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Arts education partnerships in Australia: spaces and places for teaching and learning

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posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by Dawn JosephDawn Joseph, H Champion
The arts over the centuries have continued to pervade, direct and define our societies. In Australia, they are seen as an important and influential mechanism of pedagogies. In arts education students explore and express their identity and build understanding of their worlds through learning by doing and social interaction. This long-established position is endorsed by contemporary arts education pedagogies that encourage students to look, listen, learn, think, and work as artists in new places and spaces. The forthcoming Australian Curriculum: The Arts (dance, drama, media arts, music, and visual arts) will require consideration of the students’ own cultures and the cultures of their communities, region, and the wider world. Interaction between the students and the wider arts community are central to this approach. Using narrative inquiry, reflective practice, and document analysis as our methodologies, we describe ways of seeing, knowing, and learning between artists, students, schools, education authorities, and universities in the Australian state of Victoria. The authors contend that collaborative partnerships take many forms and provide opportunities for exploration of pedagogies that foster strong relationships between arts education and the arts industry.

History

Journal

International journal of arts education

Volume

8

Pagination

25 - 36

Location

Champaign, Illinois

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2326-9944

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Common Ground

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