Between my sabbatical and teaching buy-out, I have been on a very light teaching load for the last couple of years. There are more grants in the works, but I’m back to an almost-full teaching load for the next two semesters, and there’s a lot of new lectures to plan. I’m trying to finish my book (and plan two exhibitions, and write another Big Grant and, and) but I’ve started outlining some of the reading lists and activities that I’d like to try out next year. So what is in store for me?
Autumn 2025:
Digital Creativity (postgraduate) – I taught this last year for the first time, using the Avebury Papers to teach about critical making and, my current love, worldbuilding in archaeology. I actually wrote a little bit about it on the Avebury Papers blog and completely forgot to cross-post it. I have been debating whether or not to keep using Avebury or to use another project I’m involved with, the Cults of the Head? project, led by Ian Armit, with a miracle postdoc Reb Ellis-Haken (seen above using one of our old scanners with a student) conducting the research and digitising. Between Reb and Fran Allfrey (and indirectly with Loes Opgenhaffen), I’ve been absolutely spoiled by working with incredible postdocs. Anyway, as I’m teaching a lot of new material in other classes, I might stick with Avebury again. It’s one of the primary modules in the MSc Digital Heritage degree, and heavily encouraged in the MSc Digital Archaeology degree, both of which I direct with Peter Schauer.
Interpreting Prehistory (undergraduate) I’m teaching 1/3 of this module, with Penny Spikins covering the Palaeolithic and James Taylor covering the Neolithic. I’ll be teaching Bronze Age in Arabia, which is exciting, as I’ve been digging there for the last couple of years, and may be back early next year. There’s some very specific ground I’d like to cover in this module, which will support another article I have in the works with Dan Eddisford, after we get our primary article out about the excavations at Hili Archaeological Park later this year.
Settlements and Society (undergraduate) I only have a single lecture in this one, again about my excavations in the UAE. I’ve taught it two years running now, and will change it up slightly.
Spring 2026:
Special Topic – Digital Archaeology (undergraduate) This is a very intensive module that I will be leading that will provide our undergraduates with an in-depth specialism in digital archaeology. It will be slightly odd for me, as I generally teach very practice-based, hands-on modules and special topics are supposed to be all lectures and discussion. Regardless it will be nice to update my reading lists since the 2022 Current Digital Archaeology article, which is totally out of date! There’s a chapter I’m writing right now on Digital Materiality & Archaeology that I think will be a good basis for a new lecture.
Archaeology and AI (postgraduate) I’m leading this brand new module, but will team-teaching with all our digital specialists–James Taylor, Guy Schofield and Peter Schauer. I am really excited as each of us has our own specialism and perspective on the topic and I think it will be a very robust offering, particularly as we’ve been involved with the new MAIA Cost action and I’ll be headed to Paris next week for the Automata meetings.
We’ll also begin to integrate some of the equipment we’ve been buying for the new Wolfson Digital Archaeology and Heritage Lab, which should officially launch in autumn 2026, but we’ll be looking for dissertations and use cases around our Artec Spider II, laser-aided ceramics profiler.
But for now, head back down into writing the book that’s been taking me years to get out!





