Teaching
At Liverpool I teach topics closely linked to my research, and students can consider my own data and interpretations alongside those of others. I lead the Heritage strand within the degree programmes, and teach several of the modules. I am particularly keen that students understand through case studies the challenges of heritage professionals, and the structures and policies with which they work. I am also module convenor and main teacher for The Practice of Archaeology module (Year 1) , and run the Departmental field training programme which takes place at the site and museum of Norton Priory, which feeds into Year 2 ALGY248 module, Working with the Past ,which I convene and co-teach.
Heritage
At Liverpool I teach topics closely linked to my research, and students can consider my own data and interpretations alongside those of others. I lead the Heritage strand within the degree programmes, and teach several of the modules. I am particularly keen that students understand through case studies the challenges of heritage professionals, and the structures and policies with which they work. I am also module convenor and main teacher for The Practice of Archaeology module (Year 1), and run the Departmental field training programme which takes place at the site and museum of Norton Priory, which feeds into Year 2, ALGY248, Working with the Past which I convene and co-teach.
Iron Age to Recent times
My archaeology period interests range from the Iron Age, through the Vikings, and up to recent times and they are represented in a number of modules. I aim to develop students' critical understanding of how we get to know about the past, and for their engagement and active involvement in the teaching and learning process. I use later prehistoric and historic case studies in methodology and heritage teaching.
Archaeology fieldwork
I co-ordinate and teach on a year 1 module which provides the framework of understanding of field methods, and also direct the Departmental Field School and Training Excavation at Norton Priory from 2018. This allows the combination of research with teaching, and also develops students' employability skills. The Norton Priory first season revealed a large medieval ditch with the upper levels filled with post-Dissolution debris including a large amount of domestic refuse from the 18th century. Some 18th-century garden features were also identified. Residual medieval finds included a range of decorated floor tiles and a fragment of a decorated grave slab. More medieval deposits will be examined next season, along with further investigation of the post-Dissolution evidence. My field training embraces excavation and recording methods, but also surface and geophysical survey and the many aspects of graveyard recording, which students learn during term time field sessions to accompany lectures and practicals. I have been running training excavations for over 35 years, and have also published on fieldwork teaching and how it links skills development with research.
Modules for 2024-25
ACE MA AND MSC DISSERTATION
Module code: ALGY600
Role: Teaching
MAKING HERITAGE HAPPEN
Module code: HLAC205
Role: Module Co-ordinator
MUSEUMS AND MONUMENTS
Module code: HLAC206
Role: Module Co-ordinator
PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE: GLOBAL QUESTIONS AND INSIGHTS FROM THE PAST
Module code: ALGY383
Role: Teaching
THE PRACTICE OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Module code: ALGY102
Role: Module Co-ordinator
Working with the Past
Module code: ALGY248
Role: Teaching
Supervised Theses
- 'Man is a dining animal': the archaeology of the English at table, c.1750-1900
- Reconstructing Christian lifeways: a bioarchaeological study of medieval inhabitants from Portmahomack, Scotland and Norton Priory, England.
- Rejected evidence reassessed: Wirral and the Mersey Basin in the Roman and post-Roman periods (first to seventh centuries AD)
- The Manx Stone Axe-head Project: interconnection or isolation? The evidence from stone axe-heads for the Manx Neolithic in its Irish Sea context.
- The Origins and Maritime Expansion of the Tobacco Pipe Trade of Southern England: An Archaeological and Historical Study, 1585-1640
- The archaeology of Manx church interiors: contents and contexts 1634-1925