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Higher Hopes Podcast

Higher Hopes Podcast

Written by: Ebe Ganon
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The podcast raising the bar for Australian universities. Clever thinkers from the Australian universities community tackling the big questions about systemic change. Students, advocates, academics, and refreshingly honest senior leaders come together to envision how higher education can genuinely serve staff and students from traditionally marginalised and underserved backgrounds - and chart the path to get there. Produced on Ngunnawal and Ngambri lands by Ebe Ganon.

© 2026 Higher Hopes Podcast
Political Science Politics & Government Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Episode 6: The Neurodiversity Paradigm in Higher Education
    Jan 4 2026

    In this bonus episode, Ebe shares the recording of her November 2025 ADCET webinar on the neurodiversity paradigm, which drew over 500 registrations from across Australia.

    The session covers the foundations and principles of the neurodiversity paradigm as articulated by Dr Nick Walker and Sonny Jane Wise, contrasting it with the pathology paradigm that currently dominates university support systems. Ebe explains key concepts including neurodiversity, neurodivergent identity, neuronormativity, biocertification and biopower, and explores what these mean for how universities structure support, assessment and inclusion.

    The webinar addresses a growing issue in the sector: institutions adopting neurodiversity language whilst maintaining the same exclusionary practices and diagnostic requirements. Ebe calls this "paradigm washing" and outlines what genuine paradigm shift would require instead.

    Practical guidance is offered for disability practitioners, teaching staff and institutional leaders, with particular focus on universal design for learning, harm reduction approaches, epistemic justice, and moving from individual accommodations to systemic change.

    The episode includes Q&A with ADCET's Rebecca Morris, addressing questions about assessment design, the role of diagnosis, and how to balance institutional requirements with paradigm shift.

    Resources mentioned in episode:

    • ADCET webinar recording (video)
    • Written Q&A responses from webinar
    • History of the paradigm and terminology (including the role of Kassiane Asasumasu in coining 'neurodivergent' and 'neurodivergence')
    • Dr Nick Walker's work
    • Sonny Jane Wise's work, including the Neurodiversity Smorgasbord

    New from Higher Hopes:

    • Submit your questions for "Ask me anything about neuro-affirming practice in higher education"
    • Higher Hopes on Substack

    Send us a text

    Support the show

    For students who want to transform their universities. For staff ready to build genuinely inclusive systems. For academics and professionals who think big about what Australian higher education could become.

    Ready to raise the bar?

    Support the podcast: higherhopespod.com
    Follow us: LinkedIn @HigherHopesPod | Instagram @higherhopespod
    Full transcript: Available at higherhopespod.com

    Produced on the traditional lands of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri peoples.

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    56 mins
  • Episode 5: Placement Equity with Amani Bell and Lachlan Sibir
    Dec 7 2025

    In this episode, Ebe speaks with Associate Professor Amani Bell (University of Sydney) and Lachlan Sibir (classroom teacher and researcher) about placement equity and placement poverty in Australian higher education.

    The conversation explores what placement equity means and why it matters for students from equity-deserving backgrounds. We discuss the strengths and limitations of the Commonwealth Prac Payment, which currently supports students in education, nursing, and social work but excludes many other degree programmes that also require extensive unpaid placements.

    The episode examines the intersection of placement poverty with Indigenous student support and other equity initiatives, before diving into practical solutions such as flexible placement models, payment structures based on year level, and strengths-based approaches. We challenge the difference between framing placement support as welfare versus recognising the labour students contribute to organisations, and share insights on designing inclusive and accessible placement experiences that work for all students.

    Throughout, the conversation challenges the idea that "this is how it's always been done" and explores concrete ways to make placements equitable without students having to choose between financial survival and completing their degrees.

    Episode resources:

    • ACSES Fellowship Report: Addressing placement inequities via participatory action research
    • The team’s literature review on global approaches to ameliorating placement poverty
    • Australian Council of Deans of Health Sciences Report
    • Information about the Commonwealth Prac Payment
    • ADCET resources on Inclusive fieldwork, work placements, excursions and practicums
    • Paid Placements Aotearoa
    • Students Against Placement Poverty

    Send us a text

    Support the show

    For students who want to transform their universities. For staff ready to build genuinely inclusive systems. For academics and professionals who think big about what Australian higher education could become.

    Ready to raise the bar?

    Support the podcast: higherhopespod.com
    Follow us: LinkedIn @HigherHopesPod | Instagram @higherhopespod
    Full transcript: Available at higherhopespod.com

    Produced on the traditional lands of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri peoples.

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    39 mins
  • Episode 4: Keeping Disability Rights on the National Agenda with the DIIU
    Nov 9 2025

    In this special episode recorded at UNSW's Diversity Fest, we examine the rising global threats to diversity and inclusion through a disability lens. Join Ebe Ganon in conversation with Professor Jackie Leach Scully (Director, Disability Innovation Institute UNSW), Professor Alistair McEwan (former Disability Royal Commissioner), and Dr Supriya Subramani (University of Sydney) as they unpack everything from Trump's harmful rhetoric to Australia's NDIS challenges, university diversity strategies, and what meaningful allyship actually looks like.

    Professor Jackie Leach Scully – Director, Disability Innovation Institute at UNSW. Expert in disability bioethics and the philosophy of embodiment.

    Professor Alastair McEwin – Former commissioner on the Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability. Former Australian Disability Discrimination Commissioner.

    Dr Supriya Subramani – Ethics researcher at the University of Sydney, examining structural injustice, everyday indignities, and the ethics of belonging.

    This episode was recorded at UNSW's 2025 Diversity Fest. Special thanks to the Disability Innovation Institute of UNSW for hosting the event and allowing us to share this important conversation.

    This episode discusses discrimination, violence against people with disability, ableism, racism, and systemic oppression. References to deaths of people with disability in institutional settings and COVID-19 discrimination.

    Send us a text

    Support the show

    For students who want to transform their universities. For staff ready to build genuinely inclusive systems. For academics and professionals who think big about what Australian higher education could become.

    Ready to raise the bar?

    Support the podcast: higherhopespod.com
    Follow us: LinkedIn @HigherHopesPod | Instagram @higherhopespod
    Full transcript: Available at higherhopespod.com

    Produced on the traditional lands of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri peoples.

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    1 hr and 28 mins
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