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The Creative Teaching Space © Know Drama 2005. The Creative Teaching Space is an online magazine published by Darron Davies. Email Darron for any enquiries or contributions. |
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Issue No.14 - Into New Lands Contents
The
Stage meets Life An
Obituary for a Concept At
the Edge of the Event Being
a Child A
Father’s Hands The
Day Our Son is Due Who
Owns Matilda? A
Music Maverick Taking
Cinema Beyond Subterranean
Spaces In
Search of Southern Lights Bring
on the Media Manipulators When
Old Images Resonate An
autumn leaf floating Welcome to Edition # 14 of The Creative Teaching Space. Once again I pursue an interest in strategies that may open learning possibilities. I draw ideas from many sources on the Internet, from my travels, and ideas mentioned by other people. Some people may call my role as that of a conduit. Whatever your response to these strategies continue to explore new possibilities in teaching and learning. The field is endless. Even the simplest of ideas may motivate a student on his or her own path of discovery. Artists, writers, etc, build ideas upon sustained thought. The simplest of ideas may become a beautiful bridge that takes us to a new land of opportunity!
I have recently been reading the lovely poetry of Wislawa Szymborska. This acclaimed winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize for Literature, who gave an interesting acceptance speech, writes in Polish and is well translated in a number of editions of collected work. I have Poems New and Collected, Harcourt, 1998. Wislawa Szymborska’s poetry is often built upon a central concept. Her work would be valuable for teachers and students who wish to investigate how important concepts can be explored through prose. In a number of poems Wislawa Szymborska writes about a strange connection between theatre and everyday life. In Theatre Impressions she explores the importance of the Act Six of a play, where the actors take the curtain call and bow to the crowd:
And here I am reminded of a similar reference in a song by Laurie Anderson.
What ironies can we find in the junction where the world of fiction meets reality?
Increasingly as teaching focuses on concepts so we need to remain sensitive to creative ways of exploring concepts. Here is an idea that came to me via a joke email. Take note of how joke emails can be used in learning! A concept such as Common Sense is given an obituary. What other concepts can have an obituary? Ask students to investigate how obituaries are written. Then ask them to take a figurative leap. You can even ask students to dissect the values underpinning each obituary. There are certainly a range of values within the following piece that deserve dissection.
I recently saw the documentary Meeting People is Easy: A Film by Grant Gee about Radiohead. Radiohead being the English rock group. As I was viewing Meeting People is Easy I came across a fascinating scene. Radiohead are seen performing their hit song Creep live on stage. Instead of seeing a close up of the band the camera is positioned well outside the space of the stage. It is in the foyer. We see the band silhouetted in the distance and we see people coming and going. Some are perhaps going to the toilet; some may be talking to friends. What is fascinating is the director’s choice to film the performance from a distance. How often do we see close up band performances and over-excited crowds? The above scene is quite distant and matter of fact. It brought to my attention the idea of being at the edge of an event. There is always that edge of the event: the policeman standing in the wings, the bored audience member or the technician with other priorities. What happens if we take that step back from an event, to its edges? What do we find? What does this tell us about the event, how we focus on events, and on the diversity of people? We know that Tom Stoppard fore-grounded the two minor characters from Hamlet, Rosencrantz and Guildernstern, in his play Rosencrantz and Guildernstern are Dead. How could we open learning possibilities by changing focus?
The following song on the tail end of the album The Philosopher’s Stone, by Van Morrison, an album of out-takes, is an evocative spoken word tribute to childhood. Written by Peter Handke and sung/spoken by, it contains many views of childhood. Students may wish to explore how the experience of being a child is different from their current experience. What changes? Why? Can these changes be explored creatively in e.g. a similar poem/song? Song of Being a Child When the child was a child…. It
walked with arms hanging When
the child was a child When
the child was a child When
the child was a child When
the child was a child The
child, the child was a child And
on and on and on and on and onward
The following story My Father’s Hands by Calvin R. Worthington, is an evocative story detailing one man’s experience of illiteracy. Moving, and tragic, it shows the impact that reading – or its lack – has on a person’s life. Students may like to use this story as a starting point to discuss how we learn in life. What impact does a disability have on a person? How do people overcome these disabilities?
Another story of the same name, by Paul M. Clements, details a father’s life told through the character of his hands. Can students write similar biographies by choosing a particular focus e.g. hands, a face, arms?
The poem, Redknots, emphasises that important moments can be linked to other significant events. Imagine a scene. What other events are happening in the world? What connections can be made between events? Do these events connect? Do they need to connect? Encourage students to explore how we can connect phenomena and in doing so create new types of meaning.
In Australia our most significant song is probably Waltzing Matilda. It would certainly be the most internationally recognized Australian song. Yet how many people know its history and the fact that when it was played at the Sydney Olympics the payment for its use went to an American copyright holder? The following site, set up by Roger Clarke, Copyright in 'Waltzing Matilda', explores the story of this song. Songs have their own history, their own cultural value, and their economic value e.g. legal rights. The song Waltzing Matilda, as does Happy Birthday, reveals that songs are much more than words. Consider the possibility of exploring a song from a transdisciplinary perspective – investigating it e.g. economically/mathematically, culturally, historically, musically, etc. Explore how teachers can work together to reveal how a range of disciplinary approaches surround even the simplest of songs. This could be a wonderful chance to explore the breadth of the music industry. Students may even like to choose a song and capture its essence, through research, or imaginative interpretation.
The American composer Harry Partch was well ahead of his time when he designed and created musical landscapes, often with his own created instruments, well before this became fashionable in the 1960s or currently within our digital era. Partch’s work is very eccentric. One even has the opportunity of digitally playing his instruments at this site. Whenever we see or play odd instruments at e.g. music festivals, one should be reminded of people like Partch who chose to confront the rules of music. What are these rules? Can they be broken? Were there other people like Partch in other cultures? Didn’t every first instrument builder have to confront a tradition? What is currently happening in music that can be confronting? Perhaps students can create their own soundscapes, including their own instruments. Every sense has its own tradition. Sound is not a fixed entity. We all hear slightly differently. Sound has changed through the ages and is currently changing. Encourage students to investigate the culture of sound by starting with people like Harry Partch.
The great Taiwanese filmmaker Hou Hsiao-hsien is quoted in the following article: In Search of New Genres and Directions for Asian Cinema. It is a beautiful quote that challenges the often static perception of cinema – one created by some funding bodies and popular culture. Films, like any art form, can encourage the uniqueness of the individual. Hou Hsiao-hsien knows this and the beauty of his vision is revealed in his films. We may need to remind ourselves of such quotes/visions in a world that too often pushes a sameness.
And sometimes that is all that is needed to be said!
I can remember that when I lived in Ballarat, in Victoria, there was sometimes the sense of a subterranean world. Ballarat had been a large gold mining town in the middle of the nineteenth century and it was littered with mine shafts. Besides its mining shafts Ballarat also seemed to contain many vaults. After all, the gold had to be stored somewhere. Many buildings had basements or vaults. There was even a story that a local pub had a shaft, created by miners, used to evade mining tax collectors, in the mid 1800s. All cities have their vaults, their basements, and their utility structures such as pipes, channels or even subways. The following sites allow us to investigate the subterranean world of Paris, Glasgow and other U.K. cities. Ask students to investigate the world beneath their city or town. Perspectives can be as varied as those of town planning to imagined traditions – the sewer in the horror/war movie. What is evoked by the ‘underground’? How is it experienced by people? Imagine speaking to a miner, a railway maintenance worker, or a creative writer about the experience of being under a city.
It took three years for me to see the Southern Aurora, or the Southern Lights, above Hobart. On a perfect night with just the right amount of mist in the air I was treated to a dazzling light show across Mt Wellington. This included a shimmering effect of blue and green light, and rays of green light shooting across the sky. It was very beautiful and mesmerizing. It made me think about its beauty as well as its scientific basis. What effect do such events have on people? How are such events viewed today? How were they viewed in the past? Auroras, like lightning storms, can be surrealistic as revealed in photos. Here we may have a lovely opportunity for students to combine scientific fact – meteorological truth – with artistic viewpoints. How could an artist experience an aurora? How could one be experienced by a meteorologist? What is shared? What is different?
Bring on the media manipulators. Let’s highlight who is doing what with images and for what effect! The following site shows what media outlets do to change images. Photographs have been manipulated for years. Now, though, it is even easier with digital technology. Another site is written specifically for students.
Old photographs can have a strange resonance. The work of Ross Gibson and Kate Richards in the CD-Rom Life After Wartime uses old police crime photographs, music, and the random building of images, to create a disturbing sense of place. Yes, these were crime scenes, something happened, yet we are never quite sure – many of the initials police records identifying the scene and location are now missing. As a result the exercise takes on a poetic quality. A recent exhibition by Ross at ACMI in Melbourne – Street X-Rays – uses photographs of old crime scenes and juxtaposes them with video footage of those scenes in the present day. This is very interesting. The current places take on an ambience – these places look very innocent in their real time, yet carry their own history. Images and locations resonate with meaning. How can we use technology to highlight this power? Ross Gibson’s work, like many other media artists, show us how new meanings can be created by the interaction of media technology. How might students address old images, or locations, through the use of multimedia? The website Time Tales is dedicated to found images, those dislocated from their original owners, yet ones that still carry a certain resonance. Does, as quoted on this site "a picture need memories to be an image?" What is a dislocated picture without its story or history?
The following article entitled Perfect Day: A Meditation About Teaching (PDF document) is a good point at which to end this edition of The Creative Teaching Space. It is a beautiful story about teaching. Written by an American teacher Gilbert Valadez it records the point where personal experience and professional role meet in the classroom; in this case a time when a grieving teacher finds solace in the creativity and honesty of children, and is moved in unexpected ways. What this story reminds us is that the best teaching has a naturally spiritual element – not an imposed spirituality. The best teachers invest their classrooms with a soulfulness that is as rich and rewarding for themselves, as it is their students. Learning is deeply human. At times there will be strength, at other times vulnerability. The best teachers are strong but are also able to show their vulnerability. The measure of a healthy teaching environment is one where the teacher cares, and the teacher is cared for. Learning is about being moved. If we don’t allow the opportunity for ourselves, as teachers, to be moved, then we are denying the very essence of what makes teaching a communicative and two-way act. Happy teaching and happy searching. Send me any ideas and contributions. Best wishes
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