Veterinary Educational Development
 

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Hayley Williamson

Clinical Associate Professor in Small and Exotic Animal Practice, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences

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Biography

Hayley graduated from the Royal Veterinary College in 2016 and worked as a mixed practitioner in an independent mixed animal practice in West Sussex that had a heavy first opinion and referral exotics and zoo caseload. In 2017 Hayley was asked to become the second exotics vet in the practice and she started working towards the RCVS Certificate in Advanced Veterinary Practice (Zoological Medicine), which she went on to complete in 2021 and she became an RCVS Advanced Practitioner in Zoological Medicine in 2022.

In 2019 Hayley started teaching part time at the University of Surrey, where she obtained the Graduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching (GCLT) and become a fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Alongside this teaching role Hayley continued her exotics clinical work at an independent small animal practice and by volunteering at a wildlife hospital in Surrey. In 2020, she relocated and started working at the University of Nottingham where she completed the Postgraduate Certificate in Higher Education (PGCHE) in 2021.

Hayley is now a Clinical Associate Professor and the Exotic Animal Clinical Sub Dean for the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science. Hayley is particularly passionate about teaching 'day one skills' with exotic pets in addition to communication skills and human factors, in order to equip students for life as a new graduate vet.

Hayley's research activities have recently been moving away from exotic pets and British wildlife and towards pedagogy (veterinary education) and human factors. She is currently investigating how veterinary human factors can be embedded into the veterinary undergraduate curriculum and integrated into clinical practice.

Veterinary Educational Development Research Theme

The University of Nottingham
School of Veterinary Medicine and Science
Sutton Bonington Campus, Leicestershire, LE12 5RD


telephone: +44 (0) 115 951 6116
email: Email our Research Theme Leader