Writing from the dual perspectives of artist and educator, Kathryn Dawson and Daniel A. Kelin II raise fundamental questions about the complex functions of the teaching artist in school, community and professional theatre settings. Contributions to the text explore a series of foundational concepts, including intentionality, quality, artistic perspective, assessment and praxis, all used as a reflective framework to illuminate case studies from a wide range of teaching artist practice.
Readers are also offered questions to guide their practical application, charts to complete, and the editors examine the practice of teaching in, through and about drama and theatre.
Зміст
Introduction
Part 1: A Teaching Artist Reflects
Chapter 1: The Teaching Artist
Chapter 2: Reflective Practice
Part 2: Collected Wisdom
Chapter 3: Intentionality
Intentionality Case Studies
Learning to listen: Lessons for Teaching Artists from a Minneapolis mosque – Sarah Myers
Stories of my life: A Teaching Artist reflects on cultural consciousness – Roxanne Schroeder-Arce
Devised performance in a gender-specific juvenile probation program – Amanda Hashagen
Audition notice(d): Taking steps to align mission and admission – Lisa M. Barker
Remaking how a site is perceived and experienced: The ghosts of Waller Creek Project – Michelle Dahlenburg
Chapter 4: Quality
Quality Case Studies
What does quality theatre for young audiences look like? – Tamara Goldbogen
Suit My Heart: Staging foster youth narratives that hit home – Michelle Hayford
How do we find relevance? – Gary Minyard
On both shores: Teaching across personal/political distance – Nicole Gurgel
Balancing artistic and language-learning goals in Lincoln Center Theater’s Learning English and Drama Project – Kati Koerner
Chapter 5: Artistic Perspective
Artistic Perspective Case Studies
Developing ‘dramatic metaphor’ to teach concepts of science – Jo Beth Gonzalez
The art of relationship: Intergenerational theatre – Marsha Gildin
Bridging the divide with Shakespeare: Theatre as moral education in Bosnia and Herzegovina – Andrew Garrod
Dramaturgy by students – Carol T. (Jones) Schwartz and Kim Bowers-Rheay-Baran
What’s Happened to Queen Fancy Fish? Deconstructing an applied theatre lesson for the early childhood classroom – Karina Naumer
Chapter 6: Assessment
Assessment Case Studies
Capturing the story: A Teaching Artist’s attempt to assess a documentary theatre project in rural Alaska – Ryan Conarro
The applications of theatre as pedagogical and research methodologies: Scenes and waves of investigative dialogues across the Nordsjøen (North Sea) – Heli Aaltonen and Stephanie Knight
Engaging the outliers: One theatre educator’s journey to reach her most challenging students through choice, rigor and empowerment – Tracy Kane
Reflection as a bridge between program evaluation and instruction – Cory Wilkerson and Jennifer Ridgway
Naming our learning along the way through arts-based assessment – Bridget Kiger Lee
Chapter 7: Praxis
Praxis Case Studies
The vagabond’s dilemma: Representing host culture as a guest – Jamie Simpson Steele
Activating community: Process-centered philosophy in a product-oriented world – Gillian Mc Nally
Playing at praxis: Locating youth voices in history – Megan Alrutz
Enacting liderazgo: Where drama praxis and Latino leadership intersect – Christina Marín
Essentializing residencies: Collecting trophies of the oppressed – Peter B. Duffy
Part 3: The Reflexive Practitioner
Chapter 8: Participatory Action Research
Final Reflections
Про автора
Kathryn Dawson is assistant professor in the Department of Theater and Dance at the University of Texas at Austin and serves as director of the Drama for Schools program.
Daniel A. Kelin II is director of drama education at the Honolulu Theater for Youth and teaching artist on the national roster of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.