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Education, Arts and Sustainability: Emerging Practice for a Changing World 2018 ed. [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 107 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 454 g, 5 Illustrations, color; 1 Illustrations, black and white; X, 107 p. 6 illus., 5 illus. in color., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Sērija : SpringerBriefs in Education
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Mar-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • ISBN-10: 9811077088
  • ISBN-13: 9789811077081
  • Mīkstie vāki
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 107 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 454 g, 5 Illustrations, color; 1 Illustrations, black and white; X, 107 p. 6 illus., 5 illus. in color., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Sērija : SpringerBriefs in Education
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Mar-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • ISBN-10: 9811077088
  • ISBN-13: 9789811077081
This book addresses this challenge by proposing an integration of sustainability and arts education in both principle and practice. 

In a global context of intensifying social, economic and environmental crises, education is key to raising awareness and motivating individuals and communities to act in sustaining life in our more-than-human world. But how is this done when the complexity and need for change becomes overwhelming, and schooling systems become complicit in supporting the status quo?



Drawing on critical education theory and precepts of creativity, curiosity and change, it documents a series of case examples that demonstrate how five principles of Education for Sustainability - critical thinking, systems thinking, community partnership, participation, and envisioning better futures - are found at the heart of much arts practice in schools. Featuring the creative work and voices of teachers working in arts-based enquiry and diverse community-engaged contexts, the book investigates how sustainability principles are embedded in contemporary arts education thinking and pedagogy.  The authors are unapologetically optimistic in forming an alliance of arts and sustainability education as a creative response to the challenge of our times, arguing that while they may have operated on the margins of conventional pedagogy and curriculum, they have more than marginal impact. 
1 A Conversation on the Possibilities for Arts and Sustainability Education
1(12)
Conversations in the Middle
6(5)
References
11(2)
2 (What's at) The Heart of the Matter? Sustainability, Arts, and the Case for Change
13(22)
Sustainability and Education
16(4)
The Case for Change
20(3)
The Arts and Education
23(5)
Integrating Sustainability and the Arts in Education
28(3)
References
31(4)
3 Crafting Community with the Billy Project (Participation)
35(12)
With Stephanie Finn and Chris Mead Why Participation?
36(2)
Participation and Arts Education
38(1)
Arts, Sustainability, and Participation in Action
39(4)
Connection and Participation Through the Arts
43(1)
References
44(3)
4 Creative Criticality in the meenah neenah Cultural Arts Program (Critical Thinking)
47(14)
Katrina Miller
Vicki West
Why Critical Thinking and Reflection?
49(2)
Critical Thinking, Reflection, and Arts Education
51(1)
meenah neenah: The Context for Creative Criticality
52(2)
Lens on Critical Thinking I: Making and Responding
54(2)
Lens on Critical Thinking II: Identity and Cultural Histories
56(1)
Lens on Critical Thinking III: Artists Responding with Creative Criticality
57(2)
Beyond a Neutral Skill Set: Critical Thinking as Cultural and Affective Engagement
59(1)
References
60(1)
5 The Story of a SmartPhone (Systems Thinking)
61(14)
Janiene Hill
Paula Huett
Brett Hay
Why Systems Thinking?
62(1)
Systems Thinking and Arts Education
63(1)
Arts, Sustainability, and Systems Thinking in Action
64(6)
Student-Led Inquiry and Whole School Change: The Implications for Systems Thinking
70(2)
References
72(3)
6 The Festival of Wood (Envisioning Better Futures)
75(8)
Kim Schneiders
Why Envision Better Futures?
76(1)
The Arts and Envisioning Better Futures
77(1)
Arts, Sustainability, and Envisioning Better Futures in Action
78(2)
Starting with New Voices and Diverse Insights: Better Futures Begin Now
80(1)
References
81(2)
7 Reorienting Teacher Professional Learning (Partnerships for Change)
83(12)
Why Partnerships?
85(1)
Why Partnerships for Change?
85(2)
Partnerships for Change and Arts-Led Teaching Professional Learning
87(3)
Arts, Sustainability and Partnerships for Change in Action
90(2)
Valuing Artists' Ways of Knowing in Making Partnerships for Change
92(1)
References
92(3)
8 Towards a Radical Compliance
95(11)
Re-appropriating Innovation
95(2)
Change and Anxiety
97(1)
Why Arts and Sustainability Education?
97(2)
Emergent Practice
99(1)
An Educational Dilemma
99(1)
Radical Compliance and Dilemma Management
100(2)
Necessary Failure and Risk
102(1)
What Have We Learned?
103(2)
Non-concluding Thoughts
105(1)
References 106
Mary Ann Hunter is Senior Lecturer in Arts Education at the University of Tasmania where she researches in the fields of arts education and peace building.  She coordinated the Curious Schools project with Sherridan Emery and has current interests in artist pedagogies and the role of curiosity in educational and applied arts encounters. Mary Ann has worked in government, media, creative industry and community-based positions, including as coordinator with Aboriginal arts-based mentoring and alternative education program, meenah mienne. 

Arnold Aprill is an award-winning director, producer and playwright, and founded the Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education (CAPE) in 1993 and the Radical Compliance Arts and Learning Laboratory in 2013. As one of the co-designers of Habla: the Center for Language and Culture in Merida, Mexico., Arnold has lectured at numerous U.S. universities and consults nationally and internationally on the role of the arts in effective school improvement. 

Allen Hill is Principal Lecturer in Sustainability and Outdoor Education at ARA Institute of Canterbury, Aotearoa New Zealand, and is adjunct Senior Lecturer in the School of Education, University of Tasmania. Dr Hills professional career is characterized by a strong concern for issues of justice, equality, sustainability, transformation, and citizenship, with a focus on how education can contribute to a more sustainable future through healthy people, healthy communities, and healthy environments.

Sherridan Emery is a doctoral student in the Faculty of Education, University of Tasmania, where she is investigating the concept of cultural wellbeing in classroom communities. Sherridan is actively engaged in international research collaborations in the field of early childhood education for sustainability and in postgraduate student wellbeing. She is a research assistant on the Australian Research Council project, Improving student learning and wellbeing in low SES schools.