ERIC Number: ED513931
Record Type: Non-Journal
Publication Date: 2009
Pages: 255
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: ISBN-978-1-1096-0124-4
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EISSN: N/A
Available Date: N/A
Palpable Pedagogy: Expressive Arts, Leadership, and Change in Social Justice Teacher Education (An Ethnographic/Auto-Ethnographic Study of the Classroom Culture of an Arts-Based Teacher Education Course)
Barbera, Lucy Elizabeth
ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, Antioch University
"Palpable Pedagogy: Expressive Arts, Leadership, and Change in Social Justice Teacher Education" is an arts-informed ethnographic study of the pedagogy and culture engendered when the expressive arts are employed in social justice teacher education. "Palpable Pedagogy" is a qualitative study that examines the power of the expressive arts to identify, explore, and address issues of inequity in the context of a social justice teacher education course that I taught over three consecutive years. The literature in the field outlines the essential components for effective social justice teacher education (identity, reflection, and dialogue) and neatly explores them. However, with the exception of Art teacher education, where national learning standards require that cultural diversity be explored through the arts, little has been written about the utilization and power of the arts as a pedagogical tool in general teacher education for social justice. My objective in "Palpable Pedagogy" is to reveal the layers of felt meaning, transformational learning, and release of the imagination (Greene, 1995) for leadership and change that my students experienced in my social justice teacher education course, "Expressive Arts, Leadership, and Change." The arts themselves provide a splendid methodological match for research of this kind. McNiff (1998) proposes that there is no better way to study the effects of the arts than "through the arts themselves". Using an aesthetic approach in my ethnographic study, I employ participant observation, field notes, photography, videography, interviews, and student art process, and product as my data, creating a text/context of the phenomenologically understood life worlds of my students. A "bricolage" results, with the inclusion of my justice educator/artist self-study, situating me both emicly and eticly in the life world of my students and classroom. Readers will aesthetically experience data presented in the forms of student and researcher poetry, performance, painting, mask making, sculpture, and narrative, as a way of understanding and knowing. This study reveals the inherent potential of the expressive arts as a pedagogical tool to reclaim art as a necessary human behavior/birthright (Dissanayake, 1992) to make meaning, galvanize learning, catalyze leadership, and inspire action--thus, creating a unique and "palpable" pedagogy for social justice teacher education. This dissertation contains embedded images in jpg format. It also includes nine associated video files in avi format and two associated audio files in mp3 format. The electronic version of this dissertation is available in the open-access OhioLink ETD Center, www.ohiolink.edu/etd. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com.bibliotheek.ehb.be/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
Descriptors: Social Justice, Teacher Education, Education Courses, Participant Observation, Ethnography, Transformative Learning, Student Diversity, Cultural Pluralism, Art Teachers, Classroom Environment, Art Education, Interviews, Video Technology, Teaching Methods, Art Expression, Aesthetics
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Publication Type: Dissertations/Theses - Doctoral Dissertations
Education Level: Higher Education; Postsecondary Education
Audience: N/A
Language: English
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