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Madeleine Pownall

Bio: Madeleine Pownall is an academic researcher from University of Leeds. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychology & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 15 publications receiving 30 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: As coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) continues to disrupt pretertiary education provision and examinations in the United Kingdom, urgent consideration must be given to how best to support the...
Abstract: As coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) continues to disrupt pretertiary education provision and examinations in the United Kingdom, urgent consideration must be given to how best to support the ...

24 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Samantha Parsons, Flavio Azevedo, Mahmoud Elsherif, Samuel Guay, Owen N. Shahim, Gisela Govaart, Emma Norris, Aoife M. O'Mahony, Adam Jackson Parker, Ana Todorovic, Charlotte Rebecca Pennington, Elias Garcia-Pelegrin, Aleksandra Lazić, Olly Robertson, Sara L. Middleton, Beatrice Valentini, J. D. McCuaig, Bradley J. Baker, Elizabeth Collins, Adrien Fillon, Tina B. Lonsdorf, Michele C. Lim, Norbert Vanek, Marton Kovacs, Timothy Roettger, Sonia Rishi, Jacob F Miranda, Matt Jaquiery, Suzanne Stewart, Valeria Agostini, Andrew K. Stewart, Kamil Izydorczak, Sarah Ashcroft-Jones, Helena Hartmann, Madeleine Ingham, Yuki Yamada, Martin R. Vasilev, Filip Děchtěrenko, Nihan Albayrak-Aydemir, Yufei Yang, LaPlume A. Annalise, Julia Wolska, Emma L Henderson, M Zaneva, Benjamin Farrar, Ross Mounce, Tamar Kalandadze, Wanyin Li, Qin Xiao, Robert M. Ross, Siu Kit Yeung, Meng Liu, Micah Vandegrift, Zoltan Kekecs, Marta Topor, Myriam A. Baum, Emily A. Williams, Asma A. Assaneea, Amélie Bret, Aidan G Cashin, N. Talley Ballou, Tsvetomira Dumbalska, Bettina Kern, Claire Melia, Beatrix Joy Yvonne Michelle Arendt, G. H. Vineyard, Jade S. Pickering, Thomas Rhys Evans, Catherine Laverty, Elizabeth Woodward, David Moreau, Dominique G. Roche, Eike Mark Rinke, Graham Wightman Reid, Eduardo Garcia-Garzon, Steven Verheyen, Halil Emre Kocalar, Ashley R Blake, J.P. Cockcroft, Leticia Micheli, Brice Beffara Bret, Zoe M. Flack, Barnabas Szaszi, Markus Weinmann, Oscar Lecuona, Birgit Schmidt, William X. Q. Ngiam, Ana Barbosa Mendes, Shannon Francis, Brett Gall, Mariella Paul, Connor Tom Keating, Magdalena Grose-Hodge, James E. Bartlett, Bethan J Iley, Lisa Spitzer, Madeleine Pownall, Christopher J Graham, Tobias Wingen, Jennifer Terry, C. M. F. Oliveira, Ryan A. Millager, Kerry Jane Fox, Alaa Aldoh, Alexander Hart, O. V. D. Akker, Gilad Feldman, Dominik A Kiersz, Christina Pomareda, Kai Krautter, Ali H. Al-Hoorie, Balazs Aczel 
TL;DR: The Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Teaching (FORRT) community presents a crowdsourced glossary of open scholarship terms to facilitate education and effective communication between experts and newcomers as mentioned in this paper .
Abstract: Open scholarship has transformed research, and introduced a host of new terms in the lexicon of researchers. The ‘Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Teaching’ (FORRT) community presents a crowdsourced glossary of open scholarship terms to facilitate education and effective communication between experts and newcomers.

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Open science aims to improve the rigor, robustness, and reproducibility of psychological research as discussed by the authors. Despite resistance from some academics, the open science movement has been championed by some earl...
Abstract: Open science aims to improve the rigor, robustness, and reproducibility of psychological research. Despite resistance from some academics, the open science movement has been championed by some earl...

20 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Qualitative evidence related to barriers and facilitators of flexible sigmoidoscopy screening (FSS) intention and uptake is synthesised, particularly within low socio‐demographic uptake groups.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To synthesise qualitative evidence related to barriers and facilitators of flexible sigmoidoscopy screening (FSS) intention and uptake, particularly within low socio-demographic uptake groups. FSS uptake is lower amongst women, lower socio-economic status (SES), and Asian ethnic groups within the United Kingdom (UK) and United States of America. METHODS: A total of 12 168 articles were identified from searches of four databases: EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO and Web of Science. Eligibility criteria included: individuals eligible to attend FSS and empirical peer-reviewed studies that analysed qualitative data. The Critical Appraisal Skills Program tool evaluated the methodological quality of included studies, and thematic synthesis was used to analyse the data. RESULTS: Ten qualitative studies met the inclusion criteria. Key barriers to FSS intention and uptake centred upon procedural anxieties. Women, including UK Asian women, reported shame and embarrassment, anticipated pain, perforation risk, and test preparation difficulties to elevate anxiety levels. Religious and cultural-influenced health beliefs amongst UK Asian groups were reported to inhibit FSS intention and uptake. Competing priorities, such as caring commitments, particularly impeded women's ability to attend certain FSS appointments. The review identified a knowledge gap concerning factors especially associated with FSS participation amongst lower SES groups. CONCLUSIONS: Studies mostly focussed on barriers and facilitators of intention to participate in FSS, particularly within UK Asian groups. To determine the barriers associated with FSS uptake, and further understand how screening intention translates to behaviour, it is important that future qualitative research is equally directed towards factors associated with screening behaviour.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors make the case for integrating reflexivity across all research approaches, before providing a "beginner's guide" for quantitative researchers wishing to engage reflexively with their own work, providing concrete recommendations, worked examples, and reflexive prompts.
Abstract: Reflexivity is the act of examining one's own assumption, belief, and judgement systems, and thinking carefully and critically about how these influence the research process. The practice of reflexivity confronts and questions who we are as researchers and how this guides our work. It is central in debates on objectivity, subjectivity, and the very foundations of social science research and generated knowledge. Incorporating reflexivity in the research process is traditionally recognized as one of the most notable differences between qualitative and quantitative methodologies. Qualitative research centres and celebrates the participants' personal and unique lived experience. Therefore, qualitative researchers are readily encouraged to consider how their own unique positionalities inform the research process and this forms an important part of training within this paradigm. Quantitative methodologies in social and personality psychology, and more generally, on the other hand, have remained seemingly detached from this level of reflexivity and general reflective practice. In this commentary, we, three quantitative researchers who have grappled with the compatibility of reflexivity within our own research, argue that reflexivity has much to offer quantitative methodologists. The act of reflexivity prompts researchers to acknowledge and centre their own positionalities, encourages a more thoughtful engagement with every step of the research process, and thus, as we argue, contributes to the ongoing reappraisal of openness and transparency in psychology. In this paper, we make the case for integrating reflexivity across all research approaches, before providing a ‘beginner's guide’ for quantitative researchers wishing to engage reflexively with their own work, providing concrete recommendations, worked examples, and reflexive prompts.

8 citations


Cited by
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01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: The authors explored the potential of blogs as learning spaces for students in the higher education sector, and concluded that blogging has the potential to be a transformational technology for teaching and learning in higher education.
Abstract: 'Blogging' - a contraction of the term 'web logging' - is perhaps best described as a form of micro-publishing. Easy to use, from any Internet connection point, blogging has become firmly established as a web based communications tool. The blogging phenomenon has evolved from its early origin as a medium for the publication of simple, online personal diaries, to the latest disruptive technology, the 'killer app' that has the capacity to engage people in collaborative activity, knowledge sharing, reflection and debate (Hiler, 2003). Many blogs have large and dedicated readerships, and blog clusters have formed linking fellow bloggers in accordance with their common interests. This paper explores the potential of blogs as learning spaces for students in the higher education sector. It refers to the nascent literature on the subject, explores methods for using blogs for educational purposes in university courses (eg. Harvard Law School), and records the experience of the Brisbane Graduate School of Business at Queensland University of Technology, with its 'MBA blog'. The paper concludes that blogging has the potential to be a transformational technology for teaching and learning.

817 citations

01 Jan 2004
Abstract: Abstract Although research has established that stigmatized individuals suffer impaired performance under stereotype threat conditions, the anxiety presumed to mediate this effect has proven difficult to establish. In the current investigation, we explored whether non-verbal measures would fare better than self-reports in capturing stereotype threat anxiety. Gay and heterosexual men interacted with preschool children under stereotype threat or control conditions. As predicted, stereotype-threatened gay men demonstrated more non-verbal anxiety, but not more self-reported anxiety, than non-threatened gays during these interactions. Furthermore, non-verbal anxiety appeared to mediate the effects of stereotype threat on the quality of participants’ childcare skills. We discuss how these findings advance stereotype threat research, and highlight their potential implications for gay childcare workers.

252 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the associations between mental health and academic stress, self-efficacy, satisfaction for degree course, locus of control, COVID-19 risk perception, taking into account the level of information seeking about pandemic.
Abstract: In light of rising concern about the coronavirus pandemic crisis, a growing number of universities across the world have either postponed or canceled all campus and other activities. This posed new challenges for university students. Based on the classification proposed in the Mental Health Continuum model by Keyes, the aims were to estimate university students' prevalence of mental health during lookdown outbreak, and to examine the associations between mental health and, respectively, academic stress, self-efficacy, satisfaction for degree course, locus of control, COVID-19 risk perception, taking into account the level of information seeking about pandemic. Overall, 1124 Italian university students completed a self-report questionnaire. Data were analyzed using descriptive and correlational analyses. Results showed that 22.3% of participants were flourishing, and levels of mental well-being appeared in line with normative values in young Italian adults; levels of academic stress were not significantly higher than those found in other student samples before the COVID-19 outbreak. Students with high levels of information seeking presented higher levels of well-being and risk perception. Results could be considered useful to realize training pathways, to help the university students to improve their well-being, post-pandemic.

75 citations

17 Apr 2014
TL;DR: The authors argue that informal peer support networks like reading groups may provide important avenues for sustaining feminist research in times of austerity, as well as supporting and enabling women and emerging feminist scholars in academia.
Abstract: In this paper, we reflect upon our experiences and those of our peers as doctoral students and early career researchers in an Australian political science department. We seek to explain and understand the diverse ways that participating in an unofficial Feminist Reading Group in our department affected our experiences. We contend that informal peer support networks like reading groups do more than is conventionally assumed, and may provide important avenues for sustaining feminist research in times of austerity, as well as supporting and enabling women and emerging feminist scholars in academia. Participating in the group created a community of belonging and resistance, providing women with personal validation, information and material support, as well as intellectual and political resources to understand and resist our position within the often hostile spaces of the University. While these experiences are specific to our context, time and location, they signal that peer networks may offer critical political resources for responding to the ways that women’s bodies and concerns are marginalised in increasingly competitive and corporatised university environments.

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: As coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) continues to disrupt pretertiary education provision and examinations in the United Kingdom, urgent consideration must be given to how best to support the...
Abstract: As coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) continues to disrupt pretertiary education provision and examinations in the United Kingdom, urgent consideration must be given to how best to support the ...

24 citations