I taught psychology A-level for 12 years in North Yorkshire, before going back to university for postgraduate study. I also co-authored a textbook for A-level psychology and several revision tools.
In the Psychology department I have worked as a Research Associate in 3 different labs, and as an Outreach officer, Graduate Teaching Assistant and administration assistant. I have also run sessions and helped to organise outreach events such as Psych! York and University summer schools.
I have delivered adult learning for the Institute for Lifelong Learning at the University of York, developed and presented courses to sixth form students and run a team of undergraduate students developing support and resources to support potential students.
Piloting the use of body illusions for treating Anorexia Nervosa
My PhD project focusses on interoception in the perinatal period. Interoception is the awareness and perception of visceral feelings, which may be different in pregnancy. The project will focus on understanding these differences between how pregnant and no-pregnant women perceive and interpret their visceral signals. This will involve developing and validating a self-report measurement of interoception, and testing whether current measures of interoception are valid during pregnancy. We will also test whether interoceptive abilities during pregnancy have any relationship with body satisfaction in the perinatal period, and on postnatal outcomes.