Dr Sue Greener
currently works at the Brighton Business School, University of Brighton and as
a Doctoral Supervisor at the Universities of Brighton and Liverpool (Laureate
Online). Sue conducts research in the fields of online learning, Human Resource
Development and Research Methodology. She is an experienced External Examiner,
Chief Examiner and External Advisor in Business & Management. She has been
Co-Editor of the academic journal Interactive Learning Environments since 2012
and is chair of the Brighton Business School Research Ethics Panel.
Sue has published
for some years with Bookboon and is listed on ResearchGate and Scopus for
publications. She has worked with Tom Bourner and Asher Rospigliosi on a range
of projects including graduate employment.
Research interests
Personal &
professional development, online resource design, blended learning, Human
Resource Development, Technology Enhanced Learning, Research Methodology,
Social media impact on learning communities.
Supervisory
Interests
Sue’s doctorate is
in online learning and she continues to develop work in this area of the impact
of digital learning technologies on learning design and community building in
HE and organisational contexts. She currently supervises 5 PhD students at
Brighton in related fields of social media and education, women and leadership,
and the impact of dyslexia on learning in innovative SMEs. She has supervised
two successful completions of PhD thesis, one in the field of women's learning
environments in Saudi Arabian HE, the other the use of school teachers'
acceptance and use of e-learning technologies, plus one DBA in the area of
motivation and psychological contract.
In summary, the
fields of supervisory interest are:
·
Online and blended learning design in HE and in organisational contexts
·
Social media in relation to learning and community-building
·
Human Resource Development
·
Problem-based learning
·
Action learning
·
Graduate employability
Sue is also a Lay
Minister in the Anglican church, a breeder of pedigree Southdown sheep and a
proud mother and grandmother.