The International Encyclopedia of Art and Design Education 2019
DOI: 10.1002/9781118978061.ead118
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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, ‘When reaction becomes action is when the greatest creativity emerges’ (Turner, 2019, 95). We suggest that this action should be driven by question posing – and this is what art and design educators do: problematise (Baldacchino 2019). However, the right kind of questions need to be asked.
‘We would argue that education’s current dis(re)pair has been brought about by the wrong kind of attention: attention focused on what education should do (its instrumental purpose) without regard for what education, itself, actually is (as a kind of entity or being in its own right)’ (Osberg & Biesta 2020, 2).
…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, ‘When reaction becomes action is when the greatest creativity emerges’ (Turner, 2019, 95). We suggest that this action should be driven by question posing – and this is what art and design educators do: problematise (Baldacchino 2019). However, the right kind of questions need to be asked.
‘We would argue that education’s current dis(re)pair has been brought about by the wrong kind of attention: attention focused on what education should do (its instrumental purpose) without regard for what education, itself, actually is (as a kind of entity or being in its own right)’ (Osberg & Biesta 2020, 2).
…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Whess Harman visited an art teacher education class, Jocelyne Robinson, 11 a member of the Algonquin Timiskaming First Nation in Abitibi region of Quebec, visited a graduate class in arts education focused on a/r/tography. Robinson (2015 , 2019) came to share her dissertation research that spanned Indigenous storytelling ( Archibald, 2008 ) and a/r/tography ( Springgay et al, 2008 ), detailing perspectives gathered from three Indigenous and three non-Indigenous scientists as well as three Elders from her community, as she created a dynamic learning framework that brought together Indigenous and Western science, elevating ecological concerns. Robinson shared stories of her relations with Elders across her lifetime.…”
Section: Embodied Reflexivity In the Classroom: Love Land And Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Braiding Indigenous storywork ( Archibald, 2008 ) with a/r/tography ( Irwin & Springgay, 2008 ), Robinson’s dissertation research was called the Algonquin Ekwânamo Matrix Project (AEMP) and while a number of themes were developed, one stands out for our discussion here on embodied reflexivity and relational ethics through the flesh. The AEMP drew upon the metaphor of breath, or as she called it, “subtle energies” ( Robinson, 2019 , p. 3), that transforms across time to weave through and with physical, emotional, and spiritual ways of being. Stories detail this and other metaphors, expanding our ways of coming into knowing and being as embodied humans living with ecology, and with a living-breathing Mother Earth.…”
Section: Embodied Reflexivity In the Classroom: Love Land And Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%
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