Co-designing a jewellery curriculum

Conversations and remembrances about Ann O’Donnell and her work in adult education

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3384/rela.2000-7426.6275

Keywords:

adult education, jewellery design, curriculum, vocational education, invisibilities

Abstract

Two researchers from the creative arts have come together in a conversational encounter to explore the educational legacy of Ann O’Donnell (1933-2019). O’Donnell was a jewellery designer, maker, entrepreneur and educator working in Leeds, UK during the late 1950s until 1993. During the time of O’Donnell’s employment in an art college, its archivists and librarians did not collect many papers, curricula or resources made by women educators, who often had part-time roles. This resulted in their contributions to the education field remaining invisible. In order to preserve O’Donnell’s legacy, conversations between the two researchers captured the pedagogic knowledge created by her experience and practice in creating a jewellery curriculum with her students. As O’Donnell was working at a significant time for the development of vocational qualifications in the UK (1970s-1990s) the conversation revealed O’Donnell’s pragmatism in interweaving a liberal and vocational education for the benefit of her students.

Author Biographies

Samantha Jane Broadhead, Leeds Arts University

Professor Samantha Broadhead is Head of Research at Leeds Arts University. Her research interests include access and widening participation in art and design education and the educational sociology of Basil Bernstein (1924–2000). She serves on the Journal of Widening Participation and Lifelong Learning’s editorial board. Broadhead publishes work on access and widening participation. Broadhead has co-authored with Professor Maggie Gregson (2018) Practical Wisdom and Democratic Education - Phronesis, Art and Non-traditional Students, Palgrave Macmillan. She also has co-authored with Rosemarie Davies and Anthony Hudson (2019) Perspectives on Access: Practice and Research, Emerald Publishing. She has also produced an edited book, Access and Widening Participation in Arts Higher Education, Palgrave Macmillan (2022). Broadhead is working on Learning Returns, a practice-based project that aims to capture the experiences of mature students studying art and design on YouTube. 

Frances, Leeds Arts University

Frances Norton is Subjects Leader Postgraduate Studies and Senior Lecturer on the MA in Creative Practice. She has taught on Access to HE, undergraduate and postgraduate courses in art and design. Her research interests explore the use of formal and informal learning pedagogies to develop student critical thinking.

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Published

2026-06-29

How to Cite

Broadhead, S. J., & Norton, F. (2026). Co-designing a jewellery curriculum: Conversations and remembrances about Ann O’Donnell and her work in adult education. European Journal for Research on the Education and Learning of Adults, 1–16. https://doi.org/10.3384/rela.2000-7426.6275

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Section

Open Paper