmmaking) can broaden our understanding of the social world - including my first feature-length documentary film, Born of Coal, which premiered at ºù«Ӱҵ's Showroom Cinema in May 2015. 

I am co-Principal Investigator (alongside Dr Sabine Little) on the 'My Media, My Power, My World' project, having secured approximately £80,000 of research funding from  (Poland) to create a new interdisciplinary primary school subject which could be taught to children internationally. I am also the co-Principal Investigator (alongside Dr Kirsty Liddiard) on 'Rethinking Deafness, Film and Accessibility', a ºù«Ӱҵ Innovation Programme (SIP) project with Beth Evans and Jon Rhodes at user research and design studio Paper, to explore how Deaf people perceive suspense in films as an under-researched and under-represented group. Additionally, I was Principal Investigator on the UKRI-funded ‘Evaluating Trespass Prevention’ project in 2021, in partnership with Network Rail and the National Railway Museum (UK).

Qualifications

BA English Language & Literature (ºù«Ӱҵ, 2015)

MA English Literature (ºù«Ӱҵ, 2016)

MA Social Research (ºù«Ӱҵ, 2017)

PhD in Education (ºù«Ӱҵ, 2021)

Research interests

My multimodal research outputs include:

  • (2015): a feature-length documentary film about the socio-cultural impacts of the 1984-85 Miners’ Strike conflict; 
  • (2019-20): a series of video interviews with internationally renowned researchers for the ºù«Ӱҵ Institute for International Development (SIID); 
  • (2021): a series of four short documentary films depicting voluntary filmmaking at ‘Kirklees Local TV’, a non-profit community media outlet (and the partner organisation for my Collaborative PhD project). One of these four films, ‘The People’s News Outlet’, can be viewed ;
  • (2021): videographic essays disseminating research co-produced with a group of digital media students from Barnsley College, as part of a research project investigating the effectiveness of railway anti-trespass media campaigns. 

Current research projects and engagements include:

  • 'My Media, My Power, My World' (2022) - we (myself and Dr Sabine Little) were awarded approximately £80,000 of research funding from  (Poland) to create a new interdisciplinary primary school subject which could be taught to children internationally. Our project team, composed of two Research Associates (Hannah Raine and Adeline Choo) and a Digital Content Designer (Sheida Tanhai), have created a series of 45 lessons complete with interactive learning resources, ready-made to be incorporated by primary school teachers within existing curricula.  A  of this project was produced by Hannah Raine for the Research England funded 'Connect and Reflect' project, as an example of best participatory research practice.
  • 'Rethinking Deafness, Film and Accessibility' (2022) - working with Dr Kirsty Liddiard (as co-PIs) and Beth Evans and Jon Rhodes at user research and design studio Paper, this ºù«Ӱҵ Innovation Programme (SIP) project explored how Deaf people perceive suspense in films as an under-researched and under-represented group. We designed this research project with the help of a Deaf Advisory Board, and conducted online video interviews with a small group of Deaf people, facilitated by a Deaf Interpreter (). Our project findings will be presented in both written English and British Sign Language, to make the research accessible to both Deaf and hearing people. A Deaf Studies Database has also been created as a result of this project, to enable and promote future research possibilities with Deaf people as participants.
  • Evaluating Trespass Prevention (2021) - working as the Principal Investigator on a UKRI National Productivity Investment Fund (NPIF) project, working in partnership with Network Rail and the National Railway Museum to better understand young people’s perceptions of anti-railway trespass video campaigns. Working alongside several academic colleagues from ºù«Ӱҵ, including Dr Becky Parry, Marion Oveson, and Dr Aneesh Barai, we developed an evaluation toolkit for Network Rail, who intend to use this to better understand how young audiences interpret and engage with anti-trespass media material. Hannah Raine has also compiled a  of this project for the Research England funded 'Connect and Reflect' project, as an example of best participatory research practice.
Publications

Journal articles

  • Bramley RJ, Oveson M & Barai A (2024) . International Journal of Adolescence and Youth, 29(1), 2308080. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Bramley R (2023) Windrush: Portraits of a Pioneering Generation – collaborative approach reveals the people behind the paintings. The Conversation. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Hammett D, Jackson L & Bramley R (2022) . Area. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Bramley R (2020) . Pedagogy, Culture & Society, 28(4), 650-653. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Bramley R (2016) ‘Born of Coal’ - Project Report. Track Changes, 9, 110-123. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Bramley R & Rowsell J () . Education 3-13, 1-14. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Bramley RJ () . Studies in Documentary Film, 1-18. RIS download Bibtex download

Chapters

  • Bramley RJ (2024) , Performative Representation of Working-Class Laborers (pp. 17-37). Springer Nature Switzerland RIS download Bibtex download

Reports

  • Bramley R, Rowsell J, Mushtaq F, Shaw J & Wood ML (2024) RIS download Bibtex download

Theses / Dissertations

  • Bramley R (2021) In Their Own Image: Voluntary Filmmaking at a Non-Profit Community Media Organisation. RIS download Bibtex download
Teaching interests

As well as being recognised as a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, I have also proved myself to be a versatile educator. I am currently involved with five different programmes within the School of Education (more info under ‘Teaching activities’). 

I am really interested in interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary teaching, particularly when it involves bringing arts-based methods and methodologies into new spaces. As such, I have made significant contributions to university learning and teaching beyond the School of Education. I delivered an annual Guest Lecture, ‘Introduction to Storytelling’ for Master’s of Architecture (M.Arch) students at the ºù«Ӱҵ School of Architecture (SSoA) between 2015-2018. I have also lectured on the School of English’s MA Research Methods module, delivering an interactive session on ‘Filmmaking as an Arts-Based Research Practice) to postgraduate Language & Linguistics students. 

One of my proudest achievements was the substantial role I played in the development and implementation of a new, innovative learning and teaching opportunity for students across the Faculty of Social Science: a 'PhD-by-Practice' Programme, introduced in 2021-22. In contrast to the traditional 80,000-word written thesis, a PhD-by-Practice allows a student to make a creative submission for their doctorate (e.g. poetry, film, photographic essay, drama performance, etc.), along with a written creative commentary that explores the theoretical and practical considerations underpinning the piece. 

I would be happy to supervise PhD and EdD students interested in exploring any of the following themes: Digital Media Consumption, Contemporary Film, Digital Literacies, Working-Class Voices, Alternative Media, Active Citizenship, Literary Representation, Multimodality, and the educational work/role of Third Sector and Non-Profit Organisations. I am also particularly interested in supervising PhD-by-Practice doctoral students. 

Teaching activities

I teach across a broad range of undergraduate and postgraduate programmes within the School of Education, both as a lecturer and a seminar tutor:

(Modules taught on include: EDU111 Making Sense of Education - Facts, Fiction and Data; EDU203 Research Project in Education, Culture and Childhood; I also deliver Academic Seminars for Year One and Year Two students)


(EDU6356 Critical Issues in Education and Educational Research; EDU6358 The Practice of Research)


(EDU6186 Practice-based Inquiry; EDU6168 Education, Teaching and Learning)


(EDU81004 Educational Research - Theory and Practice)

Professional activities and memberships

Member of the  (ISSOTL)

Member of the Disabled & Ill Researchers’ Network

Member of the

Committee Member The Participatory Research Network at the University of ºù«Ӱҵ (PRN@TUOS)