Author Archives: Julian Sefton-Green

Hong Kong Institute of Education

I visted the Department of Cultural & Creative Arts at the Hong Kong Institute of Education in November 2011. I gave two talks there: on the creative workforce in Education in the UK; and on Creative Pedagogies. The first of these was based my work on Creative Agents for Creative Partnerships and the second on ongoing work for the Signature Pedagogies project (see Jan 20 2011 post).

I have just been appointed Honorary Professor in the Department of Cultural & Creative Arts at Hong Kong Institute of Education.

Lernen in der Netzwerkgesellschaft

I have just returned from this event, Learning in the Network Society, held  by the Austrian Ministry of Education, in Vienna. I gave a talks entitled: Towards a new settlement: young people’s life-worlds, learning and school change. I tried to bring together 2 key discourses of change in recent Education Policy and Research, ‘The Creativity Agenda’ and research around Digital Cultures, in order explore how both fields – which in different ways have a new and distinctive sense of the agency of young people – influence and are influenced by contemporary change in Schools.

 

Creative Teaching/Creative Schools

Along with Pat Thomson and Naranee Ruthra Rajan I am the series editor for books aimed at  classroom practitioners at Key Stages 2 and 3 who are interested in developing creative learning and teaching in their schools. Each book is supported by Creative Partnerships and offers suggestions, models of practice and stimulus material for CPD sessions. The emphasis is on practical, accessible studies from classrooms framed within jargon-free understandings of key issues and principles found in more academic studies. Studies are complemented by accounts from learners, capturing pupil voice and making clear the benefits and values of changing approaches to learning.

A description of all volumes in the series can be found here.

The first volume in the series by Ethel Saunders Leading  a Creative School has just been published.

International Handbook of Creative Learning

This volume co-edited with Pat Thomson, Ken Jones and Liora Bresler has just been published by Routledge. The book develop the premise that the concept of creative learning extends far beyond Arts-based learning or the development of individual creativity. It covers a range of processes and initiatives throughout the world that share common values, systems and practices aimed at making learning more creative. This applies at individual, classroom, or whole school level, always with the aim of fully realising young people’s potential.

Until now there has been no single text bringing together the significant literature that explores the dimensions of creative learning, despite the work of artists in schools and the development of a cadre of creative teaching and learning specialists. Containing a mixture of newly commissioned chapters, reprints and updated versions of previous publications, this book brings together major theorists and current research.

Comprising of key readings in creative education, it will stand as a uniquely authoritative text that will appeal to those involved in initial and continuing teacher education, as well as research academics and policy specialists.

Sections include:

  • a general introduction to the field of creative learning
  • arts learning traditions, with sub sections on discrete art forms such as drama and visual art
  • accounts of practice from artist-teacher partnerships
  • whole school change and reforms
  • curriculum change
  • assessment
  • evaluative case studies of impact and effect
  • global studies of policy change around creative learning.

A Manifesto for Media Education

I have just added my thoughts to this collection. Its an interesting project – not just for the people who have contributed but I am intrigued by the question of why a manifesto now, at this point in time? What is different about this community form the media education cadres of fifteen to twenty years ago? How are their visions different from the radicalism of older reform agendas?

New Literacies and Learning in the 21st Century

I have just returned from The New Literacies Conference, sponsored by The Department of Language and Literacy at UBC, and The Faculty of Education at The University of Victoria, and supported by SSHRC. It addressed themes of new and digital literacies in the 21st century.

In recent decades “literacy” has taken on new and varied definitions and has become an even more complex and contested site as “new literacies” become prominent aspects of our lives, particularly for youth and children. This conference takes up these issues within a  Canadian context, where researchers are currently poised to play a vital leadership role in exploring the connections among local and global new literacy practices, defining what it means to be literate in the 21st Century, and sharing their work with a broad range of educators and policy makers.

A blog 0f the event includes my presentation and reports on the wide-ranging debate and discussion.