|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Stories are a valuable vehicle for practitioners in research,
education, human services and the arts to enable individual and
cultural change. The authors describe and deploy a variety of
methods that can be used by teachers, researchers, artists, youth
and community workers, and other professionals to analyse stories
in ways that can promote learning and wellbeing and enhance
professional practice. Offering a concise and user-friendly
assemblage of techniques on how to creatively engage with stories,
the authors explore and exemplify these techniques through the
narratives of Queerly Identifying Tertiary Students. This practical
and innovative volume will appeal to readers, researchers and
practitioners alike.
This book, based on a critical/collective/auto/ethnographic
research project, describes an assemblage of theoretically
informed, arts-based methods that aim to promote multiplicity and
thinking. It explores multiplicities of knowing, sensing, doing and
being, generated by analyzing knowing frames, poetry, reading
aloud, fableing, playwriting and other inventive, playful and
scholarly ways of working with experiences and stories. By offering
engaging and inspiring strategies that can disturb standardizations
and interrupt cultural normativities, the book sheds light on the
conditions that might be present in cultural contexts that enable
diversity and creativity. The research project on which this book
is based originated from a contradictory set of conditions
characterized on the one hand by a marked interest in creative
research methods and novel knowledge practices and, on the other
hand, by a widespread concern that we live in increasingly
standardized times, featuring systems that specify objectives ahead
of time, demand compliance and narrow the possibilities for human
action. The book takes readers on an arts-based journey designed to
enhance the opportunities for imaginative and ethical professional
practice in education, human services and the arts.
Stories are a valuable vehicle for practitioners in research,
education, human services and the arts to enable individual and
cultural change. The authors describe and deploy a variety of
methods that can be used by teachers, researchers, artists, youth
and community workers, and other professionals to analyse stories
in ways that can promote learning and wellbeing and enhance
professional practice. Offering a concise and user-friendly
assemblage of techniques on how to creatively engage with stories,
the authors explore and exemplify these techniques through the
narratives of Queerly Identifying Tertiary Students. This practical
and innovative volume will appeal to readers, researchers and
practitioners alike.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Chernobyl
Jared Harris, Stellan Skarsgard, …
Blu-ray disc
R707
R507
Discovery Miles 5 070
|