SHELLEY TRACEY QUEEN’S UNIVERSITY BELFAST Crossing thresholds and expanding conceptual spaces:...
-
Upload
constance-george -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
0
Transcript of SHELLEY TRACEY QUEEN’S UNIVERSITY BELFAST Crossing thresholds and expanding conceptual spaces:...
SHELLEY TRACEYQUEEN’S UNIVERSITY
BELFAST
Crossing thresholds and expanding conceptual spaces: using arts-based methods to extend teachers’ perceptions of
literacy
Adult literacy practitioners: start of teacher education programme
“I see literacy as basic English language, as reading and writing”
“Literacy is the ability to communicate in your daily life”
End of course
“My understanding of literacy has changed dramatically over the past two years. In today’s world as methods of communication have expanded, it is no longer simply being able to read and write.
Due to the development of technology such as computers, television and mobile phones it is almost impossible to shop, use banking systems or apply for a job without having a good understanding of literacy and technology. People with poor literacy skills find it difficult to integrate into society and to be independent and make their own choices and decisions.
To me being literate should be more than being an economic asset to the government - it should be about people fulfilling their ambitions and reaching their full potential.”
Overview
Context: teacher education programme for adult literacy practitioners at Queen’s University Belfast.
Use of arts-based approaches to enhance practitioners’ conceptualizations of literacy
Responses and teachers’ evaluations of these methods.
Discussion on assessment and visual literacy
IALS
• International Adult Literacy Survey
• 1994-1996 • 26 countries• More than 20% of adults in NI
with lowest level of skills
IALS questioned
MethodologyCriteriaResultsDeficit model of literacy
Essential Skills for Living Strategy
Department for Employment and Learning (NI), 2002
24% of post-16 population of Northern Ireland at lowest level
Standards for learning for adult literacy and numeracy and frameworks for teacher qualifications
Essential Skills for Living
Definition of literacy and numeracy as Essential Skills:
“the ability to communicate by talking and listening, reading and writing: to use numeracy: and the ability to handle information”
Focus on employability skills
Essential Skills Strategy
The Literacy Ladder Crowther, Hamilton and
Tett (2001:1-2)
The common way to think about literacy at the moment is by seeing it as a ladder that people have to climb up.
“Deficit” and “Wealth” models of literacy
Skills-based models (Skills for Life)
New Literacy Studies: literacy as social practice
Brian Street: models of literacy
Autonomous model: set of technical reading and writing skills
Ideological model: based on literacy in context
Situated literacies: different literacies in different domains/ aspects of life
Visual literacy
Students
Previous teaching experience in adult literacy: 0 to 48 months
Teaching qualification: 15%
Working full-time and studying part-time.
Teaching practice placements : - further education colleges, alternative education,
training organizations, programmes for unemployed people, prison service, voluntary and community organizations, hostels for homeless people.
Literacy Travellers’ Tree (2007)
Alberto et al (2007):perceiving literacy as a capacity for reading and writing limits the participation in learning of those with severe learning difficulties
Notion of literacy as “obtaining information from the environment” (p. 234) in a variety of modes, only one of which is reading words.”(ibid.)
Literacy and the arts
Teacher education: extending reflection
Leitch and Day (2000: 186-187)
“the development of more complex models of reflection, related to purpose, which take greater cognisance of existing knowledge from other disciplines, particularly those aspects of psychology concerned with cognitive processes including problem-finding, insight, wisdom, creativity”
Modes of reflection
• Thinking• Critical
reflection• Discussion• Writing• Drawing
• Imagining• Reverie• Meditating• Dreaming• Visualising
Individual collective verbal non-verbal process product
… arts-based methods of inquiry still wrestle
for mainstream acceptance in the world of educational research
but are nevertheless rich in their capacity to create opportunities for teachers to reflect and
self-direct
Leitch, 2008, p. 150
Arts-based approaches
“Arts encourage a transcendental capacity. They allow the creator and the viewer to imagine possible ways of being, encourage the individual to move personal boundaries, and challenge resistance to change and growth.”
(Higgs,2008:552)
Innate “artistry” involved in the craft of teaching (Eisner (2002, 382-383).
Arts-based methods
‘… immersion in the uncertainties of experience, ‘finding’ a personally fulfilling path of inquiry, and the emergence of understanding through an often unpredictable process of exploration.”
McNiff, 2000: 15
Creativity: process
PreparationIncubationInspirationIlluminationVerification (evaluation)
(Poincaré)
Creative Reflection model (Tracey, 2007)
1. Preparation for Engagement
2. Play
3. Exploration
4. Synthesis
Processes involved in creativity
Phase 1: Preparation
• Entering a creative space; threshold activities
• liminal spaces: uncertainty • need for receptivity: Negative
Capability: John Keats , “when a man is capable of being in
uncertainties, mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason” (Buxton Foreman, 1895).
Meyer and Land (2006): learning involves the occupation of a liminal space during the process of mastery of a threshold concept
Threshold activity
Phase 2: Play
Phase 3: Exploration
Non-verbal explorationNeed for incubation timeUse of metaphor
Exploring and extending teaching spaces
Creating an ideal teaching and learning environment ...
Phase 4: Synthesis
• Reflection
• Evaluation
Use of arts-based work (2008/2009)
Course sessionsAssignments:- Group exhibition - Reflective learning journal- Final reflection in teaching practice portfolio
Course sessions
Creative thinking activitiesStorytelling PostersModels for learning and themesAcrostic poemsCollages Resources for literacy teaching
Group work on motivation
What are you like?
What are you like?
Assessment: Creating exhibitions
First year of the programme : interactive group exhibition on any aspect of literacy
Posters and creative artefacts, creative writing activities, dance and mime.
“This was a great learning activity”.
“It allows for imagination, creativity and collaboration with peers.”
“Good ideas for learners”.
Reflection
“Images were used in my reflection on the group project and I felt that they did help when writing up my reflection. I used them to enhance the presentation and to ‘jog my memory’ of the presentation.”
Teachers’ evaluations
Reflections on images “Images really helped me to reflect
and my learners to do the same”. “Learners in my organisation are
extremely visual.” “Helped with story telling;” “Allows the imagination to run wild
but in a constructive way”.
Creative Writing
“Can be adapted and used on a variety of areas and learning levels”
“Learners like reflecting on their disabilities though poetry”.
“Acrostic poetry was new to me, found interesting. Allows for creativity.”
Acrostic poem
Shape Poem
STORY TELLING
“I have incorporated storytelling into my class and found it useful and important to learners”
“Learners with [learning] difficulties enjoy this activity”.
Assessment: Reflecting on images
“The use of images, whether of one’s own or another’s creation, can reveal our otherwise hidden worldview assumptions. Those hidden assumptions have a profound impact on the way we think and make meaning from our experiences. It is in the purposeful estrangement from those assumptions, envisioning of alternative realities, and critical examination of both old and new points of view – although not necessarily in a conscious and rational way – that transformative learning occurs.” (Hoggan, 2009, p. 73)
I find self-reflection quite difficult. I find it hard to express myself through words - I can’t seem to be able to state how I feel using only language. Being able to use [Windows] Moviemaker greatly enhanced my ability to reflect not only on what I had learned but also on what my learners had learned. To say all I wanted to, using only words, would have required me to write page after page! Using Moviemaker allowed me to address the many intricacies of my reflection in a fuller and more interesting format.
“It’s a great idea and I liked learning how to use Windows Moviemaker, but I just didn’t have the time for this.”
Digital Images (Mullan and Tracey)
Photos: of practice: “really enabled me to see my teaching
through the eyes of my learners – especially when they took their own photographs”
“…photos and images of my practice provided the opportunity to show others the nature of my teaching and the range of learners.”
Short films: Windows Moviemaker.
Collaging research
Rese
arc
hin
g C
oll
ag
e
COLLAGE-MAKING
Meaning-making
Electro
nic co
llage
Paper-b
ase
d
colla
ge
Text
Image
Rese
ar
ch
qu
estio
ns
Although none of the learners in my class made it as far as accreditation while I was there, we did use the final session as a time of acknowledgement. The learners participated in collage making (something none of the men had ever tried before), with the theme “What I have learnt about myself”. Afterwards we engaged in a discussion about the collages, what they meant to us, and how much we had learnt about ourselves, as learners and as people, through the classes. I acknowledged the work each individual learner had done and highlighted their progression with particular note to some of the more difficult areas in their literacy learning that they had overcome. Everyone, myself included, came away from that final session inspired by the potential and possibilities we had seen for ourselves and each other.
Use of arts-based methods in assignments
RESULTS
Collage : responses
“Great for kinaesthetic
learning sessions.”
“something that I could use with my
learners”
Response ReflectiveLearning Journal:Year1 (n=13)
ReflectiveLearning Journal:Year2(n=14)
Teaching Practice Portfolio: Year 1(n=13)
Teaching Practice Portfolio: Year 2(n=14)
No use of images/arts-based methods
4 3 1 0
Use of existing images as focus for reflection
2 6 5 7
Images created for assignment (drawings/ cartoons/games)
3 3 2 6
Use of photographs 0 0 1 2
Film (Windows Moviemaker) 1 1 1 2
Collage 2 0 1 2
Acrostic poetry 2 7 4 6
Storytelling/ creative writing 1 1 2 2
Total: 15 21 17 27
Reflective learning journal
Reflective learning journal
At the end of the course
“I have learnt about visual literacy, for example, which I had not considered before.”
“I now see literacy as a complex web of realities – different for different learners and communities.”
“My definition of literacy now includes speaking and listening, also visual literacy and social practice view of literacies.”
“I understand that literacy is much more than just writing, that it takes many forms and this impacts on the resources I use.”
• Visual literacy in adult literacy teacher education programmes
• Frameworks for the assessment of arts-based work in higher education.
Discussion
Visual literacy
Use of images in assessment process for literacy learning
Griffin (2008): because students in the twenty first century are receptive to visual images, this does not necessarily mean they are knowledgeable about them or about aspects of visual design
Visual literacy in Higher Education
“The challenge of transforming print-centric colleges and universities into a visually rich and dynamic community of creators and scholars is daunting. Although the information technologists have laid the infrastructure and although commerce and entertainment have provided examples, higher education remains bogged down in its traditions—traditions that were highly effective in a past era.” Metros and Woolsey, 2006:80-81
Analysing images
Visual literacy not the capacity “to identify images and to parse them according to the ways they refer to the world.” (Elkins, 2002, p. 137)
Visual literacy
Langford (2003): the skills of interpreting, decoding, analyzing and synthesizing the images around us.
Rose (2001) set of questions to enhance awareness of the nature of the image itself, its production, and the role of the audience in the production.
“The course has opened up for me the creative and powerful aspects of literacy. It has also made me aware that I have neglected my own development in this area.”