Gauntlett graduated from the
University of York in Sociology in 1992. He completed an MA in Women's Studies at
Lancaster University in 1993. He took his PhD and then taught at the
University of Leeds from 1993 to 2002, then was appointed Professor of Media and Audiences at
Bournemouth University. In 2006 he joined the School of Media, Arts and Design at
University of Westminster as Professor of Media and Communications, becoming co-director of the Communications and Media Research Institute (CAMRI), from 2010 to 2015. From 2015 to 2017 he was Professor of Creativity and Design, and the Director of Research for Westminster School of Media, Arts and Design. Gauntlett's critique of media 'effects' studies sparked controversy in 1995, and since then he has published a number of books and research on the role of popular media in people's lives. In particular he has focused on the way in which digital media is changing the experience of media in general. In 2007, he was shortlisted for the 'Young Academic Author of the Year' award in the Times Higher awards. In the 2008 book,
Reading Media Theory, Barlow & Mills state: "David Gauntlett is a prominent, public academic, who has spent his career engaging in research activities which have deliberately involved the public, and have crossed the traditional divide between the academic community and the outside world." In 2018, he was invited to Canada to take up a role as a Tier I
Canada Research Chair in the Faculty of Communication and Design at
Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, where he founded the Creativity Everything lab, and ran projects including Reframing Creativity (2021-2024), and Creative Encounters (2025-2028) funded by Canada's
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. ==New creative research methods==