I worked with students at the University of East London, many of whom were the first generation in their families to pursue a university degree. My teaching focused on equipping students with a distinctive set of tools to become confident, socially engaged change-makers.

I particularly enjoyed working with mixed cohorts across general journalism, music, fashion, and sports journalism. I designed real-world tasks and industry-relevant challenges that helped students strengthen both soft and hard skills, adapt to multi-platform media environments, and build meaningful, long-lasting collaborations. I also drew on mindfulness frameworks to support students in better understanding themselves and shaping their professional lives as a genuine vocation. Alongside refining their journalism, editing, and design skills, I supported students in developing strong product and project management capabilities.

In 2023, I taught two employability courses to second-year and master’s students, encouraging them to view the media industry as an interconnected ecosystem rather than through a single specialism. This approach resulted in cross-disciplinary storytelling, including work examining the links between sport and sustainability, such as the impact of air pollution on athletic performance.

In 2024, I taught first-year students the fundamentals of journalism. In 2024–2025, I led magazine production modules for third-year students, guiding editorial teams as they took on real newsroom roles and produced complete magazines, gaining hands-on experience in collaborative production, commissioning, editing, and design.

Students’ projects
An MA student Vlad Andrejevic created a series of interviews on air pollution with key people in the community — a teacher, the head of a local mosque, a pharmacist and the head of a charity.
As a part of their assignment, second-year students Tom Chambers and Harry Briffa created this X thread, featuring Green Infrastructure elements that would reduce the impact of air pollution and save taxpayers’ money.
A team of seven last-year journalism students created Capital, a minimalist magazine about Londoners and their stories that define the city today, such as interviews with an NHS nurse, a BBC soap opera producer and a Ukrainian family that found a new home here.
A team of seven last-year journalism students created Issue-z, a funky magazine reflecting on Gen-Z’s ethos and style, featuring the world’s first-ever book town review, an untold story of an Egyptian female nuclear physicist, and an insider’s view of the sex industry.

Testimonial

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