About this event
This is the fifth lecture in the 'Beyond the Dark Clouds' lecture series - "'It's not my imagination': Children's Spirituality and the Implications for Education". This lecture will be given by Professor Kate Adams, Leeds Trinity University.
Kate Adams is Professor of Education. With a background in primary teaching with a specialism in Religious Education, she became a researcher through a Farmington Fellowship from Oxford University and a subsequent PhD scholarship from the University of Glasgow.
Kate's research specialisms are in children's spirituality and the implications for schools, with a focus on understanding spiritual and/or religious experiences from their perspectives. She works with children of all faiths and none, with a particular interest in those from no faith background. Areas of interest include young people's spiritual dreams, encounters with angels and deceased loved ones, imaginary friends/invisible companions and children's spiritual voice(s) which are often unheard.
Kate has over two decades experience working at universities in Scotland and England, most recently at the University of Winchester where she was Director of Research and Knowledge Exchange and Professor of Education and Childhood.
Kate is on the international advisory board of the Journal of Religious Education and International Journal of Children's Spirituality. She regularly reviews papers for a range of journals and grant applications for funding bodies. She is a former Director of the International Association for the Study of Dreams and former co-chair of the International Association of Children’s Spirituality.
Kate has received media attention for her research including interviews on the BBC Today Programme, local BBC radio stations, The Daily Telegraph, Times Educational Supplement, Church Times, The Tablet and has had expert comments in a range of mass media outlets including Vogue, Sainsbury's Magazine and Readers' Digest.
The aim of our inaugural lecture series ‘Beyond the Dark Clouds’ is to support the university, with its Catholic roots, to have a voice in the public square about justice, law-enforcement, the police, the nature of education, business ethics, spirituality, leadership and contemplation and the arts. Open to all, we encourage you to be a part of these public discussions about how to humanise our world and to bring about the conditions that enable the flourishing of all individuals and groups.
Booking
To book your place, click here.
Further Information
For more information please email Ann Marie Mealey ([email protected]) or to view the full lecture schedule alongside other university events, click here.