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Educators have long been pursuing and applying ways that play can
be a context and even a medium for teaching and learning. Volume 15
of Play & Culture Studies focuses on the special topic on Play
and Curriculum, a long waited topic to many educators and
researchers in the field of play and education. This volume
includes chapters reporting recent studies and practical ideas
examining the relations between the play and curriculum from early
education to higher education. The volume has 3 sections with the 9
chapters grouped to represent various voices on play and
curriculum: in Culture, in STEM, in Higher Education. The
uniqueness of this book is represented by its breadths and depths
of diversity from investigating play and curriculum in an
indigenous group in Columbia to play in a New York City Public
school and from play and curriculum in a Family Child Care context
to the uses of play with college students.
Dramatic Interactions in Education draws together contemporary
sociocultural research across drama and educational contents to
draw out implications for researchers and practitioners both within
and outside the field. Drama is a field for which human
interactions, experience, emotional expression, and attitude are
central, with those in non-arts fields discovering that
understandings emerging from drama education can provide models and
means for examining the affective and relational domains which are
essential for understanding learning processes. In addition to
this, those in the realm of drama education and applied theatre are
realising that sociocultural and historical-cultural approaches can
usefully inform their research and practice. Leading international
theorists and researchers from across the UK, Europe, USA and
Australia combine theoretical discussions, research methodologies,
accounts of research and applications in classroom and learning
contexts, as they explore concepts from Vygotsky's foundational
work and interrogate key concepts such as perezhivanie (or the
emotional, lived experience), development of self, zone of proximal
development.
Dramatic Interactions in Education draws together contemporary
sociocultural research across drama and educational contents to
draw out implications for researchers and practitioners both within
and outside the field. Drama is a field for which human
interactions, experience, emotional expression, and attitude are
central, with those in non-arts fields discovering that
understandings emerging from drama education can provide models and
means for examining the affective and relational domains which are
essential for understanding learning processes. In addition to
this, those in the realm of drama education and applied theatre are
realising that sociocultural and historical-cultural approaches can
usefully inform their research and practice. Leading international
theorists and researchers from across the UK, Europe, USA and
Australia combine theoretical discussions, research methodologies,
accounts of research and applications in classroom and learning
contexts, as they explore concepts from Vygotsky's foundational
work and interrogate key concepts such as perezhivanie (or the
emotional, lived experience), development of self, zone of proximal
development.
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