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HE Bioscience Teacher of the Year

Applications for 2025/2026 are now closed.

The Higher Education Bioscience Teacher of the Year Award seeks to identify the UK’s leading bioscience higher education (HE) teachers, recognising the invaluable role they play in educating and inspiring the next generation of biologists. The competition is open to all employed bioscience teachers in the UK HE system and individuals can be nominated either by self, peer, management, or student nomination.

We are seeking nominations which represent and celebrate the whole of the HE bioscience teaching community across all career stages. 

The HE Bioscience Teacher of the Year Award recognises outstanding learning and teaching practice in the biosciences. The scheme rewards lecturers who:

  • Display individual excellence through the development and implementation of approaches to teaching that have proven successful in promoting bioscience student learning and achievement.
  • Undertake scholarly and professional developmental activities that actively influence and enhance the learning of their students.
  • Support colleagues and influence bioscience student learning beyond their own department and institution.
  • Exhibit innovation in relation to teaching that has proven to improve their teaching practices and enhance student learning.
  • Embeds inclusive approaches to bioscience teaching, ensuring equality of participation and outcomes for those from disadvantaged backgrounds.

The HE Bioscience Teacher of the Year Award has been developed from the UK Centre for Bioscience’s Ed Wood Teaching Awards, which were established in 2008/09 to provide an annual opportunity for bioscience academics to receive national recognition for their outstanding learning and teaching practices.

Since the closure of the UK Centre for Bioscience in 2011, the award has been offered and managed by the Royal Society of Biology. The Society and the sponsors, Oxford University Press and Heads of University Biosciences, are delighted to support the continuation of this award.

The winner will receive the Ed Wood Memorial Prize of £1,000 to spend as they wish. The Ed Wood Memorial Prize is named in honour of Professor Edward J. Wood, who established and became the first Director of the Learning and Teaching Support Network for Bioscience, subsequently the UK Centre for Bioscience, and who dedicated himself to the promotion of biochemistry and molecular biology education.

The winner will also receive £250 worth of OUP books of their choice; and one year’s free membership of the Royal Society of Biology at the appropriate grade (MRSB or FRSB). The winner also gets the fee for their first year of Chartered Science Teacher (CSciTeach) waived, should they wish to apply.

The remaining finalists will each receive a £150 prize for their case study, and will also receive one year’s free membership to the Royal Society of Biology, and the fee for their first year of Chartered Science Teacher (CSciTeach) waived.

Previous winners and finalists are listed below, along with their successful case studies. In some cases application forms and video entries can also be viewed as well as career timelines that have been extracted from Recognising Teachers in the Life Sciences, a fantastic publication by The Physiological Society. This was developed in collaboration with the Academy of Medical Sciences, Royal Society of Biology and HUBS.


2026 Winner and Finalists

Overall Winner: Dr Ahmed Elbediwy, Kingston University London | Case Study

Finalists: Dr Raheela Awais, University of Liverpool | Case Study and Dr Helen Leggett, University of East Anglia | Case Study

2025 Winner and Finalists

Overall Winner: Dr Sobia Kauser, University of Bradford | Case Study

Finalists: Dr Andy Wakefield, University of Bristol | Case Study and Dr Gemma Wattret, University of Liverpool | Case Study

2024 Winner and Finalists

Overall Winner: Dr Carys Watts, Newcastle University | Case Study

Finalists: Dr Patrick Murphy, University of York | Case Study and Dr Richard Thacker, University of the West of Scotland | Case Study

2023 Winner and Finalists

Overall Winner: Dr Emmanuel Adukwu, University of the West of England | Case Study 

Finalists: Dr Ellie Davison, University of Lincoln and Dr Kelly Edmunds, University of East Anglia | Case Study

2022 Winner and Finalists

Overall Winner: Professor Jo Rushworth, University of Lincoln | Case Study

Finalists: Dr Emma Yhnell, Cardiff University | Case Study | and Dr Stephany Veuger, Northumbria University | Case Study

2021 Winner and Finalists

Overall Winner: Dr Nigel Francis, Swansea University | Case Study | Application Form

Finalists: Dr Dave Lewis, University of Leeds | Case Study | and Dr Helen Vosper, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen | Case Study | Application Form

2020 Winner and Finalists

Overall Winner: Dr Sue Jones, York St. John University | Case Study | Application Form

Finalists: Dr Peter Klappa, University of Kent | Case Study | Application Form | and Dr Alfred Thumser, University of Surrey | Case Study | Application Form

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"I’m honestly so humbled and a little overwhelmed to receive this award. It means the world to me. Anyone who’s ever been in my classroom knows I always say the same thing: any award I win belongs to my students first. They’re the superheroes who show up every day with resilience, humour, and heart. They’re the reason I keep pushing myself to innovate and find new ways to help them reach their potential. It also belongs to my colleagues, who challenge me, support me, and make me want to be better at what I do. If you’re reading this and battling imposter syndrome, please hear me: apply anyway. Putting yourself forward forces you to look back at everything you’ve done, all the things you forgot you achieved, and it’s incredibly grounding. This is a special moment for me, one I’ll carry with me for a long time.”

Dr Ahmed Elbediwy, Kingston University London 

HE Bioscience Teacher of the Year 2026

Microorganisms

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